The Room
Nobu Dallas occupies the ground floor of Hotel Crescent Court at 400 Crescent Court in Uptown, opening onto the hotel's courtyard — dark wood, paper lanterns, low light tuned to the way raw fish reads on the plate. It opened here in 2005, one of the earlier Nobu outposts away from the coasts, and the room has the easy confidence of a brand that no longer has to prove the address.
Sound sits at a hum, spacing is generous, and dress is smart-casual. The sushi counter is the seat to ask for if you want to watch the knife work; the dining room is the call for a client table where the conversation matters more than the show. Either way the lighting flatters and the pacing is unhurried.
A bar, a happy hour and a Sunday brunch (about $75 a head) widen the door beyond the formal dinner. But the core proposition has not changed since opening: a serious Japanese-Peruvian kitchen inside a serious Uptown hotel, run with the consistency the name demands.
The Food
Nobu Matsuhisa built the new-style Japanese kitchen everyone now imitates: classical Japanese training routed through Peru, where he learned to cut sashimi and hit it with citrus, chili and hot oil. The black cod with miso is the dish that explains the method. The fillet sits three days in a sweet, saikyo-style den miso, which cures and seasons the flesh before a short bake and a broil lacquer the surface; the result is sweet, saline and silky in a way that reads as correct before you can name why. Yellowtail with jalapeño — thin hamachi, a disc of chili, ponzu — is the second signature, and the rock shrimp tempura is the third.
Spend runs roughly $150 to $300 a head. The counter omakase lands around $225 and moves from composed bites through raw courses, tempura, grilled items and rice with a logic built over years; a sake or champagne pairing is worth adding. Japanese A5 Wagyu is offered by the ounce as a supplement, and the kitchen handles it with the restraint the ingredient needs.
Dallas has its own additions: scallops with jalapeño salsa, and a ranchero rib eye that exists at no other Nobu. These are local accents, not compromises — the kitchen reading its room without losing the method.
Best Occasion Fit
Impress Clients: Nobu operates as a global credential. An international client from Tokyo, London, or New York will know what Nobu is and understand what securing this table communicates about the person who booked it. The Dallas location is among the better-executed restaurants in the portfolio. The omakase is the correct order for a client dinner when you want the kitchen to set the agenda and leave your attention free for the conversation.
First Date: Nobu is a first date restaurant that works because it is exciting without being intimidating, formal without being cold, and because the shared experience of navigating a Japanese-Peruvian menu generates conversation in a way that conventional restaurants cannot replicate. The tempura, the omakase progression, the sake flight — all provide reference points that a first date needs to become a real conversation.
Proposal: The Crescent Court setting, the intimacy of the omakase counter, and the hotel's ability to arrange a suite for the evening make Nobu Dallas a coherent choice for the question. Call ahead; the restaurant is experienced at handling the occasion with discretion.
Not For
Skip it if you want an only-in-Dallas meal: apart from a couple of Texas dishes, Nobu runs the same global template here as in London or Tokyo.
Common Questions
Is Nobu Dallas worth it? Yes, if you want reliable, high-technique Japanese-Peruvian food in a polished room. Nobu Matsuhisa's signatures — black cod miso, yellowtail jalapeño, rock shrimp tempura — are executed here to the brand standard, and the Crescent Court setting suits a client dinner or a celebration. At roughly $150 to $300 a head it is expensive, and the menu is global rather than local, but the cooking holds up.
How hard is it to book Nobu Dallas? Not especially hard, but book the counter and prime weekend slots ahead. Reserve through OpenTable or the restaurant; weeknights are usually available within a few days, while Friday and Saturday and the sushi counter fill faster. For a special occasion, call the restaurant directly and ask the team to arrange seating and pacing.
What should I order at Nobu Dallas? Start with the three signatures: black cod with miso, yellowtail with jalapeño, and rock shrimp tempura. For the full range, take the counter omakase, around $225, and let the kitchen lead. Japanese A5 Wagyu is available by the ounce as a supplement. If you want something only here, the ranchero rib eye is a Dallas-only dish.
What does dinner at Nobu Dallas cost? Plan roughly $150 to $300 per person before drinks, depending on whether you order à la carte or the omakase, which lands around $225. Japanese A5 Wagyu adds a per-ounce supplement, and wine or a sake pairing pushes the figure higher. Sunday brunch is a gentler entry point at about $75 per person.
What is the dress code at Nobu Dallas? Smart-casual. This is a hotel fine-dining room, so collared shirts, dresses and smart denim all work; jackets are welcome but not required. Beachwear and athletic wear are out of place. The room skews polished in the evening, so err toward the dressier end for a client dinner or a celebration.