Nobuyuki ‘Nobu’ Matsuhisa on a-listers and sushi...plus three recipes 

Lauren Taylor meets renowned chef Nobuyuki ‘Nobu’ Matsuhisa to talk A-lister guests, resilience and how to eat sushi correctly. Plus here’s three of his recipes...
Nobuyuki ‘Nobu’ Matsuhisa on a-listers and sushi...plus three recipes 

Chef Nobu Nobuyuki Matsuhisa. Picture: Nobu Hotel Portman Square/PA N

From Taylor Swift to Leonardo DiCaprio, many A-listers have been spotted dining at the swanky Nobu restaurants, a global empire run by Japanese chef Nobuyuki Matsuhisa.

But no one will quite live up to his “most memorable” celebrity story - Princess Diana dining at his first London eatery, in 1997, shortly before her death.

“A couple of months before she got into the accident, my business partner invited Princess Diana, then I cooked for her,” says the chef, better known as Nobu.

Admitting he was nervous to say hello, the 76-year-old notes: “I said, ‘Pleasure to meet you Princess. And she said to me, ‘Oh, Chef Nobu, I’ve read about you’.

“I was so surprised, I was so happy she knew me,” he says proudly. “She loved what I cooked for her” which was “a very simple tempura, I didn’t want to give anything too strange to the royal family. She liked the tempura, she liked fish, sushi... I think she enjoyed it because she ate it all.”

After debuting at his Matsuhisa restaurant in Beverly Hills in the ’80s, Nobu now has more than 50 worldwide, as well as about 40 hotels.

He says A-listers including Mick Jagger, Paul McCartney and Kate Winslet have enjoyed dining at his UK restaurants - the newest of which is in Portman Square.

The chef is known for popularising Japanese food - particularly sushi - with Peruvian influence (just don’t call in ‘fusion’ -“I prefer ‘Nobu style’, he says). Nobu can take credit for inventing ‘black cod with miso’ - his signature dish and recreated by restaurateurs the world over.

Cindy Crawford once requested he create something off the menu for her at his LA restaurant - “Some tempura but in a different way with shrimp, scallops, onions, then steamed rice with tempura on top. The Japanese name is kakiage donburi” - a dish he named ‘Cindy Rice’ so Crawford could ask for it again.

His head chef in New York had to call up Nobu to ask how exactly to make it, as the legendary model had just walked into the restaurant and requested ‘Cindy Rice’.

Born in the small town of Saitama, near Tokyo, Nobu’s childhood bedroom was next to the kitchen. “Every morning, my mother, my grandmother, started cooking breakfast. I’d wake up to the smells and the sounds and walk into the kitchen”. His mum has since died but, he says, “everyone has a memory of missing their mother cooking.”

The art of sushi was reserved for restaurants in Japan at the time. “Becoming a sushi chef was my dream as a kid,” Nobu says. He dropped out of architect high school to train at a small family-run sushi restaurant in Tokyo at 18, but spent a “tough” three years cleaning and prepping before any of the senior chefs would show him how to make sushi.

With dreams of making it in another country, Nobu moved to Peru at 23. It was there he started to imagine how Japanese food could take on elements from Peruvian cuisine.

“Now, ceviche [raw fish marinated in lemon juice for up to six hours] is all over the world, people know about it, but 50 years ago, nobody knew. I knew Japan had fish so then [I thought] use the same fish and make it in a different way.

“From this moment, my eyes open. Then I started thinking about every Peruvian dish, and I made it in a Japanese way” - and he opened a restaurant in Lima.

His next venture would take him and his family to Alaska, with the opportunity to open a restaurant there.

After just 50 days of the opening, an electrical problem caused a fire, destroying the restaurant. “It means my restaurant is gone, my dream is gone, I lost everything,” Nobu says. It was a moment watching his young children and wife that helped him out of a dark place.

“They didn’t know why Daddy was staying at home, they were playing, they starting screaming or fighting and something happened then, this voice from my ear, then I kind of woke up to, ‘Oh, yes I have a family, I have two kids, I’ve got to try one more time to survive.

“It was a very tough time but this experience is now appreciated,” he says, “Because this experience makes Nobu what it is”.

He learned “you can never give up”, he notes. “But no rush, I like to go one by one, step by step, even one millimetre a day. Lots of people helped me and supported me, I felt so much, being loved.”

Nobu opened the famous Matsuhisa in Beverly Hills, California, in 1987, garnering celebrity fanfare. Actor Robert De Niro liked it so much he offered to go into partnership with the Japanese chef - an opportunity Nobu turned down at first.

“After four or five years, he approached me again, so this time, [I thought] oh, I can trust him. Because it was not only money, he was watching me and what I was doing.

Together, they opened Nobu New York in 1994 - the first of many with the ‘Nobu’ name. Over the years some of the establishments have gained, and lost, Michelin stars, but Nobu says it’s not his focus.

“I never care for titles. My ‘Michelin star’ is customers smiling and eating.”

Try three of his recipes here...

For more information or to book Nobu Portman Square, visit nobuhotels.com/london-portman/.

Sashimi Salad with Matsuhisa Dressing

Recreate this recipe from the chef’s famous Beverley Hills restaurant.

Chef Nobu's sashimi salad with Matsuhisa dressing. Picture: Nobu Hotel Portman Square/PA 
Chef Nobu's sashimi salad with Matsuhisa dressing. Picture: Nobu Hotel Portman Square/PA 

A favourite with customers from when Matsuhisa first opened, Matsuhisa dressing is an appetising soy-sauce-based mixture enhanced by sweet onions and aromatic sesame oil.

Ingredients (serves 4)

  • Sea salt
  • Freshly ground black pepper
  • 200g fresh tuna fillet
  • 5tbsp plus 1tsp Matsuhisa dressing
  • 60g assorted salad vegetables (e.g. micro greens)
  • For the matsuhisa dressing (yields 350ml)
  • 70g finely chopped onion
  • 2tbsp plus 2tsp soy sauce
  • 1tbsp plus 1tsp rice vinegar
  • 2tsp water
  • 1/2tsp granulated sugar
  • A pinch sea salt
  • 1/4tsp powdered mustard
  • A pinch freshly ground black pepper
  • 4tsp grapeseed oil
  • 4tsp sesame oil

Method

1. Make the dressing: combine all the ingredients except the oils. When the salt is fully dissolved, add oils. (Note: This all-purpose dressing also works with meat and tofu).

2. Preheat a grill or broiler. Sprinkle a little sea salt and black pepper on the tuna. Briefly sear the tuna until its surface turns white. Plunge the fillet into iced water to stop it cooking any further, then shake off the excess water.

3. Pour the Matsuhisa dressing into a serving dish. Arrange the salad vegetables in the center of the dish. Cut the tuna into slices ? inch (4-5mm) thick. Roll each slice into a cylinder and place them in a petal-like pattern around the vegetables in the center.

Rock Shrimp Tempura with Creamy Spicy Sauce

The perfect mix of crispy and creamy.

Chef Nobu's rock shrimp tempura with a creamy, spicy sauce. Picture: Nobu Hotel Portman Square/PA 
Chef Nobu's rock shrimp tempura with a creamy, spicy sauce. Picture: Nobu Hotel Portman Square/PA 

The creamy spicy sauce is the real star of this dish, and a Nobu favourite the world over.

Ingredients (Serves four to six)

  • 650g rock shrimp, or peeled and deveined large shrimp cut into bite-sized pieces
  • Yuzu juice or lemon juice
  • Vegetable oil for deep frying

For the sauce:

  • 1 egg yolk
  • 1/2tsp sea salt
  • 1/2tsp white pepper
  • 1tsp rice vinegar
  • 100ml grapeseed oil, or other mildly flavoured oil
  • 2tsp chilli garlic sauce (Toban Djan)

For the tempura batter:

  • 1 egg yolk
  • 200ml iced water
  • 100g all-purpose flour

Method

1. Start by making the sauce. Whisk together the egg yolk, salt, pepper and vinegar, then very gradually whisk in the grapeseed oil. Start with just a few drops to create an emulsion, then increase the amount of oil, whisking all the while. Once all the oil has been added and your sauce is nice and thick, stir through the chilli garlic sauce.

2. Whisk all the batter ingredients together and combine well.

3. Heat around 5 inches of vegetable oil in a pan suitable for deep frying until it reaches 180˚C or 355˚F. Working in batches of 2-3 small handfuls, coat the shrimp in the tempura batter and gently drop into the hot oil, frying for a few minutes until golden. Remove the shrimp from the oil and place onto a paper towel-covered tray to drain. Repeat the process until all the shrimp is cooked.

4. Transfer the fried shrimp to a large bowl, pour over the sauce and toss to coat. Finish with a splash of yuzu or lemon juice and garnish with chopped chives.

Tips from the chefs: If shrimp is unavailable you can try this sauce with any white fish tempura, or even vegetable tempura. If you don’t have the right equipment for frying, this sauce is also delicious drizzled over any grilled fish or meat.

Seafood Ceviche

This is classic Nobu style - with a Peruvian influence.

Chef Nobu's seafood ceviche. Picture: Nobu Hotel Portman Square/PA 
Chef Nobu's seafood ceviche. Picture: Nobu Hotel Portman Square/PA 

A combination of raw and cooked seafood, vegetables, and spicy-sour ceviche sauce. This dish is light, fresh, and ideal for entertaining.

Ingredients (Serves 4)

  • 180g mixed seafood (delicately flavoured varieties such as fresh white fish and shellfish, boiled octopus, boiled squid, boiled shrimp), cut into bite-size pieces
  • 1/4 red onion, thinly sliced
  • 1/2 cucumber, peeled and cut into thin round slices
  • 4 each red, yellow, and orange mini tomatoes, halved
  • 4tsp finely chopped coriander leaves
  • 5tbsp plus 1 tsp ceviche sauce
  • Coriander sprigs, for garnish

For the ceviche sauce:

  • 4tbsp lemon juice
  • 2tbsp yuzu juice
  • 1/2tsp sea salt
  • 1tsp soy sauce
  • 1/2tsp finely grated garlic
  • 1/2tsp grated ginger
  • 1/2tsp freshly ground black pepper
  • 1tsp aji amarillo paste

Method

1. Make the ceviche sauce: Combine all the ingredients (yields approximately 5 tablespoons plus 1 teaspoon).

2. Mix all the seafood and vegetables together well.

3. Combine with the ceviche sauce and transfer to a serving dish. Top with a coriander sprig and serve immediately.

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