Kono

I ate at Kono, a fine dining yakitori restaurant with just as many accolades as its next door neighbor Yamada, which I wrote about recently. Fortunately for the staff at Kono, I restrained myself from ordering the sake pairing, so my night was uneventful and ended without a police escort.

First, the boring: Kono is stellar. Some of the skewers are possibly the most thoughtful treatments of chicken in New York. Particular highlights of my meal were the heart, cooked to avoid the typical chewy and rubbery texture I associate with heart and reveal a more delicate bounciness, and the oyster, which reached heights of tenderness and juiciness I did not know chicken could reach.

When I eat at a steakhouse, I have an arsenal of words to describe the quality of beef: USDA Prime, A5, Wagyu, Angus, marbling. It's a shame the only phrase I can think of for chicken is "heritage breed", because I've had heritage breed chicken before, and there is something else going on at Kono.

Skewers are about half the meal at Kono. The other half consists of small plates, which leads me to what I'm really here to talk about: the slider, meant to fill the same role as tsukune in other yakitori.

slider with egg yolk

Does it count as a skewer if the bread is skewered?

This was a course of comedy. I would call it unintentional, but I can't rule out that Chef Atsune Kono serves this so he can get some laughs in the middle of a long service. The raw yolk stands, unpopped, on a narrow tower of non-egg-yolks all served on a rimless plate. This is a precarious setup, and the emergent dynamic behavior of the yolk-plate-server-diner system is worthy of study. Some field notes from my own experience:

A fascinating night of observation. Next time I dine at Kono, maybe the staff could strap on some roller skates before the slider course. Deploy some Slip 'n Slides, and this could be a real multisensory dining experience. Be the yolk. Slide directly to freedom, or slide directly down someone's gullet.

Chef, if you are looking for a true visionary to revamp your restaurant, I am your guy. Drop me a line.