Daikan was a welcome reprieve from the fried, sugary, creamy, meat-filled Christmas market food in Cologne (some of which was perfectly delicious). We walked away from Daikan feeling comfortably satiated, having tried a good sampling of their dishes: sushi, ramen, gyoza, chicken wings, and the chocolate-filled gyoza dessert.
Located in the Belgian quarter, this is a highly coveted spot that should be reserved at least a few days in advance. Unless you have a large enough group, you sit with other diners at large solid wooden tables, and if you're lucky you can see the chefs working hard behind the counter from where you sit. We sat in the front room, between the window and the chefs, which I appreciated in part because it was well lit, unlike the room at the back. Another reason to avoid the back dining room: clients have to walk through it to get to the restrooms, located outside across a stone-filled courtyard. With each opening and shutting of the door, diners in the back room were subjected to a cold gust of wind.
We ordered the soy-based ramen with mushrooms, which surprisingly arrived before the sushi. It came in a starter-sized bowl with a perfect egg and the most delectably chewy noodles. Since it wasn't the only dish we were ordering (and since Daikan is an Izakaya bar), we weren't disappointed by its size. We downed it pretty quickly, slurping up every last drop. Then came the crispy chicken gyoza, which was good but could have had some more flavor. The gyoza sauce was surprisingly sweet and sticky, not vinegary, which didn't help with the flavor issue. I ended up dipping the crispy dumplings into my wasabi-laced soy sauce instead. After that, the four of us split two crispy rolls: one vegetarian filled with eggplant, and the other with avocado and mango. The outside crunch was divine, the textures inside the rolls superb. We also split a raw salmon roll with spicy creamy sauce drizzled on top (the best type of roll!) and a cooked salmon roll without sauce but with raw tuna on top (not as great--I'm not actually sure why one would eat cooked salmon in sushi form). Then came the chicken wings in a spicy barbecue sauce spiked with sesame seeds. You don't need dipping sauce for these--they were fantastic on their own.
Everything goes down well with a chilled glass of white. I'm not sure which one we ordered since my friend ordered in German and took our waitress's suggestion, but it was a fine accompaniment. The boys ordered Japanese beer.
Oh and dessert--fried gyoza wrappers filled with chocolate. It wasn't amazing, but then again I'm not a sucker for the sweet stuff. I kept snacking on salted edamame while the others polished off this dish. read more