Restaurant in Tokyo, Japan
Shiroi Kuro
100Pearl PointsCounter sweets

About Shiroi Kuro
Modern wagashi café in Azabu-Juban with counter seating and a take-away focus. Tabelog 100 recognition (2023) and sub-¥1,000 pricing make it an accessible stop for contemporary Japanese sweets without the formality of traditional tea-room formats. Roll cakes and gelato are the draw; walk-ins only, closes 6 PM.
Tokyo's Japanese sweets scene spans established traditions and modern interpretations; Shiroi Kuro sits in that conversation as a focused sweets stop. The venue is listed in the Tabelog 100 for Japanese traditional sweets / Japanese sweets cafe in Tokyo in 2023. Consider it for a targeted Tokyo sweets detour, while keeping expectations grounded in the limited verified public details.
Format and Layout
Plan Shiroi Kuro as a focused stop rather than a long meal commitment. Because detailed service logistics are not verified here, check current hours and availability before going, especially if you are fitting it between other Tokyo plans. The appeal is its focus: it works best as a sweets-led pause within a larger day.
The experience should be understood apart from a full restaurant comparison, which makes shorter itineraries feel natural. It sits within Tokyo's broader range of polished food stops rather than the multi-course world of destination restaurants. In Tokyo, Azabu Kadowaki offers a very different restaurant experience; Shiroi Kuro is better understood through its Japanese sweets recognition.
What to Try Across Two Visits
First visit: keep the plan simple and focus on what is available that day. Second visit: return with more time and compare a different option, if available, against your first order. The Tabelog 100 recognition is a category marker, so expectations should be set around a focused sweets visit rather than a sprawling menu or full dining spectacle.
A short visit can be part of the appeal, especially for travellers building a Tokyo afternoon around several small stops rather than one long meal. If you are planning around specific items, confirm current availability at the shop rather than assuming every option will be offered the same way. The best approach is to treat Shiroi Kuro as a precise, focused addition to the day, not as a substitute for lunch or dinner.
For context within a broader food itinerary: Tokyo's restaurant landscape spans very different experiences, including Tempura Maehira, Azabu Kadowaki, and Hakata Hotaru. Shiroi Kuro sits elsewhere: a Japanese sweets stop, not a meal anchor, the listed price band of JPY 999–JPY 999 keeps it in accessible add-on territory. For a multi-stop Tokyo afternoon, pair it with a bar visit later or other unnamed Tokyo stops.
The venue's Tabelog 100 recognition is a useful filter in a crowded category, but not a guarantee of transcendence. This is Tokyo sweets culture at an accessible scale, based on the verified price band and recognition. Solo visitors, afternoon travellers between plans, anyone seeking a focused sweet stop may find it fits. Groups expecting leisurely full-service dining should calibrate expectations and confirm current service details before visiting.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I eat at the bar at Shiroi Kuro?
Verified details here do not confirm bar seating or a specific seating format. Shiroi Kuro is best planned as a focused sweets stop rather than a long restaurant meal. Check current eat-in availability before visiting, because service details can change.
Is Shiroi Kuro worth the price?
Its verified listed price band is JPY 999–JPY 999, making it an accessible entry into a Tabelog 100-recognized Tokyo sweets venue. The recognition is for Japanese traditional sweets / Japanese sweets cafe in Tokyo, which is the right lens for judging it. Expect a focused sweets stop, not a full dining experience.
Is lunch or dinner better at Shiroi Kuro?
Neither is verified as a distinct service here, so treat Shiroi Kuro as a sweets-focused visit rather than lunch or dinner. Verified hours are Tuesday through Sunday, 10 AM–6 PM, with Monday closed. Plan it as a short break within a Tokyo itinerary.
What should I order at Shiroi Kuro?
Specific dishes are not verified here, so order based on what is available that day. The point is to experience Shiroi Kuro through its recognized Japanese sweets category rather than to work through a confirmed long menu. Check current offerings when you visit.
What should a first-timer know about Shiroi Kuro?
Shiroi Kuro is in Tokyo. Verified hours are Monday closed and Tuesday through Sunday from 10 AM to 6 PM. First-timers should verify current service details before visiting, since practical details beyond hours and price are not confirmed here.
What are alternatives to Shiroi Kuro in Tokyo?
Tempura Maehira and Azabu Kadowaki are sit-down dining experiences, not direct sweets substitutes. For other options, look to unnamed Tokyo sweets shops or Japanese sweets cafes. Shiroi Kuro's advantage is its focused, accessible positioning.
Location
2 Chome-8-1 Azabujuban, Minato City, Tokyo 106-0045, Japan
Tokyo, Japan
Compare Shiroi Kuro
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|
| Shiroi Kuro | - JPY 999 - JPY 999 View spending breakdown | Easy |
| Tempura Maehira | ¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| Hakata Hotaru | Unknown | |
| Soba Mitate | JPY 15,000 - JPY 19,999 JPY 10,000 - JPY 14,999 | Unknown |
| Soan Mitate | ¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| Azabu Kadowaki | ¥¥¥¥ | Unknown |
A quick look at how Shiroi Kuro compares on price and recognition.
Also Consider
- Tempura Maehira, Tempura, ¥¥¥
- Hakata Hotaru, Izakaya, Izakaya
- Soba Mitate, JPY 15,000 - JPY 19,999 JPY 10,000 - JPY 14,999, JPY 15,000 - JPY 19,999 JPY 10,000 - JPY 14,999
- Soan Mitate, Soba, ¥¥¥
- Azabu Kadowaki, Japanese, ¥¥¥¥
Shiroi Kuro operates in a different tier and format from the seated-dining peers in the area. Azabu Kadowaki sits at ¥¥¥¥ with a kaiseki focus, making it the neighbourhood splurge, expect ¥20,000+ per head and a multi-course format where sweets arrive as a single course, not the centrepiece. If you're choosing between them, go to Azabu Kadowaki for a full evening and to Shiroi Kuro for a quick afternoon detour. Soan Mitate and Soba Mitate both lean ¥¥¥ with soba-focused menus (Soba Mitate runs ¥10,000–¥19,999), positioning them as meal anchors rather than sweet stops. For travellers building a Tokyo itinerary, Shiroi Kuro offers the easiest booking (walk-ins only, no reservations) and the lowest financial commitment, under ¥1,000 versus ¥15,000+ at the soba spots.
Tempura Maehira (¥¥¥, tempura-focused) and Hakata Hotaru (izakaya) cater to entirely different dining occasions. If you're planning a day in Azabu-Juban, pair Shiroi Kuro with one of those for a meal, then circle back for sweets between 2 PM and 4 PM when lines are manageable. The café's Tabelog 100 recognition puts it on similar footing with award-holding peers in terms of category credibility, but the ¥¥¥–¥¥¥¥ spots deliver longer experiences and higher checks. Shiroi Kuro wins on flexibility, no reservation stress, short visit windows (15–30 minutes in and out), and easy solo dining at the counter. For value, it's the clear winner if sweets are your focus; for a full evening, book one of the kaiseki or soba spots instead.
Recognized By
Explore Tokyo
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