Most sushi restaurants treat the drink list as a page near the back. Masaki Sushi builds the meal the other way around. The sake collection runs past eighty bottles, it is curated by a master sake sommelier, and it is meant to lead the table rather than trail behind it. That single decision reshapes how an order comes together at the Picton Street sushi bar in Old Town: the question is not only which rolls to get, but which pour sits beside them.
The food earns the attention the sake draws to it. The Masaki Roll is the house calibration order — an avocado-and-cucumber roll topped with seared salmon, Hokkaido scallops, and spicy mayo, the dish that tells a first-time table what the kitchen cares about. From there the menu widens. A5 Wagyu Ishiyaki arrives on a hot stone, beef the diner finishes searing at the table. Grilled Gindara puts black cod under citrus chili soy. There is a Spicy Sashimi Salad cut with daikon and tobiko, an Oyster Shooter set in ponzu jelly, Aburi Pork Belly Don over rice, and a Salmon Lover plate that runs sashimi, nigiri, and hosomaki in one order for a table that wants to commit to one fish.
Menu Tags
What to order
Tiers reflect how diners actually talk about each dish — Diamond is the rarest. Tap a dish to cast your vote.
Masaki's point of difference is the way sushi and sake share the center of the visit. Signature rolls, chef-choice nigiri, sake flights, a Sake Journey route, and private-label Kyoto sake give diners a meal with a clear beverage spine.
02
Named Culinary and Beverage Leadership
Executive Chef Seong I L Lee anchors the kitchen, while Yoshi Takaoka anchors the sake program. That two-person structure gives Masaki more personality than a standard sushi list with a drinks page attached.
03
Premium Japanese Menu Depth
The current menus run beyond familiar rolls into A5 Wagyu Ishiyaki, Grilled Gindara, Oyster Shooter, Spicy Sashimi Salad, donburi, sake flights, and specialty-menu dietary routes. That range makes Masaki useful for both cautious ordering and a more exploratory table.
Restaurantica Analysis
How the score breaks down
9.9
Uniqueness
9/10
Bang For Buck
8/10
Food Quality
10/10
Local Reputation
10/10
Popularity Factor
9/10
The Playbook
How to eat at Masaki Sushi
1
Order Masaki Roll First
Start with Masaki Roll if you want the restaurant's sushi identity in one order. It brings together seared salmon, Hokkaido scallops, cucumber and avocado structure, and spicy mayo, so the table gets a clear read on the kitchen before moving into nigiri or hot dishes.
2
Pair Sushi with Sake Flight
Use Sake Flight as part of the meal plan rather than an add-on. The drink list is broad enough for a guided tasting route, and pairing it with Masaki Roll, Chef’s Nigiri Sushi, or Salmon Lover keeps the sushi and sake sides talking to each other.
3
Use Lunch for a Tighter Visit
The lunch-special menu is the practical move for diners who want Masaki without building a full evening around it. Maki Lunch, Sushi Lunch, Sashimi Lunch, Chirashi Lunch, and Wagyu Croquettes sit inside a defined midday window, so the format is easier to plan than a sprawling dinner order.
4
Build a Premium Table Around A5 Wagyu Ishiyaki
For a more occasion-shaped meal, put A5 Wagyu Ishiyaki beside Grilled Gindara and a sushi order. That combination lets the table move between hot-stone beef, black cod, and sushi craft without turning the visit into a tasting-menu exercise.
5
Use Specialty Menu for Dietary Navigation
Masaki's specialty menu is the safer planning surface for diners sorting through gluten-free, vegan, and vegetarian options. It keeps dishes like Masaki Roll, The Meister Roll, Soy Flow, Spider Roll, vegetable gyoza, and Grilled Gindara in view while making dietary navigation less improvised.
Key Strengths
What this room does best
8.0
Sushi & Raw Bar
Masaki has a real sushi-and-raw-bar center of gravity, not a token roll section. The order can move from Masaki Roll and Chef’s Nigiri Sushi to Oyster Shooter, Spicy Sashimi Salad, and The Meister Roll without leaving the main lane.
8.0
Standout Signature Dish
The strongest trio gives different reasons to pay attention: Masaki Roll for the house style, Sake Flight for the beverage program, and A5 Wagyu Ishiyaki for premium hot-stone ordering. It reads as a restaurant with signatures across the meal, not one famous dish doing all the work.
8.0
Cocktail Program
The drinks side is unusually serious for the category. Sake flights, a broader Sake Journey, private-label Kyoto sake, sake cocktails, shochu, whisky, and Niagara wine give the meal a beverage plan rather than an afterthought.
7.5
Cultural Experience
Masaki gives Niagara-on-the-Lake a Japanese counterpoint to the expected wine-country itinerary. The sushi, seafood-from-Japan positioning, sake literacy, and restrained room make the visit feel specific rather than generic.
7.0
Special Occasion
This is an easy occasion pick because the menu has built-in escalation. A5 Wagyu Ishiyaki, Grilled Gindara, Chef’s Nigiri Sushi, and sake flights let diners build a meal that feels deliberate without needing a tasting-menu format.
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