create dishes you want?
Absolutely! I have a head chef in every restaurant who is in charge of the daily running and my job is to mentor them, work with them on our products and ensure we are developing as a company as we want to continue expanding and moving forward. We want to make it something special and everyone plays a part.
What is the creative process behind ROKA dishes?
We focus on the products, those that come to the market and those we go searching for. It’s all about the team in each restaurant and its location – this is very important. We talk to customers and find out what they like and we use the seasons as well. Each team works on the dishes and then I work with them side by side once they have developed them. We also have a ROKA News board in each restaurant where new development dishes go on every few months. Any dishes that are well received here find their way on to our main menu.
As a Japanese restaurant are all your dishes inspired by Japan or do you take ideas from elsewhere?

The biggest inspiration is Japan of course, I’ve just had a trip there and I have a million ideas for dishes and products I want to reintroduce. But my own inspiration generally comes from the chefs in the team. They work on something and I can help develop it to the next level and bring in different things. Seasonal produce is also always a big inspiration, it really helps us along the way looking at what’s available on the market – we wouldn’t call it a seasonal menu but seasons are a good guide. And we do use a lot pf local produce not just what we bring in from Japan.
Do you and the team go to Japan often?
Not as often as we would like but we always pick up something new when we do. It’s often something old that we haven’t discovered yet! Japan’s food culture is so old they have so many things they have been doing for years and years in every village or town. For us it’s an expansion of our knowledge of their culture and how each region does things.
After years of experiencing different cultures and cuisines, what is your individual cooking style and food philosophy?
I think cooking is an evolution. I don’t think anyone has any one style which they stick to, we all try and do the best we can. My philosophy is I try and take a good product and make it sing, make it shine. It may sound a bit corny but also customer’s enjoyment, one thing I've learnt working at ROKA is that it’s about the customer. We want to make them happy, we want to give them something they’ve never tried before but we have to listen to what they like.
How do you source your ingredients?
We’re a well-established restaurant now, we’re ten years old so we have great connections across all the different markets. We have a couple of key butchers, two great fish suppliers and obviously our local grocers. The sheer volume can be a hindrance at times as we can’t target smaller producers as we need to deliver consistency across all of the restaurants. But we do have amazing products and itss taken ten years to get right and make sure we have the best of the best for our volume.
Although using wild ingredients isn’t an option for ROKA is it something you’ve cooked with in the past?
In New Zealand we did, we had a great lifestyle hunting and picking porcini mushrooms – I love the idea of it. I think it can be a little bit over sold, the price of foraged stuff can be ridiculous. The romance of getting out there at five o’clock in the morning and foraging before you come into the restaurant is not really practical for us. Foraged products have transformed British cuisine in the past few years, for the better.
Do you have a favourite dish on the menu at the moment?
In the new Aldwych restaurant we have a Wagu tartare. We are lucky enough to have Wagu which is Japanese for beef, supplied by a company called Joshu Wagyu and their quality of beef is amazing - Wagu is really creamy and luscious. The dish is very different and is made with a black seaweed cracker, wasabi and a little bit of Japanese mustard. It’s a simple dish but it’s getting great feedback and it’s an original dish for that restaurant.
The new ROKA in Aldwych is now open - read about it here