Sit down at Shingo, the Michelin-starred omakase hidden gem in Coral Gables, and your first instinct is to touch everything. The counter is made with a large plank of hinoki, a Japanese cypress, cool to the touch. Hot tea is served in rugged, wavy ceramic cups by renowned artist Shiro Tsujimura that you want to hold with both hands; cold sake transitions to smooth glassware by Josephinenhütte, also designed with elegant waves. This tactile feeling translates to nigiri, eaten with your hands — diamond-scored pickled mackerel feels textured on the fingers and palate, the golden eye snapper (kinmedai) glides like velvet, and osetra caviar is confetti on the roof of the mouth. Chef Shingo Akikuni is running a high-frequency, tangible omakase experience where you’re allowed — nay, encouraged — to touch the art.
What to order
The tasting menu ($275) changes seasonally. In the colder months, slurp down every drop of the yellowtail soup (buri owan). The broth is rich and delicately savory, with fatty yellowtail, which appears again as nigiri.
The wine pairing by beverage director Kaori Yoshioka is a must. The Ohmine 3 Grains sake is a limited release and pairs beautifully with many courses of nigiri. Two pours from different rice varieties offer a great side-by-side comparison.
Get the new tea pairing. The mugicha barley tea is delicate and earthy, the gokujo genmaicha green tea with roasted rice is powerful with grilled seafood, and freshly whisked matcha with Japanese pudding is a fitting hug goodbye.
Take note
Chef Akikuni and sous chef Yuta Sakakibara swap positions mid-meal so they can interact with both sides of the table. Service is intelligent, guiding you through the experience, answering questions about the seafood, ceramics, or wine as though you’re talking to a friend.
Insider tip
Arrive 15 minutes early to browse rare Bizen ware pottery at the entryway — it’s for sale.
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