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Reviews

How Kohnotori in Honolulu Will Satisfy Your Yakitori Craving

This article is written by a student writer from the Spoon University at Marist chapter.

It’s hard being away from home and going off to college on the other side of the country. I start to miss all the great restaurants back in Honolulu, especially when the semester gets busy and all I have time to eat is cup ramen. Now that it’s summer break, I get to enjoy all the restaurants I’ve been craving for the past semester, and you can’t come to Hawaii without eating Japanese food. That’s why Kohnotori is at the top of my list.

yakitori

Photo by Ashly Kim

Kohnotori is an amazing Japanese restaurant known for its yakitori, a type of Japanese food that involves grilling skewers seasoned in either salt or teriyaki sauce. I immediately fell in love with the restaurant as soon as I tried my first teriyaki-seasoned shiitake mushroom.

yakitori

Photo by Ashly Kim

There are a variety of choices: Japanese-style musubis, fried oysters, salads and soups. My favorites are the chicken in ponzu sauce topped with daikon, shiitake mushrooms, bacon-wrapped asparagus, bacon-wrapped enoki mushrooms, and baked miso rice ball. I suggest alternating between a salt or teriyaki seasoning because too much teriyaki can be overwhelming. 

yakitori

Photo by Ashly Kim

The best part is that although you get a few pieces per skewer, the seasoning is fulfilling enough to make eating here affordable.

Each yakitori ranges around $2-3. I can only handle eating 5 or 6 skewers which I know doesn’t sound like a lot, but the trick is teriyaki sauce and rice. Order a few meat dishes and a rice ball and you’ll be set. Kohnotori can still get pricey but it’s a great place for a college student like me, with a low budget and desire to splurge.

yakitori

Photo by Ashly Kim

If you live in Hawaii, definitely take a break from studying and bring your friends and family out to dinner at Kohnotori. It’s a small restaurant so my advice is to get there at opening if you want seats, or make reservations. Otherwise, stop in after late-night bubble tea hangouts to snack on authentic Japanese food. Bonus: it stays open until midnight.

Ashly Kim

Marist '17

Hello there! I'm from Honolulu, Hawaii, a cultural mixplate of people with different ethnic backgrounds. I love trying out various types of food from all kinds of cultures and I'm excited to share my experiences with you as I journey between home and New York.