Restaurant in Albuquerque, United States
Azuma Sushi & Teppan
100Pearl PointsDual-Register Japanese

About Azuma Sushi & Teppan
Azuma Sushi & Teppan offers both sushi and teppan grill formats under one roof on San Mateo Blvd NE, making it one of the more flexible Japanese options in Albuquerque. Easy to book and well-suited for groups at the teppan tables. A practical choice for first-timers who want a complete Japanese dining experience without the commitment of a specialist venue.
Is Azuma Sushi & Teppan Worth Booking?
If you are looking for Japanese cuisine in Albuquerque — specifically a place that covers both sushi and teppan under one roof — Azuma Sushi & Teppan on San Mateo Blvd NE is one of the more complete options in the city. For a first visit, the dual format works in your favour: you can choose between counter sushi and the theatrics of a teppan grill without committing to one style. That flexibility is the main reason to pick it over more narrow specialists.
The service model at a teppan venue like Azuma carries built-in expectations. The teppan side is performance-oriented by design: a chef cooking in front of you at the table sets a high bar for engagement, and how well the kitchen delivers on that determines whether the price feels justified. Sushi service tends to be quieter and more transactional. First-timers should decide upfront which format they want, because the two halves of the restaurant can feel like different experiences. If you are after a relaxed sushi meal, sit at the sushi side. If you want the full teppan show, book a grill table specifically.
On San Mateo Blvd, Azuma sits in a commercial corridor that also serves as a practical midpoint for visitors staying in the northeast part of the city. It is not a destination-dining address in the way that Old Town or Downtown venues position themselves, but it does not need to be. The draw is consistency and format, not neighbourhood prestige. For diners coming from outside Albuquerque who want a reference point: teppan formats in mid-sized American cities typically run $25–$60 per head depending on protein selection, and sushi sits in the $15–$40 range for a reasonable meal. Pearl has no confirmed pricing data for Azuma specifically, so treat those figures as category context rather than venue fact.
Booking is easy. Azuma does not appear to carry the kind of demand that requires advance planning weeks out. For groups, the teppan tables are the logical choice , they seat multiple diners around a shared grill and tend to work better for four or more than a two-leading at a standard table. Couples or solo diners are better served by the sushi counter format.
Practical Details
| Detail | Azuma Sushi & Teppan | Typical Albuquerque Peer |
|---|---|---|
| Format | Sushi + Teppan (dual) | Usually single format |
| Booking difficulty | Easy | Easy to moderate |
| Group suitability | Strong (teppan tables) | Varies by venue |
| Location | 4701 San Mateo Blvd NE | Varies |
| Price data confirmed | Not yet available | Varies |
Explore More in Albuquerque
Azuma is one option in a city with a broader dining range than most visitors expect. For American comfort food, 5 Star Burgers is the casual anchor. If you want something with more culinary ambition in a sit-down setting, Artichoke Cafe and Antiquity Restaurant are the established fine-dining names. For neighbourhood breakfast or lunch without any pretension, Barelas Coffee House is worth the detour. Middle Eastern options include Afghan Kebab House, which covers a format you will not find many other places in the city.
For broader city planning, Pearl's full guides cover Albuquerque restaurants, Albuquerque hotels, Albuquerque bars, Albuquerque wineries, and Albuquerque experiences. If you are benchmarking Azuma against top-tier Japanese dining in the US, Atomix in New York City sits at the other end of the spectrum in terms of formality and price. For tasting-menu ambition at the national level, The French Laundry in Napa, Smyth in Chicago, and Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg are the reference points. Seafood-focused ambition at the leading end is covered by Le Bernardin in New York City. For immersive chef-driven formats, Lazy Bear in San Francisco and Emeril's in New Orleans offer useful comparisons. At the furthest reach of the comparison set, Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler in Brunico represents what the format can look like at a European pinnacle level.
FAQ
Does Azuma Sushi & Teppan handle dietary restrictions?
- Pearl has no confirmed dietary policy data for Azuma. The general rule for Japanese restaurants in this format: sushi menus typically accommodate pescatarian and gluten-aware diners reasonably well, while teppan cooking involves shared grill surfaces, which can be a concern for serious allergen restrictions.
- If allergy management matters to your group, call ahead before booking. No phone number is currently confirmed in Pearl's database, so check Google or the venue directly for current contact details.
- Vegetarian diners will usually find limited but workable options on a sushi menu (vegetable rolls, edamame, salads). Teppan menus often include a vegetable preparation, but the shared-surface issue applies.
- For diners with complex dietary needs who want a venue that explicitly publishes accommodation policies, Indian Pueblo Kitchen is a local option with a broader track record of accommodating varied diets, given its scale and institutional positioning.
Location
4701 San Mateo Blvd NE, Albuquerque, NM 87109
Albuquerque, United States
Compare Azuma Sushi & Teppan
| Venue | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|
| Azuma Sushi & Teppan | Easy |
| Cecilia's Cafe | Unknown |
| Gruet Winery & Tasting Room | Unknown |
| Indian Pueblo Kitchen | Unknown |
| Mary & Tito's Cafe | Unknown |
| Monica's El Portal | Unknown |
What to weigh when choosing between Azuma Sushi & Teppan and alternatives.
Also Consider
- Cecilia's Cafe, Notable alternative
- Gruet Winery & Tasting Room, Notable alternative
- Indian Pueblo Kitchen, Notable alternative
- Mary & Tito's Cafe, Notable alternative
- Monica's El Portal, Notable alternative
How Azuma Compares in Albuquerque
Azuma occupies a different lane from most of Albuquerque's frequently cited restaurants. Cecilia's Cafe, Mary & Tito's Cafe, and Monica's El Portal are all New Mexican cuisine destinations with long local track records and lower price points. If your visit centres on eating what Albuquerque is actually known for, green chile, red chile, posole, those three are the stronger decisions. Azuma is not competing in that category.
For a more direct comparison, the question is whether Azuma or a broader American dining option better fits your evening. Indian Pueblo Kitchen offers a culturally specific dining experience tied to the region that Azuma cannot replicate, and tends to be the better booking for visitors who want something anchored in New Mexico's food identity. Gruet Winery & Tasting Room is a separate category entirely, if wine is the priority, Gruet wins the evening by default.
Where Azuma earns its place is group dining and format flexibility. The teppan table format is genuinely difficult to find in Albuquerque, and for parties of four or more who want a communal, interactive meal, there are few direct alternatives locally. If that is your situation, Azuma is the practical answer. For two people wanting a quiet dinner focused on food quality and local character, the New Mexican spots above will serve you better at a lower spend.
Explore Albuquerque
Save or rate Azuma Sushi & Teppan on Pearl
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.
