Ura Stand, Kyoto: Chicken sashimi and kushiage at hip retro izakaya

Chicken sashimi (raw chicken) sounds impossible to eat. So does it in Japan in general. But some know how to execute it professionally. Chicken sashimi is a local dish in Miyazaki Prefecture and Kagoshima Prefecture on the island of Kyushu in Southern Japan. There’s a demand for chicken sashimi.

Ura Stand (串揚げと煮込み 裏スタンド / Kushiage to nikomi Ura Stand) in Kyoto is one of the cool progressive izakayas that take risks to bring greater food such as chicken sashimi to modern customers. In a traditional Kyoto-style Japanese townhouse (京町屋 / Kyomachiya) is an eclectic, retro hip space with handsome interior design. It’s so-called “neo taishu sakaba (ネオ大衆酒場)”.

As Ura Stand’s whole store name, Kushiage to nikomi Ura Stand (串揚げと煮込み 裏スタンド), says, its focus is on kushiage (串揚げ / deep-fried skewers) and nikomi (煮込み / stew and oden). Ura Stand’s menu had an ever-so Reiwa era (令和 / 1 May 2019 – present) vibe as a reading material: pared-down design with bold font and minimal art.

Ura Stand’s dishes I ate were all flawless. Kushiages were phenomenal. They managed to entrap all the delicious elements of ingredients in an ethereal crispy coating where I savored professional engineering. That totally convinced me to order chicken sashimi/chicken tataki (鶏のたたき). The surface of the chicken sashimi was seared, thus tataki (たたき). It was like the chicken version of roast beef. Nothing upset my stomach.

8/10

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Asian Japanese queer omnivore native to Kyoto. →Bio | @sushisandwich81