New York · Kaiseki · omakase
Ikigai
Kaiseki-Inspired Tasting MenuNon-ProfitJapanese-Polish FusionSeasonal12-Course
A 12-seat kaiseki-inspired nonprofit restaurant in Fort Greene where 100% of profits support Rescuing Leftover Cuisine and food-insecure communities.
- Price
- ¥¥¥
- Area
- Fort Greene, Brooklyn
- Since
- 2024
- Chef
- Rafal Maslankiewicz
- Owner
- Dan Soha

Plate № 1900
About
Ikigai — meaning 'reason for being' in Japanese — is a one-of-a-kind not-for-profit fine dining restaurant opened in July 2024 by entrepreneur Dan Soha. The kitchen is led by Chef Rafal Maslankiewicz, whose résumé spans Masa (New York) and Eleven Madison Park, and whose Polish heritage subtly informs the 12-to-14-course seasonal tasting menu. Guests begin in a serene outdoor garden before being guided into a round 12-seat counter enclosed by floor-to-ceiling wood and soft lighting. Dishes are shaped by weekly market finds, leaning toward produce and premium Japanese proteins — uni, unagi, and sashimi — treated with fine-dining discipline. After covering operating costs, all remaining profits are donated to Rescuing Leftover Cuisine, an organization redistributing food waste to food-insecure individuals. Within 80 days of opening, Ikigai had donated over $12,000, funding 63 tons of food.
Why it's on Washoku Guide
- Dining here is an act of generosity — 100% of the restaurant's profits are donated to eliminate food insecurity in New York City.
- Chef Rafal Maslankiewicz's kaiseki training under the chefs at Masa gives the multi-course menu a technical precision rarely found in Brooklyn.
- The intimate 12-seat round counter and garden entry create one of the most atmospheric and private dining environments in the borough.
- At $165 per person, Ikigai delivers a caliber of experience — seasonal kaiseki, premium ingredients, fine-dining execution — that would cost twice as much at comparable Manhattan establishments.
Reservations available exclusively via Resy. A non-profit restaurant: all profits after operating expenses are donated.
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