Adam Sindler and Mari Katsumura represent royalty when it comes to the rich history of Japanese restaurants in Chicago. In 1967, Sindler’s family founded Kamehachi, the city’s first sushi bar, before planting its flag in Old Town along Wells Street. Katsumura’s parents started the pioneering Yoshi’s Cafe in Lakeview with Yoshi Katsumura combining French and Japanese cuisine into something special. The restaurant was a fixture along Halsted for 39 years.

“He claimed he invented wasabi-mashed potatoes in the ‘90s,” Mari Katsumura says of her late father with a laugh. “I love spreading that rumor and perpetuating that story.”

Sindler has brought on Katsumura as chef to open a new restaurant along Wells Street inside the same space that housed his family’s restaurant. SHŌ is scheduled to open on Tuesday, August 12, at 1533 N. Wells Street, giving the two a canvas to show Chicago their brand of omakase. Katsumura, now rejuvenated after her work at Michelin-starred Yugen in West Loop, will offer a six- to eight-course omakase for about $145. There will also be supplements. SHŌ will offer the menu both at a 12-seat sushi counter and the restaurant’s four tops. The meal won’t be 100 percent sushi, which is often a misnomer.

When it comes to Japanese cuisine, Sindler and Katsumura admit that Chicago often lags behind the coasts. Katsumura feels it’s harder to compete in the Midwest as the region is limited when it comes to fresh seafood. That’s something that 2024 James Beard Award-winning chef Hajime Sato of Sozai in suburban Detroit faced before he closed his restaurant earlier this year.

SHŌ/Mistey Nguyen

SHŌ/Mistey Nguyen

SHŌ/Mistey Nguyen

There’s also a glut of omakase restaurants opening or that have recently debuted. Katsumura points out that most of them — if any — don’t have Japanese chefs or owners. She feels that “39 years of eating Japanese food” — mostly cooked by her parents — gives her a unique perspective on the cuisine, which is why courses like a reimagined chawanmushi with truffled dashi custard and cauliflower foam, accompanied by Osetera royale caviar, and shaved summer truffle will shine. Hand rolls are also making their way through Chicago. SHŌ will riff on those with a build-your-own course that emulates caviar service with numerous add-ons available.

Still, the two are careful as they don’t want to gatekeep culture. Sindler points out that he is both Italian and Japanese. He also mentions Sushi by Scratch’s Phillip Frankland Lee, saying the chef — who isn’t Japanese — presents the culture and cuisine as he sees it. At SHŌ, Sindler says while respecting tradition is important, adhering to authenticity — however that’s defined — is not.

“We are inherently Japanese in terms of how we grew up,” Sindler says. “The food is personal in that regard.”

Sindler designed the space and added several nods to music. Joining them is GM Preston Smith, currently the sommelier and assistant general manager at Beity in Fulton Market.

A chef smiling with hands folded.

SHŌ/Mistey Nguyen

A black and white photo of a chef with long hair.

SHŌ/Anthony Tahlier

Entering the restaurant business wasn’t a given for Sindler, who washed dishes at Kamehachi as a teen before going off to explore art and music. The latter is shown in how SHŌ approaches its food. It’s not so much a progressive menu, but a mixtape. This is a collaboration between two like-minded Japanese Americans who grew up in Chicago. Although their families are from parts of Japan, the common ground was so strong that Katsumura, an award-winning pastry chef, even welcomed Sindler’s input on the dessert course.

Sindler ended up working at the Alinea Group’s Roister before returning to the family business during COVID. Kamehachi has had numerous locations in Chicago, including one at the corner of Wells and Schiller (most recently a Broken English Taco Pub). They vacated that address in 2011 and moved to where SHŌ will debut. The new restaurant’s name is a shortened version of the Japanese word “keisho,” which translates to inheritance. The traditional lore attached to the name involves a family passing a katana down through generations. Sindler says it symbolized the torch being passed: “It’s three letters,” he says. “I think it’s powerful.”

SHŌ, 1533 N. Wells Street, opening on Tuesday, August 12, reservations available via OpenTable