Hori Is an Invite-Solely Izakaya in NYC

Hori

231 E. fiftieth St., nr. Second Ave.

Chef Tsuyoshi Hori says he needed to verify his restaurant was thoughtful of its neighbors and weird location.
Illustration: Sunny Wu

Down a slim flight of stairs off a nondescript stretch of East fiftieth Road, previous a ceramics studio and behind a clothes boutique, is the 14-seat restaurant Hori. Technically, anybody is welcome contained in the izakaya, divided into an eight-seat bar and a six-seat room, though reservations are required and even probably the most vigilant stalkers of the Resy web page will discover that there aren’t really reservations accessible for the restaurant, ever. It’s because Hori is presumably the one restaurant in New York that operates with the Japanese system of ichigensan okotowari — which implies first-time diners should be company of an everyday. As soon as somebody has dined and adhered to the strict “no social media” rule, they’ll register themselves and unlock entry to the in any other case invisible reservations.

The restaurant is inside Studio Calmplex, which knowledgeable the coverage, says chef Tsuyoshi Hori. “You must undergo a number of tenants to get right here,” he explains. “We wanted to discover a solution to be pleasant with our neighbors and never be bothersome, but in addition discover our company. And in order that’s why we began off with, ‘Oh, you possibly can carry your pal, however ensure that they perceive the foundations and are respectful to our neighbors.’” It labored: “It’s actually the vibe of this place and the air that flows on this restaurant,” Hori provides. “The general expertise may be very particular.”

It was Kihyun Lee, the founding father of Hand Hospitality, which runs the restaurant, who first advised that the small, hidden izakaya may take some inspiration from the Japanese TV collection (and manga it’s based mostly on) Midnight Diner, the place an everyday solid of characters revolve round a chef at a late-night Tokyo restaurant.

“That is what we name ‘jouren’ tradition, that means ‘common clients,’” says Keisuke Oku, who oversees Hand Hospitality’s Japanese companies. “If you happen to go there, chances are you’ll know some folks, or chances are you’ll develop into pals with individuals who dined with you.”

Oku says the mannequin helps construct a basis of loyal clients as an alternative of chasing clients who would possibly solely go to one or two occasions. “What we try to give attention to is a sustainable enterprise, that means that we wish clients to really feel snug and have an amazing expertise in order that they arrive again and so they really feel they wish to carry any individual,” he says.

Ichigensan okotowari shouldn’t be uncommon in cities like Kyoto or Tokyo, and in New York Rao’s has, in fact, operated for many years with an interior circle of normal diners clutching onto practically all of its tables and cubicles. However within the metropolis, most spots eager to domesticate an air of exclusivity accomplish that through chilly, onerous money, just like the $10,000 annual membership required to dine at a non-public membership resembling Main Meals Group’s ZZ’s.

“The introduction-only factor makes it sound just like the place should be sort of snobby or troublesome to get into, or the chef should be troublesome,” says one common, Chizuko Niikawa Helton, a sake marketing consultant who’s already eaten at Hori three or 4 occasions. “It’s utterly totally different. Hori-san is likely one of the funniest and nicest cooks in New York.”

The primary time Helton walked by way of the ceramics studio (the place Hori makes the entire restaurant’s chopstick rests) and clothes retailer to enter Hori, she was stunned by how informal and heat the restaurant felt — and by the cheap costs of the meals, which vary from a rotating each day $1 menu merchandise to $9.50 for Hori’s handmade soba noodles created from buckwheat that’s grown and milled on a farm in Maine. Whereas one may doubtlessly drop between $100 and $3,000 on Hori’s sake listing, many of the menu is within the single digits, like a $4.50 potato salad topped with fried strands of soba and a $7 plate of dashimaki tamago.

“The system permits me to be much more playful with how I current the menu and the way I mess around with what I can serve every evening,” says Hori. The $1 particular of the evening (not marketed on the written menu however accessible by request) would possibly make use of a small quantity of a selected vegetable the chef has. A grilled beef-tongue particular not too long ago opened a possibility for a second particular, made by simmering the tongue trimmings in sake lees. “I’m in a position to mess around and use each little bit of the components I’ve, and that results in preserving the worth low.”

Helton says that if she had been going to introduce a pal to Hori as a first-time buyer, she would really feel a way of obligation to teach that pal on probably the most respectful methods to eat soba, dipping the noodles into the sauce with out submerging them an excessive amount of and mixing the remaining sauce with a pour of scorching soba-yu to sip as a digestif. “We now have to be sort of refined clients,” she says. “You wish to be a respectful sufficient buyer to be invited subsequent time.”

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If you happen to want to learn in print, you can even discover this text within the August 25, 2025, challenge of
New York Journal.

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New York Journal.

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