Friday, October 16, 2009

No mo' show at GoJo?

Posted by Charles Ferruzza on Fri, Oct 16, 2009 at 3:00 PM

fatcitygojo_thumb_400x309.jpg
Do the teppanyaki chefs still put on a show at GoJo?
​Larry and Barb from Lake Waukomis, Missouri, e-mailed us this week with an intriguing question.

"We've gone to GoJo's since it opened and still enjoy the food. But there's no show anymore," wrote Larry, noting that when teppanyaki steakhouses like GoJo were all the rage in Kansas City, "most of their cooks/chefs put on quite a show. They were jugglers, percussionists and all 'round showmen, but now it seems that they just do a perfunctory basic cooking routine."

Larry and Barb want to find a Japanese steakhouse where the cooks still juggle pepper mills, flip cooked shrimp into the mouths of giggling patrons, break eggs ("Bad egg!"), build volcanoes out of raw onion rings and make bad jokes. I could hardly understand why -- as most Fat City readers know, I find the "show" at Japanese steakhouses to be sort of tiresome. I mean, once you've seen one flaming onion volcano, haven't you them all?

Still, I found it difficult to imagine that the grillmasters at GoJo, one of the city's oldest and busiest teppanyaki restaurants, would resort to a "perfunctory basic cooking routine" since it's more of a tourist draw than anything else.


So on an investigative mission, I stopped in last night to the

venerable Westport steakhouse to see for myself: Were the teppanyaki

chefs giving a show -- or not?

At 6:30 p.m., GoJo was packed with

customers, some even waiting outside for seats at

one of the grills in the warren of little dining rooms. There were

teppanyaki cooks slicing and dicing meats, but no flamboyant shaking of

shakers and such.

I asked two of the employees at the front about the status of the theatrics. "Oh no," a woman explained to me. "That's too slow. We have too

many customers. The cooks need to focus on cooking. No show."

Sorry, Larry and Barb. But the show most assuredly goes on at Leawood's Han Shin Steakhouse, the Samurai Chef Steakhouse in Independence and Stix at the Legends complex in Kansas City, Kansas.

 

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Mr.Sushi in Lee's Summit has one of the best "show" cooking styles that I've seen in quite some time. Definitely worth a visit!

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Posted by John on October 27, 2009 at 3:02 PM

Kyoto in Leawood has the best show and food around!

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Posted by Stephanie P on October 17, 2009 at 2:36 PM

On the other hand, Hibachi has amped up the show portion of the meal too much for my preference. At lunchtime, they used to take note of whether you looked like you were interested in the theatrics (i.e. watching them cook at all) and tone them down if it was obvious you wanted to talk to your companions. Not so much anymore.

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Posted by Average Jane on October 16, 2009 at 5:05 PM

Last time I was out at Kobe Steak and Sushi in Independence they still did most of the show. No volcano lat time, but I can assure you they still shoot shrimp across the room, as it scared my date into hiding in the restroom.

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Posted by Nuke on October 16, 2009 at 3:24 PM
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