ATXReview
photo credit: Richard Casteel
Top Roe
Dry-aged fish and handrolls reign supreme at Top Roe
Included In
Not unlike a combination Pizza Hut and Taco Bell, Top Roe has two formats under the same Downtown roof, and which side you choose to sit on makes all the difference. One side is a sleek, minimalist handroll bar where chefs whip up nori-wrapped parcels of rice and fish from a series of preordained menus faster than you can order another sake. The other is a dark, swanky izakaya with a longer menu of grilled skewers, fried snacks, sashimi, sushi rolls, and large-format steaks. Top Roe manages to make some of the best handrolls in the city while also offering an izakaya experience that feels both distinctly Japanese and uniquely Austin.
photo credit: Richard Casteel
photo credit: Richard Casteel
photo credit: Richard Casteel
Despite feeling like different restaurants, both spaces share a few key elements: high-quality fish, solid drinks, dramatic lighting, and a lively hip-hop-fueled playlist. There’s also a giant glass-door refrigerator in the middle, full of tuna slabs the size of cinder blocks that age for up to six weeks (and possibly develop their own personalities in the process).
The handroll bar is ideal for a quick solo meal or an efficient date night—expect to be in and out in under an hour. The izakaya, on the other hand, is built for lingering. This is where you’ll want to show up with a small group, order an excessive number of skewers and sushi rolls, and finish off with a slab of 40-day dry-aged tuna belly served over a bed of hot coals that smoke and sizzle on the table. Across both menus, you’ll find Texas touches—like Rice Krispies karaage with watermelon hot sauce, or Gulf redfish sashimi—that make the whole place feel like it was born right here in Austin.
photo credit: Richard Casteel
Food Rundown
photo credit: Richard Casteel
Cocktails
photo credit: Richard Casteel
Seasonal Kakiage
photo credit: Richard Casteel
Handrolls
photo credit: Richard Casteel
Crunchy Tuna Futomaki
photo credit: Richard Casteel
Yakimono
photo credit: Richard Casteel
Blue Fin Toro Steak