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Good Food hat15.5/20

Haco

David Matthews

Updated ,first published

Hervey Bay king prawn tempura.
1 / 12Hervey Bay king prawn tempura.Edwina Pickles
Hokkaido scallop with scallop crisps.
2 / 12Hokkaido scallop with scallop crisps.Edwina Pickles
The alluring entrance to Haco.
3 / 12The alluring entrance to Haco. Edwina Pickles
Chawanmushi.
4 / 12Chawanmushi.Edwina Pickles
Zucchini flower in prosciutto dashi.
5 / 12Zucchini flower in prosciutto dashi.Edwina Pickles
Dishes are spotlit, and hints of gold bring warmth to industrial greys and concrete.
6 / 12Dishes are spotlit, and hints of gold bring warmth to industrial greys and concrete. Edwina Pickles
Wagyu tenderloin.
7 / 12Wagyu tenderloin.Edwina Pickles
Wagyu tenderloin.
8 / 12Wagyu tenderloin.Edwina Pickles
Venue manager Naoki Ito and head chef Kensuke Yada.
9 / 12Venue manager Naoki Ito and head chef Kensuke Yada.Edwina Pickles
Chef Kensuke Yada.
10 / 12Chef Kensuke Yada.Edwina Pickles
Hervey Bay king prawn tempura.
11 / 12Hervey Bay king prawn tempura.Edwina Pickles
Inside Haco.
12 / 12Inside Haco.Supplied
Good Food hat15.5/20

Haco

Japanese$$$$

Precision frying is just the beginning at one of Sydney’s most singular omakase counters.

Delicate isn’t a word typically associated with fried food. Tempura, though, is different. Five years ago, if you wanted to see the delicacy of the craft in person, Haco – an omakase restaurant hidden in a backstreet near Surry Hills – was the place to do it.

Today, the tempura is still a draw, but recent years have seen the 12-seater evolve into something more worldly. See the zucchini flower, stuffed with crab and mozzarella mousse, then fried to subtle crispness. Or the chawanmushi with paradise prawn that adds bisque sauce and finger lime – a perfect marriage of old and new.

Charcoal-grilled duck breast and wagyu represent the shift away from tempura-only, but the personal, aesthetic touches remain, from the spotlit American-oak counter, to an exceptional sake list that does classic as well as it does craft. And then there are the tempura lunch sets, one of the best value experiential meals around, the craft clarifying just a little more with every crunch.

Must order: Book dinner, sure, but come back for a tempura-only lunch set, starting from $46 and served piece by piece straight from the fryer.

Good Food reviews are booked anonymously and paid independently. A restaurant can’t pay for a review or inclusion in the Good Food Guide.

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David MatthewsDavid Matthews is a food writer and editor, and co-editor of The Sydney Morning Herald Good Food Guide 2025.

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