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Neighborhood Sushi Opens in Dallas, Bringing Austin’s Beloved Japanese Restaurant to Highland Park

The Austin favorite debuts its first Dallas location at the Shops of Highland Park with seasonal sushi, an expanded yakitori program, and one of the city’s most memorable desserts
Written By: author avatar Megha McSwain
author avatar Megha McSwain
Megha McSwain is the Texas Editor for DiningOut Magazine, managing editorial content for Houston and Dallas. Megha was born in Mumbai, India, and currently resides in Houston. She has a passion for reporting on food, restaurants, chefs, and travel, and has contributed to outlets like Food Network, Eater, InsideHook, Resy, Texas Monthly, and Texas Highways throughout her career. As a trusted member of the local media, Megha also appears as a regular guest on local lifestyle television shows, Great Day Houston on KHOU11, and Texas Today on NBC5.
Natural light pours through a skylight onto Neighborhood Sushi's signature communal table, the centerpiece of the warm, wood-clad dining room. | Photo by Justin Cook
Natural light pours through a skylight onto Neighborhood Sushi's signature communal table, the centerpiece of the warm, wood-clad dining room. | Photo by Justin Cook

To say Dallas is excited about Neighborhood Sushi would be an understatement. 

From Austin-based MML Hospitality, Neighborhood Sushi opened on June 30 at the Shops of Highland Park, marking the restaurant’s first expansion beyond Austin. Since debuting in 2020, the polished neighborhood sushi spot has built a cult following for its  seasonal sushi and approachable take on Japanese dining. Dallas diners wasted no time embracing the concept.

By 8 a.m. on a Thursday, OpenTable showed the restaurant had already been booked more than 200 times that day, only a handful of dinner reservations remained. DiningOut stopped by for a first look. 

Neighborhood Sushi's understated entrance, tucked behind the Shops of Highland Park, evokes the hidden alleyway izakayas of Tokyo. | Photo by Desiree Gutierrez
Neighborhood Sushis understated entrance tucked behind the Shops of Highland Park evokes the hidden alleyway izakayas of Tokyo | Photo by Desiree Gutierrez

First thing’s first: There’s no obvious front entrance. Walk around the back of the shopping strip and you’ll see a nearly incognito back stoop with a sleek black door and minimalist wooden framed sign. Its playful first impression nods to alleyway entrances in Tokyo’s izakayas, and adds an “if you know, you know” allure neighboring one of Dallas’ most affluent communities.

Neighborhood Sushi isn’t trying to dethrone Dallas’ omakase heavyweights. Instead, it focuses on pristine seafood, thoughtful cooking, and a polished ambiance that’s elevated, not pretentious. 

Chefs prepare sushi behind the open kitchen counter at Neighborhood Sushi's first Dallas location. | Photo by Justin Cook
Chefs prepare sushi behind the open kitchen counter at Neighborhood Sushis first Dallas location | Photo by Justin Cook

A narrow, dark plaster hallway opens into a warm dining room wrapped in maple wood, cane paneling, shibori-dyed norin curtains, and Japanese tile. The dining room’s pièce de résistance is a 12-seat table situated beneath a skylight. Natural light pours in spotlighting a centerpiece airy tablescape of greenery. 

Open daily from 11:30 a.m. to 10 p.m., the menu spans everything from shareables, such as the tongue-tingling grilled edamame sprinkled with sansho, ponzu, and sea salt, to tempura, yakitori, nigiri, sashimi, rolls, and hand rolls.

The Birds Nest Salad at Neighborhood Sushi is a feast for the eyes. | Photo by Justin Cook
The Birds Nest Salad at Neighborhood Sushi is a feast for the eyes | Photo by Justin Cook

Standouts include the Birds Nest Salad, an eyecatching dish that surrounds a silky raw quail egg with ribbons of cabbage and crisp potato. It’s light and crunchy. The egg drop soup and miso soup are soothing.

Seafood may be the main character, but the vegetable nigiri steals the show. The sweet corn nigiri snaps with flavor from togarashi butter, serrano, and cilantro. The sweet and sour eggplant is an early Dallas favorite: garlicky and spicy. Executive chef In Chun’s shrimp-stuffed basil leaf tempura is light, their crisp shells envelope sweet shrimp and fragrant basil. Tempura is served with tentsuyu, a traditional Japanese dipping sauce, and aioli. For volume, order the mixed vegetable platter.

Neighborhood Sushi Dallas flaunts an extended yakitori program. King Trumpet mushrooms with crispy garlic, chives and vegetarian tare come two skewers to an order. The Mishima Reserve Wagyu with kizami chimichurri is a carnivorous delight. Don’t dismiss the asparagus. The lemon-miso aioli brightens the earthy, tender bites. 

The chef's selection of seasonal nigiri highlights pristine seafood sourced from Japan and beyond. | Photo by Justin Cook
The chefs selection of seasonal nigiri highlights pristine seafood sourced from Japan and beyond | Photo by Justin Cook

Neighborhood Sushi can be as approachable or as indulgent as you make it. Individual nigiri ranges from $5 to $17, while specialities and hand rolls elevate the bill. Lunch and happy hour are lighter on the wallet.

Lunch combos arrive with iced green or black tea and soup or small salad. The $19 Light Lunch features three pieces of nigiri. The $35 Chirashi, Japanese for scattered sushi, includes chef-selected sashimi over rice. Happy hour, offered Monday through Friday from 3 to 5 p.m., boasts beer, sake, and specialty cocktails for $10, while tempura and yaki are half off. 

The menu rounds out with desserts. The Kakigori, a mound of mango sherbert piled high with shaved ice, is not to be missed. Prickly pear, pineapple, and coconut creams accompany the gigantic snow cone for a build-your-own flavor indulgence. As the creams melt into the shaved ice, it transforms into a rainbow of color where every bite tastes different than the last.  

The Kakigori, topped with shaved ice and served with prickly pear, pineapple, and coconut creams, is one of Neighborhood Sushi's standout desserts. | Photo by Desiree Gutierrez
The Kakigori topped with shaved ice and served with prickly pear pineapple and coconut creams is one of Neighborhood Sushis standout desserts | Photo by Desiree Gutierrez

Chun compiles a daily Neighborhood Specials menu with everything from specialty fish collar, to featured cocktails and sorbet. Daily specials range from bluefin tuna gunkan to fish collars and pork belly yakitori, giving diners a reason to return.

Neighborhood Sushi is only the beginning of MML Hospitality in Dallas. The chef-founded hospitality group is also bringing Clark’s Oyster Bar to the city this fall. If Neighborhood Sushi is any indication, Dallas diners won’t wait long to snag those reservations either. 

Neighborhood Sushi, 4216 Oak Lawn Ave., Dallas, neighborhoodsushi.com

author avatar
Megha McSwain Texas Managing Editor
Megha McSwain is the Texas Editor for DiningOut Magazine, managing editorial content for Houston and Dallas. Megha was born in Mumbai, India, and currently resides in Houston. She has a passion for reporting on food, restaurants, chefs, and travel, and has contributed to outlets like Food Network, Eater, InsideHook, Resy, Texas Monthly, and Texas Highways throughout her career. As a trusted member of the local media, Megha also appears as a regular guest on local lifestyle television shows, Great Day Houston on KHOU11, and Texas Today on NBC5.
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