New York Home > Food > Hoofing It
Published October 12, 2007
You've always gone your own way. We don't see this changing before Monday.
So while the rest of the city dines on spicy tuna this weekend, better to duck into a fresh hole-in-the-wall
in the West Village and experience a whole new extreme—or should we say "extremity"—of Japanese
cuisine: the hoof.
The provider: Hakata Tonton, a spare 24-seat box of a restaurant that opened to the public last
night.
The main event at Tonton is tonsoku, a chunk of rich protein made from pig's feet. You can find it
in almost every dish: It's blended into the stews, where its greasy richness can spread out and dominate;
it's cooked into gyoza (dumplings) with some tender chicken bones; it's layered over Linguini
Carbonara, in case you're feeling fusion-y. You can even savor it as a deep-fried appetizer.
The age-defying bonus: Turns out tonsoku, as well as Chef Himi Okajima's other delicacies like
shark fin, are filled with collagen, that magical substance proven to keep hair and skin looking vibrant and
undergrad-y. (You'll appear younger with every bite.)
Hakata is still BYOB, but wait a few weeks and they'll be doling out sake just like the rest of the
neighborhood.
Which is one example of conformity you don't actually mind.
Hakata Tonton
61 Grove St
(at 7th Ave)
West Village
New York, NY 10014
212-242-3699
Hakata Tonton
61 Grove St
(at 7th Ave)
West Village
New York, NY 10014
212-242-3699
website