Canal Cafe (Photo: Sarah Mathews)

Canal Cafe, Iidabashi

Great atmosphere, food and coffee

Canal Cafe (Photo: Sarah Mathews)
Sarah Mathews   - 2 min read

If you are looking for a place to chill out one afternoon, then I can highly recommend Canal Cafe, in the trendy suburb of Kagurazaka, located right near Iidabashi station. There aren’t that many places in Tokyo where you can eat outside and enjoy a nice view, but this is one of them.

I first came across Canal Cafe when I rode my bicycle past it one day during the cherry blossom season. At the time there was a huge line to get in. Given its location right on the river (more correctly part of the outer moat of the Imperial Palace), which is lined with cherry trees, I can certainly see why. I didn’t go in that day, but a few months later I went there with a friend one afternoon. It was a weekday, but it was still packed with women and young looking couples (no doubt students from one of the many nearby universities).

Canal Cafe consists of quite an upmarket looking restaurant, and also a cafe. We tried the cafe. When you enter there is a counter displaying all the sweet food and the menu. You must order here first, and then you can grab a table anywhere along the deck. We only had a muffin and coffee/tea, but the menu has more substantial food with an Italian theme (Panini, pasta, pizza etc.). From what I saw, these looked pretty good. The muffins, although small by Western standards, were very tasty, and the drinks were good too. If you order anything other than the small sweet items, you are given a buzzer to take to your table, which goes off once your food is ready. You then go back to the counter to collect it.

Probably more important than the food though, is the atmosphere. Particularly in summer, Canal Cafe is great, as the breeze off the water, coupled with the green trees, almost make you forget that you are in the middle of summer in one of the busiest cities in the world! There are also rowboats for hire if you feel like doing some exercise, rather than just relaxing on the deck!

Sarah Mathews

Sarah Mathews @sarah.mathews

I lived in Japan for a year in 1997 as a high school exchange student, at the age of 16. I had such a great experience and fell in love with the place. After my exchange I returned to Australia, completed high school and University, and worked as an Accountant for eight years. I have always wante...