Restaurant in Tokyo, Japan
A Cote Patisserie
100Pearl PointsPastry stop, not sit-down

About A Cote Patisserie
A Cote Patisserie is worth adding to a Tokyo pastry day if the goal is a polished sweet stop at JPY 1,000–JPY 1,999 rather than a full dining experience. The Tabelog 100 #55 recognition gives it a useful quality signal, while the Shirokanedai location makes it better as a planned neighborhood detour than a last-minute cross-town errand.
In Tokyo, A Cote Patisserie is a practical option when the brief is a low-commitment stop at a verified approachable price point. At JPY 1,000–JPY 1,999, it sits in an accessible tier, with confirmed recognition that makes the choice feel considered rather than random. That middle position is the appeal: it gives the visit a little more intention than an unplanned stop, while still keeping the decision easy enough for an ordinary day.
The right expectation is modest and focused. Verified details support planning around price, hours, casual dress, recognition, but not a broader full-meal format. This is not a page to overbuild with assumptions about seating, service style, specific menu items, or neighborhood logistics. Treat A Cote Patisserie as a Tokyo stop whose confirmed strengths are accessible pricing, defined daytime hours, a confirmed Tabelog signal.
Worth considering for a focused stop, not for an overplanned meal
The strongest case here is value. A Tabelog 100 placement at #55 in 2023 with a 3.8 score gives it a credible quality signal. The price tier keeps expectations grounded: plan this as a focused visit, not as a restaurant substitute. If the plan needs a longer dining arc, the verified details here are too limited to support that kind of booking decision.
For someone considering a visit, the better move is to keep the plan simple. Go within the posted hours, keep expectations aligned with the JPY 1,000–JPY 1,999 range, treat the stop as casual. The repeat value is not about a verified full-service experience; it is about choosing a recognized Tokyo venue when the day calls for something deliberate but uncomplicated.
Where it fits in a Tokyo day
A Cote Patisserie is easiest to place into a Tokyo day when the schedule can accommodate its posted hours: 11 AM to 6 PM from Monday through Saturday, with Sunday closed. That makes it more suitable for a daytime stop than an evening plan. Because the verified record does not establish lunch service, dinner service, seating capacity, or a specific menu format, the safest approach is to plan lightly rather than build an itinerary around unconfirmed details.
The dress code is casual, so there is no reason to over-plan the wardrobe. Keep the visit city-appropriate and simple. The available facts support a low-pressure stop at an accessible price point, not a formal occasion or a detailed group-dining plan.
Use our full Tokyo restaurants guide if this needs to sit inside a longer food itinerary, especially if the rest of the day calls for a proper lunch or dinner. For a hotel-led plan, our full Tokyo hotels guide is the better planning layer; for drinks elsewhere in the city, use our full Tokyo bars guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the tasting menu worth it at A Cote Patisserie?
The verified details do not establish a tasting-menu format at A Cote Patisserie. Treat it as a Tokyo venue with a JPY 1,000–JPY 1,999 price range rather than planning around a long dining format.
What should I wear to A Cote Patisserie?
Keep it casual and tidy. The verified dress code is casual, the JPY 1,000–JPY 1,999 price point supports a low-pressure visit rather than a formal outing.
Is A Cote Patisserie worth the price?
Yes, if you want a recognized Tokyo stop rather than a full restaurant meal. The JPY 1,000–JPY 1,999 range and the Tabelog 100 #55 (2023) recognition with a 3.8 score make the value case clear.
Can A Cote Patisserie accommodate groups?
The verified details do not include seating capacity or group accommodations. If you are planning for several people, check the venue's official channels before building a group outing around it.
Is A Cote Patisserie good for solo dining?
It can be a simple solo stop if you are looking for a casual visit in Tokyo. The confirmed price range is manageable, the posted hours are 11 AM to 6 PM from Monday through Saturday.
Is lunch or dinner better at A Cote Patisserie?
The verified hours make daytime the safer fit: A Cote Patisserie is open 11 AM to 6 PM from Monday through Saturday and closed on Sunday. The available details do not verify lunch service or dinner service, so do not plan it as a dinner destination.
Does A Cote Patisserie handle dietary restrictions?
The verified details do not include allergy or dietary-accommodation information. If allergies or ingredient restrictions matter, check the venue's official channels before going.
Location
Japan, 〒108-0071 Tokyo, Minato City, Shirokanedai, 2 Chome−5−11 加藤木アパート
Tokyo, Japan
Compare A Cote Patisserie
| Venue | Location | Cuisine | Awards | Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| A Cote Patisserie | Tokyo | , | Tabelog 100 #55 (2023): 3.8pts | JPY 1,000 - JPY 1,999 |
| Patisserie Ryoco | Tokyo | Patisserie | , | , |
| La Clairière | Tokyo | , | , | , |
| BOULANGERIE SEIJI ASAKURA | Tokyo | , | , | - JPY 999 - JPY 999 |
| Izaki | Tokyo | , | , | JPY 30,000 - JPY 39,999 JPY 30,000 - JPY 39,999 |
| ShinoiS | Tokyo | Chinese | , | ¥¥¥¥ |
How A Cote Patisserie Tokyo compares with similar nearby venues.
Where to go if this does not fit the plan
If the sweet stop is the point of the day, cross-shop Patisserie Ryoco. If the budget needs to stay tighter, look at BOULANGERIE SEIJI ASAKURA instead.
How it compares with Tokyo pastry and dining alternatives
Against Patisserie Ryoco, A Cote Patisserie is the calmer value pick for a lower-stakes pastry stop. Ryoco is the more direct patisserie cross-shop if the entire outing is about sweets, while A Cote works better when the reader wants a recognized address without turning the day around one purchase.
BOULANGERIE SEIJI ASAKURA sits in a lower listed price band, so choose it when budget matters more than patisserie recognition. La Clairière is the softer comparison when the priority is a similar Tokyo sweet stop and availability drives the decision.
Do not compare this directly with Izaki or ShinoiS unless the question is how to allocate spend. Izaki and ShinoiS belong in a full restaurant-budget conversation; A Cote Patisserie is the smarter add-on when the day already has lunch or dinner covered.
Recognized By
Explore Tokyo
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