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    Bar in Edgewater, United States

    Mitsuwa Marketplace - New Jersey

    100pts

    The metro area's go-to Japanese market.

    Mitsuwa Marketplace - New Jersey, Bar in Edgewater

    About Mitsuwa Marketplace - New Jersey

    Mitsuwa Marketplace in Edgewater is the largest Japanese market in the New York metro area and the most practical option for Japanese food court dining and grocery shopping on the Hudson waterfront. Walk-in only, no reservation required. Value per meal consistently undercuts comparable Japanese food in Manhattan. Best visited on a weekday or during one of its periodic food festival pop-up events.

    Verdict

    Mitsuwa Marketplace in Edgewater, NJ is the most practical destination on the Hudson waterfront for Japanese grocery shopping, prepared foods, and food court dining — and it sits at a price point that consistently undercuts comparable Japanese market experiences in Manhattan. If you're within driving distance and want access to Japanese imports, bakery items, ramen, and a rotating selection of pop-up food vendors, this is the right call. It's not a restaurant in the conventional sense, so compare it against a trip to Sunrise Mart or H Mart rather than against a sit-down Japanese dining experience.

    What to Expect

    The Edgewater location is the largest Mitsuwa in the New York metro area, set along River Road with views of the Hudson and the Manhattan skyline — the visual payoff on a clear afternoon is real, and the riverside setting makes this a more pleasant outing than most supermarket runs. The food court is the main draw for first-timers: multiple vendors operate independently within the market, covering ramen, curry, sushi, pastries, and seasonal specials. The quality level is considerably higher than a typical American mall food court, and the prepared foods section in the grocery aisles adds another option for grab-and-go items.

    If you've been once, the move on your next visit is to check whether Mitsuwa is running one of its periodic food festivals , these rotating events bring in vendors from Japan for limited-run appearances and are the single strongest reason to time a repeat visit. Spring and fall tend to see more of these pop-up events, though specific dates are announced through Mitsuwa's own channels. Without a festival on, the food court vendors are consistent enough to justify the trip on their own, particularly for the ramen options, which compare favorably with what you'd pay for equivalent bowls across the river in Manhattan.

    The crowd skews heavily toward Japanese and Japanese-American shoppers, with a significant contingent of NYC day-trippers crossing via the George Washington Bridge or the NJ Transit bus. Weekends get congested, particularly around lunchtime when food court seating fills up. If you're coming for the grocery section rather than the food court, a weekday morning visit avoids most of the bottleneck.

    For the wider Edgewater dining picture, see our full Edgewater restaurants guide. If you want a sit-down option nearby, Baumgart's Cafe is an easy alternative a short drive away. For everything else in the area, browse our Edgewater bars guide, our Edgewater hotels guide, our Edgewater wineries guide, and our Edgewater experiences guide.

    Value Per Visit

    This is where Mitsuwa makes its strongest case. Food court meals at a Japanese market of this caliber would cost meaningfully more at comparable venues in Midtown Manhattan or the West Village, and the grocery selection , Japanese pantry staples, fresh produce, imported snacks, and sake , is available at prices that reflect a suburban retail operation rather than a specialty import markup. For a group of two spending a few hours browsing, eating, and picking up groceries, the total outlay is typically low enough to make this one of the better-value outings in the metro area for Japanese food. Specific prices are not confirmed in our database, but the market format structurally keeps individual meal costs accessible.

    Practical Details

    Address: 595 River Rd, Edgewater, NJ 07020. No reservation required , walk-in only. Parking is available on-site. The George Washington Bridge is the most direct car route from Manhattan; bus service from the Port Authority Bus Terminal also serves River Road. No dress code. Suitable for families and groups. Confirm current hours directly with the venue before visiting.

    One-line summary: Walk-in Japanese market and food court in Edgewater; no booking needed, accessible by car or bus from Manhattan.

    FAQ

    • What's the crowd like at Mitsuwa Marketplace - New Jersey? Weekends draw a mix of Japanese-American regulars, NJ locals, and day-trippers from NYC. It gets congested around midday on Saturdays. Weekday mornings are noticeably quieter and better suited to an unhurried grocery run.
    • Is the food good at Mitsuwa Marketplace - New Jersey? Yes, consistently above what you'd expect from a market food court. The ramen and Japanese curry vendors set the standard, and the prepared foods in the grocery section are a practical option for quick meals. For context, the quality level sits closer to a dedicated Japanese restaurant than to a typical food hall.
    • Is Mitsuwa Marketplace - New Jersey good for groups? It works well for groups of four or more, provided you're flexible , food court seating is communal and can be tight on weekends. Groups that split up across vendors and reconvene tend to have the smoothest experience. There's no private dining or reservation option.
    • What's the signature drink at Mitsuwa Marketplace - New Jersey? Mitsuwa is not a bar or cocktail venue. The grocery section carries a selection of Japanese sake, beer, and soft drinks, and the food court vendors offer drinks alongside their food menus. For a craft cocktail experience in the metro area, Superbueno in New York City or Bar Leather Apron are worth knowing, though they're a different category entirely.
    • Is Mitsuwa Marketplace - New Jersey good for a date? It depends on what you're after. A casual browse through the market followed by food court ramen is genuinely a low-pressure, interesting afternoon , better than most chain restaurant dates at a similar price point. It's not a setting with atmosphere or ambiance in the conventional sense, but the Hudson views from the parking area add some incidental appeal. If you want a proper sit-down experience for a date night in this price tier, Jewel of the South or Julep represent the kind of considered atmosphere Mitsuwa doesn't aim to provide.
    • Does Mitsuwa Marketplace - New Jersey have happy hour deals? No confirmed happy hour program is in our database, and the market format doesn't typically lend itself to timed drink promotions. Confirm any current specials directly with the venue. For happy hour at a dedicated bar in the metro area, see Kumiko in Chicago or The Parlour in Frankfurt for reference on what a well-structured drinks program looks like.

    Compare Mitsuwa Marketplace - New Jersey

    Price vs. Value: Mitsuwa Marketplace - New Jersey
    VenuePriceBooking DifficultyValue
    Mitsuwa Marketplace - New JerseyEasy
    JulepUnknown
    KumikoUnknown
    ABVUnknown
    BisousUnknown
    CanonUnknown

    Key differences to consider before you reserve.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What's the crowd like at Mitsuwa Marketplace - New Jersey?

    Expect a mix of Japanese expats, local families, and food-focused day-trippers from Manhattan and North Jersey. Weekends draw the largest crowds, particularly around the food court at lunch. The Edgewater location at 595 River Rd pulls a destination-shopping crowd rather than a casual drop-in one, so most visitors arrive with a purpose.

    Is the food good at Mitsuwa Marketplace - New Jersey?

    Yes, and it punches above its market-food-court category. The prepared food options reflect the same sourcing standards as the grocery floor, which stocks Japanese imports you won't find at a conventional supermarket. For the price point, the food court delivers quality that would cost significantly more at a standalone Japanese restaurant in Manhattan.

    Is Mitsuwa Marketplace - New Jersey good for groups?

    It works well for groups of four or more, provided everyone is comfortable with a self-directed, pick-your-own-vendor format. There's no shared table booking or set menu, so groups with mixed preferences do fine here. It's a better fit than a sit-down restaurant when the group can't agree on a single cuisine style within Japanese food.

    What's the signature drink at Mitsuwa Marketplace - New Jersey?

    Mitsuwa doesn't operate as a bar, so there's no cocktail or sake program to speak of. The beverage selection is retail: Japanese soft drinks, canned teas, and a grocery aisle stocked with imported beverages you won't find at standard US supermarkets. If you're looking for a curated drinks experience, this isn't the venue for that.

    Is Mitsuwa Marketplace - New Jersey good for a date?

    It depends on what kind of date. A casual afternoon of browsing Japanese imports, picking food court dishes, and watching the Hudson from the waterfront is genuinely enjoyable for the right pairing. It's not a candlelit dinner, but as a low-pressure, high-interest outing for someone curious about Japanese food culture, it holds up better than most mid-range restaurant options at a comparable spend.

    Does Mitsuwa Marketplace - New Jersey have happy hour deals?

    No happy hour format applies here — Mitsuwa is a marketplace, not a bar or restaurant with timed pricing promotions. Value comes from the everyday price structure: food court meals and grocery items are priced for regular shopping, not special occasion spending. If you're looking for discounted dining windows, this format doesn't apply.

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