Clean and simple design in this intimate restaurant which offers excellent food and fine service. Â Tsuki is a low-key, quiet place to enjoy sushi, sashimi and classic Japanese dishes like udon soup, yakitori and katsu don (pork cutlet). Â The interior is all high-backed booths, plus a Sushi bar and a tatami room for groups.
I visited at lunch, the specials are only $8-14. Â Japanese hot tea is included and was very good! Most lunches include a small bowl of a fine miso soup, followed by a very nice small salad of lettuce, shaved carrot and cucumber with an excellent and not sweet sesame dressing. Â Afterwards they bring half an orange that was delicately carved into pieces, a great presentation and also easy to eat.
The #1 sushi lunch is a California roll plus six pieces of nigiri-sushi; i.e., sliced raw fish on vinegared rice. Â Considering the soup and salad that came with it, and the tea, I thought this was very reasonable at $12.
Another great option at lunch was the udon noodle soup, loaded with fresh vegetables including  cabbage, a whole egg, chunks of seafood AND two huge tempura shrimp on the side, a bargain at $11.
The thinly sliced ginger that came with the rolls definitely was not the typical reddish color I've seen in other places. Â It tasted great to me with the same delicate crunch, so I don't know if it was just a different variety or if the one served here is more "natural."
Very friendly and prompt service. Â Place was maybe 1/3 full when we visited, it was quiet and perfect for conversation.
Dinner prices are a lot higher than lunch! Â But you knew that already.
I love the model (i.e., plastic) food in the front window, a classic touch!
I was in the Bernardsville/Basking Ridge area on business for a few days. Â I had a craving for sushi and did a brief internet search for local places. Â Tsuki came up and had fairly decent reviews from the locals, so I decided to give it a try - especially since my company was paying for it. Â :)
The place was very clean and neat, like the staff are a bunch of people with OCD who have to have every little table decoration perfectly positioned and every empty chair straightened (nothing wrong with that!). Â Fine by me.
Another reviewer claimed that Tsuki needed remodeling, but I saw nothing that stood out as an eyesore. Â Modern 1-foot ceramic tile floors, wood booths that appeared decent, and your typical sushi/oriental restaurant decor, etc. Â The appearance was fine, although some air freshener would be in order since it smelled a bit musty when I entered. Â Not a showstopper though.
I was instantly greeted and seated - no problem whatsoever there. Â
The service was very attentive, maybe even TOO much if that's possible. Â As if I were royalty with a personal servant, a waitress stood at my table for well over a minute while I poured over the menu - a long time if you're counting down the seconds. Â I got a little uncomfortable with her staring at me from 3 feet away, so I informed her that I needed time to look over the menu since I'd never been there before. Â Hint hint, beat it and give the King some space! Â LOL Â She smiled, did a little bow, and promptly went away.
I spied her peeking at me from around the corner after that, but that's good. Â It meant she wanted to take my order ASAP. Â I appreciate enthusiasm from servers.
As for the food, it was decent if you need sushi in a small town like Bernardsville where there are probably only one or two places. Â It seemed to be freshly made, especially since it took about 20 minutes to make it and the place didn't seem crowded (I went there late at almost 9pm). Â But sadly, it just wasn't that tasty. Â It was "meh". Â
I had a Phoenix roll, a "spicy fluke roll" that wasn't spicy at all, and a "buddy roll" made with shrimp tempura. Â Add a house salad with typical Japanese ginger dressing and the total was almost $30. Â That's kind of expensive considering each roll only had 5-6 pieces, but oh well. Â Where else could I go for sushi late at night in this little unfamiliar town?
They had a few kernels of corn on top of the salad - never seen that before at a sushi place. Â I suppose that might horrify a few Japanese restaurant connoisseurs, but not me. Â I ate it all.
The pickled ginger wasn't pink, it was yellow. Â I prefer pink, but honestly I think both colors taste the same. Â I just like a little color, that's all. Â :)
So all in all, great service but merely acceptable food in a small town where choices are few. Â I'll give it three stars, but if I lived in Bernardsville and had time to scout out other places in the area I'll bet something tastier could be found after a modest drive to nearby towns. Â
I don't think this place would hold up in an urban environment with abundant, tough competition. Â The food is fresh and nicely made, but lacking in taste. Â Nothing I sank my teeth into perked up my eyebrows.
Tsuki needs to spice their food up a little bit - literally!