In Japan, yokochos are the neon-lit alleyways dotted with tiny restaurants and karaoke bars that have, in recent times, become Instagram-famous. Kolkata’s buzzy Park Street may have the city’s favourite bars and restaurants, but the Japanese tradition is set to come alive on the first floor of a very commercial complex. A spiral staircase leads you to a maze of half-shuttered shops, and there, somewhat hidden in plain sight, behind a large wooden door, a symphony of culinary acts comes alive. Yokocho has the same thrill you feel when you stumble upon a dai pai dong in Hong Kong, a hẻm in Vietnam or an izakaya in Japan.
Abhimanyu Maheshwari, founder of Zing Restaurants and Conversation Room; chef Auroni Mookerjee, who worked with Kolkata’s beloved Sienna and is known for championing Bengal’s culinary culture; and Ramesh Kumar Agarwal, the fourth-generation F&B entrepreneur behind Refinery 091, Roots, Romaania, and Conversation Room, have come together to bring three distinct voices from Kolkata’s F&B landscape into this tiny room.
Inside, the first thing to catch your attention is the long omakase-style bar, that blurs the line between diners and mixologists. And then the eye rests on the charcoal grill, where seats are arranged around the fire, recreating the live-cooking vibe of yokochos.
The restaurant has been designed by Faizen Khatri of FK’D Workshop, while Anirudh Singhal of SpeedX Bars has stepped beyond the bar to build the charcoal grill too. “We approached the bar and kitchen as one seamless performance, designing the omakase counter and the custom hibachi grills in a way where every guest feels part of the theatre,” says Singhal, whose work we last encountered at Delhi’s Trouble Trouble. “We’re known to build bartender-forward bars, and we are now designing chef-forward kitchens,” he adds.
The cracked walls, the naked bulbs, and the solid wooden counters spell a space made for a community hangout. This is a place designed for conversations, where strangers can become friends. “It avoids spectacle, choosing instead to leave a distinct and memorable impression,” says Khatri.
















