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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Friday, March 17, 2006

THE NIGHT STUFF
Koi rolls out sushi, sake in urbanely chic lounge

By Derek Paiva
Advertiser Entertainment Writer

From left, Alex Pula, Tasha Tanaka and Nick Ponce have dinner at the Koi Sushi Bar & Sake Lounge on Kapi'olani Boulevard, formerly the site of Blue Tropix.

ANDREW SHIMABUKU | The Honolulu Advertiser

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The sushi bar is surrounded by a koi pond. Patrons cross a bridge to get there.

ANDREW SHIMABUKU | The Honolulu Advertiser

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KOI SUSHI BAR & SAKE LOUNGE

WHERE: 1700 Kapi'olani Blvd., 944-4848

HOURS: 5 p.m.-2 a.m. Wednesdays-Mondays; DJs from 8:30 p.m.-closing Fridays and Saturdays

OUR ORDER: All highly recommended: crispy dynamite chicken ($10), filet mignon beef sashimi ($16), 'ahi sujiko martini ($10), spicy chef special tuna roll ($12)

SPOTTED: "Lost" cast members Daniel Dae Kim and Harold Perrineau

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Jasmin Bonilla, left, and Joy Gaoiran relaxed at Koi's L-shaped bar, which faces tanks full of colorful fish.

ANDREW SHIMABUKU | The Honolulu Advertiser

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Sushi chef Mark Pomaski prepared a dish at the sushi bar in the Koi Sushi Bar & Sake Lounge on a recent evening.

ANDREW SHIMABUKU | The Honolulu Advertiser

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A chill soundtrack of Common, Zapp and Al Green instead of koto and shakuhachi offered a sweet-enough welcome.

But a mondo menu of sushi rolls and nigirizushi, sashimi creations and Asian fusion appetizers — delicious and coolly inventive — was the best part of a recent Friday evening visit to Koi Sushi Bar & Sake Lounge.

When Koi opened a couple of months back in the gutted, refurnished, relit and monkey-free former home of Blue Tropix, I was surprised its concept hadn't been claimed here sooner.

Miss the old Sansei Seafood Restaurant & Sushi Bar's weekend Sushi Lounge with its late-night food and drink menu and turntablists at Restaurant Row? Koi offers its own spin nightly (except Tuesdays) — with DJs or an eclectic piped-in soundtrack, pau hana through late night — for the same stylish, urban professional sushi-and-sake-seeking twentysomething crowd. And with a better menu.

Arriving 'round 9 p.m., my partner in Night Stuff and I scored the last of the lounge's dozen or so living-room-style seat-and-table pods. There were a few seats at Koi's large L-shaped bar fronting monster fish tanks. A half-dozen seats at Koi's novel sushi bar — you have to cross a wooden bridge over an indoor koi pond to reach it — were all spoken for.

Discreet spots gave off just enough light to preserve Koi's urbane lounge vibe. TLC boasted its inability to get with a deadbeat (expletive). And after 10 minutes, we finally pared our order from two dozen potentials to just four items — most moderately priced and nicely portioned, all well-presented and delectable enough to guarantee a return visit. (See below.)

Still more intriguing menu offerings from executive chefs Grant Kawasaki and Norlan Horita will debut in the weeks ahead.

If Koi starts offering sake flights, I may move in.

Reach Derek Paiva at dpaiva@honoluluadvertiser.com.