Gourmet Traveller (Australia)

EAST MEETS WEST

Chef KAZUKI TSUYA pushes the boundaries with a Euro twist on traditiona­l Japanese dishes.

- Words MICHAEL HARDEN Photograph­y PARKER BLAIN Styling SOPHIA YOUNG

Kazuki’s in Carlton pushes the boundaries with a Euro twist on traditiona­l Japanese dishes.

Saori Tsuya, who owns and helps run Carlton fine diner Kazuki’s with her chef husband Kazuki, pauses when asked to explain the restaurant’s approach. “It’s hard to describe exactly what we do here,” she says of the restaurant where Japanese and European flavour and technique are melded in exquisite combinatio­ns. “We are Japanese and we know Japanese food but we are not a typical Melbourne Japanese restaurant. Many of our influences have come from our time in Melbourne.”

The quality and skill of Kazuki’s cooking make it almost incomprehe­nsible that he came to cooking by accident. In 2002 he was running low on money while travelling in Australia and applied for a waiting job at Misuzu’s, an izakaya-style restaurant in Melbourne. Because his English wasn’t great, he was instead offered a job as a dishwasher.

“He was a good dishy, fast and clean” says Saori who was working as a waiter at Misuzu’s at the time.

Others noticed his skills too and began to give Kazuki more to do than washing dishes. Prepping ingredient­s and cooking was a revelation.

“When I was young, I didn’t care about food – I just ate whatever was on the table,” he says. “But then when I started doing more at Misuzu’s I realised I was good at it.”

He and Saori started doing the research, eating out in restaurant­s they read about, seeking inspiratio­n. Kazuki did stages at several places and worked at France-Soir and Lake House before opening the first incarnatio­n of Kazuki’s in Daylesford.

“Kazuki’s mum is a really good cook so he grew up around great food and you can see that in the way he cooks now,” says Saori. “That gave him a basis of his approach to food.” Kazuki agrees. “There’s influence there for sure with the flavours but also my mum likes to ‘twist’ flavours, to add non-traditiona­l ingredient­s,” he says. “It’s why my food is hard to categorise. I think if a Japanese chef saw these recipes they might not recognise them as Japanese. For me it is a blend of all my particular influences in Melbourne and Japan.”

121 Lygon St, Carlton, Vic, kazukis.com.au

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Kazuki and Saori Tsuya.
Opposite Bowl from Ali F Made It. PREVIOUS PAGES Chopstick rest from Mr Kitly. Chopsticks from Studio Visser. Bowl, as before. All other props stylist’s own. Kazuki and Saori Tsuya.

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