Restaurant: Shin-Sen-Gumi Yakitori Izakaya – West L.A.
Location: 1601 Sawtelle Blvd, Ste 101, Los Angeles, CA 90025 | +1 (424) 208-3293
Date: November 4, 2025
Cuisine: Japanese Yakitori & Izakaya
Rating: Fun Yakitori Night on a Budget!
Family night with the Foodie Club took us to Shin-Sen-Gumi Yakitori Izakaya on Sawtelle, and I’ll admit I had low expectations going in. I’ve been to Shin-Sen-Gumi a number of times before for mediocre ramen—the kind of serviceable but forgettable bowls that get the job done without leaving much impression. But they’ve apparently expanded into yakitori and izakaya territory, offering a large assortment of random izakaya dishes alongside those signature grilled skewers. With the family crew in tow and a craving for something casual and fun, we figured we’d give the new concept a shot.
Turns out, this is a completely different experience from the ramen side of the business. The vibe is classic izakaya—lively, unpretentious, with an open kitchen where chefs shout friendly greetings and the steady rhythm of skewers hitting the grill creates a buzzing energy. It’s the kind of place where you order rounds of small plates, share everything, and wash it down with sake or beer. And here’s the kicker: it’s VERY reasonable. For the amount of food and the quality of certain dishes, this is a serious value play in a city where izakaya meals can get pricey fast.
The specialty here is yakitori—skewers of meat, seafood, and vegetables grilled over high-grade charcoal, creating that essential smoky char. The open kitchen design lets you watch the meticulous preparation of each skewer, turning dinner into a kind of culinary theater. But beyond the yakitori, the menu sprawls into all manner of izakaya classics: fried things, grilled things, pickled things, and a few creative riffs on Japanese pub food.
We brought some serious Burgundy to elevate the proceedings: from my cellar, 2014 Hubert Lamy Saint-Aubin 1er Cru (Premier Cru Chardonnay with that characteristic minerality and stone fruit), 2014 Chablis Premier Cru Vaillons (classic steely Chablis with razor-sharp acidity), 2014 Maison Deux Montille Le Clou (another elegant white Burgundy), and for the reds, 2005 Louis Jadot Clos Vougeot Grand Cru—a stunning Pinot Noir from one of Burgundy’s most prestigious vineyards. Pairing Grand Cru Burgundy with yakitori might seem like overkill, but honestly, the smoky char and umami-rich sauces made it work beautifully.
Cheese Eggrolls—hot, but not that great. The idea was there (melted cheese in a crispy wrapper), but the execution was a bit greasy and the cheese filling lacked flavor.
Potato Salad was really good—creamy, slightly sweet in that Japanese style, with chunks of potato and a hint of tang.
Grilled Squid—tender with a nice char, brushed with soy-based tare.
Mushrooms—likely shiitake or king oyster, grilled until smoky and concentrated.
Agedashi Tofu—not bad. Silken tofu fried until golden, sitting in dashi broth with grated daikon and scallions.
Grilled Fish—a whole fish (likely mackerel or similar) grilled until the skin crisped and the flesh stayed moist.
Shishito Peppers—blistered and salted, with that addictive mild heat punctuated by the occasional spicy outlier.
Fried Oysters—plump and briny inside a crispy panko crust.
Okra—grilled until charred and slimy in the best way, a textural counterpoint to the meatier skewers.
Then came the yakitori parade, and this is where Shin-Sen-Gumi really delivers.
Sausages—my favorite! Juicy, snappy chicken or pork sausages with a beautiful char and that essential yakitori smoke.
Chicken with Scallions—negima style, alternating chicken and scallion on the skewer, the onion sweetening as it caramelizes.
A Different Chicken Bit—possibly thigh meat, tender and succulent.
Liver—a bit strong. Chicken liver has that intense, mineral-rich flavor that can be polarizing, and this one leaned aggressive.
Grilled Eel—yum! Unagi glazed with that sweet-savory tare, the flesh tender and rich.
A Different Meat—hard to say exactly what cut, but delicious nonetheless.
Chicken Thighs with Scallions—another negima variation, showcasing the dark meat’s richer flavor.
Crunchy Chicken Bits—maybe chicken skin, fried until shatteringly crisp and addictive.
Bacon Wrapped Cheese!—exactly what it sounds like, and exactly as indulgent as you’d expect.
Bacon Wrapped Tomatoes—the tomato’s acidity cutting through the bacon’s richness.
Beef Stew with that slightly sweet Japanese beef stew vibe—nikujaga-style with tender beef, potatoes, and carrots in a soy-sweetened broth.
Poultry Drummettes—little drumsticks glazed and grilled.
Chicken Wings—always a crowd-pleaser, crispy and caramelized.
Beef—likely short rib or similar, marbled and rich.
A Different Chicken—the parade continued, each skewer slightly different.
And a Different One—or maybe bacon wrapped chicken, the lines blur when you’re deep into the yakitori zone.
Yum! The grilling technique at full display.
Green Tea Crème Brûlée—a fitting finish, with matcha lending bitter elegance to the custard beneath that shattered sugar crust.
This was a very fun dinner, and I can’t stress enough how VERY reasonable it was. For the sheer volume of food—dozens of skewers, appetizers, stew, dessert—and the quality of the yakitori, this is one of the better value plays in LA’s Japanese dining scene. Sure, parking is quite sketch (Sawtelle being Sawtelle), but once you’re inside, the energy and the food make up for the hassle.
The standouts were clear: those sausages were my favorite, with their juicy snap and perfect char. The grilled eel brought that classic unagi richness. The potato salad—simple but executed really well—proved that sometimes the basics matter most. Even the beef stew, with its gently sweet Japanese profile, hit the comfort food spot perfectly.
Were there misses? Sure. The cheese eggrolls were hot but not that great—more concept than execution. The liver was a bit strong for my taste, though liver lovers might disagree. And the agedashi tofu was just “not bad,” which is to say perfectly serviceable without being memorable.
But here’s the thing: when you’re doing izakaya dining, you expect a mix. You order a bunch of stuff, some of it lands, some doesn’t, and you keep the sake or wine flowing while you figure out what to order next. The hits far outnumbered the misses here, and the atmosphere—lively, welcoming, with that open kitchen theater—made the whole experience feel festive and fun. Perfect for a family night with the Foodie Club, where the goal is less about chasing perfection and more about enjoying good company, good value, and a whole lot of grilled skewers.
Shin-Sen-Gumi’s yakitori and izakaya concept is a major upgrade from their ramen operation. If you’re looking for a casual, affordable Japanese meal on the Westside with solid yakitori fundamentals and a fun vibe, this is a winner. Just be prepared for sketchy parking and order way more sausages than you think you need.
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