Review: Food at Raisu Doesn’t Quite Get the Service It Deserves

Raisu, the new spot from the Kingyo/Suika/Rajio Group has, for better or worse, a lot going on.

Raisu, the new spot from the Kingyo/Suika/Rajio Group has, for better or worse, a lot going on.

Some might shrug it off as Youngest Child Syndrome. Less tolerant diners—me, for one—will be tempted to storm out during dinner. Raisu, the latest izakaya from the team behind Kingyo, Suika and Rajio, is the most interesting—yet exasperating—offspring in the whole Group Restaurant family.raisu_002Shabu shabuThe serene second-storey Kits walk-up has so much going for it: a gorgeous Zen design (including a window-wrapped balcony with hori kotatsu tables set over a recessed, heated floor), a serious sake list (more than 50 varieties, including some daily flights) and an abundance of intriguing specialties (elaborate meat and vegetarian bento boxes, teishoku tray set meals, sizzling hot-stone bowls and the immensely Instagrammable Oceans Offering checkerboard of various pressed sushi).raisu_004Sake flightraisu_001Tiger prawn croquetteThe main frustration is that many of the specialties are made in limited quantities. Some must be ordered in advance, if you can get through on the phone (it took me six attempts). Others are first-come, first-served (so you’ll have to join the lineups that start forming before the doors open at 5:30 p.m.).Much like a multi-tasking millennial switching between numerous apps, dinner streams out of the kitchen in one big interactive swoop. We were already busy with a full table of participatory dishes—grinding the sesame seeds for panko-crusted barley-fed pork, stirring a hot clay pot of sea urchin and snow crab, dipping thin slices of wagyu in a cauldron of shabu shabu-style udon—when out came the two pre-ordered Zen bento boxes with their nine compartments of delicate lotus root sandwiches, fried tofu patties with orange-grated daikon, etc., etc.No! Take it back. Food this intricate needs to be slowly savoured, not piled on and tossed around like any old ebi mayo or chicken karaage. Raisu is more refined than a happy-go-lucky, pub-like izakaya. It deserves elevated, grown-up service to match.raisu_003Shokado bento box

Raisu

2340 W 4th Ave.604-620-1564raisu.caHoursDinner 5:30-10:30 p.m.Closed Tuesdays