Restaurant in Quebec City, Canada
French-City Sushi Counter

Enzo Sushi is a Japanese restaurant on central Boulevard René-Lévesque Est in Quebec City. With limited public data on price, hours, and kitchen credentials, it is a low-risk neighbourhood option but not the first call for a special occasion. Quebec City's better-documented dining addresses offer more confidence for celebration or date-night bookings.
If you are weighing sushi options in Quebec City, the more pressing question is whether Japanese cuisine in this francophone capital fits your occasion at all — and whether Enzo Sushi is the right address to test that. Located at 150 Boulevard René-Lévesque Est in the heart of the city, Enzo Sushi sits in a dining market dominated by French-leaning tasting menus from addresses like Tanière³ and ARVI. Choosing Enzo means choosing a different register entirely.
Our venue data for Enzo Sushi is limited: no published price range, no confirmed hours, no awards on record, and no current chef attribution. That data gap is itself informative. In Quebec City's dining scene, the venues that attract the most attention — from local press and visiting diners alike , tend to be the ones with clear public profiles, tasting menu credentials, and documented kitchen leadership. Enzo Sushi does not currently sit in that tier. For a milestone dinner or a date where the experience needs to hold up to scrutiny, that matters.
What the address does suggest is convenience. Boulevard René-Lévesque Est is a central artery, accessible from both the Old City and the business district, making Enzo Sushi a plausible choice if you are staying nearby or want something within easy reach after a day of sightseeing. For a broader view of where to eat, drink, and stay while you are in the city, the Pearl Quebec City restaurants guide covers the full range, including our picks in bars, hotels, wineries, and experiences.
For special occasions in Quebec City, the venues with more documented track records are worth the extra research. Laurie Raphaël and Kebec Club Privé both offer more established dining experiences with clearer booking frameworks. If you are open to travelling for a sushi-forward or Japanese-influenced meal in a Canadian context, Alo in Toronto or the technically precise approach at AnnaLena in Vancouver represent higher-confidence options in the same country. For a Quebec comparison with strong tasting menu credentials, Jérôme Ferrer - Europea in Montreal is worth the two-hour drive if the occasion warrants it.
Closer to Quebec City, Narval in Rimouski shows what a focused regional kitchen can do with seafood in the province. For context on what a fully realised tasting menu arc looks like at this price tier internationally, Le Bernardin in New York City and Lazy Bear in San Francisco set the benchmark , though both require more planning and a longer commitment. Domestically, Restaurant Pearl Morissette in Lincoln and The Pine in Creemore demonstrate what a tightly constructed tasting experience looks like in a smaller Canadian market.
The verdict on Enzo Sushi is cautious. Book it if you are in the neighbourhood, curious about the format, and not anchoring your trip around the meal. For a special occasion where the dining experience is the event, you will find more reliable options among Quebec City's better-documented addresses.
Quick reference: Central location on Bd René-Lévesque Est; no confirmed hours, price, or awards on record; easy to book; better alternatives exist for occasion dining.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Enzo Sushi | Easy | ||
| Tanière³ | Creative | $$$$ | Unknown |
| ARVI | Modern Cuisine | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Chez Boulay - Bistro Boréal | Modern Cuisine | $$ | Unknown |
| Auberge Saint-Antoine | Canadian Cuisine | Unknown | |
| Le Clan | Regional Cuisine | $$$ | Unknown |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
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