My wife and I recently went to Kappo Kappo to celebrate the anniversary of when we met, and I’ll just say it plainly: this was one of the most incredible meals I’ve had in Austin.
Kappo Kappo is tucked inside the Austin Proper Hotel at 600 W. 2nd Street, but once you’re inside, it feels completely removed from the normal downtown restaurant experience. It’s small, intimate, dark, warm, and designed around the idea that you are not just eating food—you are watching a meal happen in real time. The restaurant describes itself as a French-Japanese chef’s tasting menu built around conviviality, connection, and removing the barrier between guest and chef. That sounds like restaurant marketing until you sit down and realize that is actually the point of the whole experience.
The restaurant is led by twin chefs Haru and Gohei Kishi, who were born in Paris to Japanese parents and trained in serious kitchens around the world. Their background is basically the whole concept: Japanese ingredients and kappo-style service, but with French technique and pacing. Kappo means “cut and cook,” and unlike a typical omakase experience where you quietly receive what the chef gives you, kappo is more interactive. You see the work, the timing, the plating, the movement, and the decisions happening right in front of you.
That is what made the night feel special. It did not feel stiff or overly formal. It felt alive.
We did the hybrid pairing, which in hindsight was both a great decision and a dangerous one. The drink progression matched the food beautifully, but by the end, we had definitely crossed from “thoughtful pairing” into “we are celebrating and nobody is driving.” The pairings at Kappo Kappo are designed to move across sake, wine, Japanese spirits, and beer, rather than locking you into one category, which made the experience feel more playful than a traditional wine pairing.
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