Hakugintei
The Story of
Hakugintei
Curry Hakugintei is a restaurant about the moment of surprise. Owner Ryuichiro Oki trained for years in traditional Japanese cuisine -- washoku -- learning the discipline of balance and the respect for ingredients that defines that world. Then he turned his full attention to curry, and he has never looked back. Twenty-six years later, he is still searching for the perfect bowl.
What Oki makes is Japanese curry in the European style -- thick, roux-based, deeply savory, the kind that many Japanese grew up eating at home. But his version reaches beyond the familiar. The broth base is made from Wagyu beef. The roux begins with Hokkaido wheat. Then come tropical fruits and 13 kinds of carefully selected spices, added in sequence to engineer a specific experience: the first bite is sweet and fruity, almost gentle. Then, slowly, the spice rises in a second wave, warming from behind.
The rice matters too. Oki selects varieties with lower moisture content than typical Japanese rice, so that each grain holds the curry cleanly without becoming waterlogged. The result is a bowl where every element is in conversation. Toppings like Pork Katsu (thinly sliced, bite-sized cutlet), Cheese, and Spinach allow guests to build the bowl that matches their mood.
Curry Hakugintei joins YUU Japanese Food Hall, bringing its Michelin-recognized, sweetness-first, spice-second Osaka curry to American diners. Come ready for that second wave.
“I trained in traditional Japanese cuisine before dedicating 26 years to curry. What I have built at Hakugintei is an Osaka-style bowl that surprises you—sweet first, then spicy. I hope that moment of discovery brings you joy.”