Jugemu & Shimbashi
On Military Road, a single address holds two Japanese kitchens with separate doors, separate moods and one shared menu you can order across. One half is given over to soba and takes it seriously: Tasmanian buckwheat is ground on a stone mill on the premises and the noodles are cut fresh twice a day, served in a quiet, traditional room where sunken tables ask you to leave your shoes at the edge. The other half is louder and hotter, an Osaka-style griddle house turning out okonomiyaki, the cabbage-bound savoury pancake layered with pork, prawn, calamari or scallop and lacquered in sweet brown sauce, alongside teppanyaki. It is an unusual pairing to find under one roof: the meditative discipline of hand-milled noodles beside the sizzle and clatter of a Kansai pancake grill. Regulars tend to have a side they prefer, though the freedom to pull tempura from one menu and okonomiyaki from the other is part of the appeal. Open for dinner Tuesday to Sunday, it reads less like a restaurant with a theme than two small specialists who happened to move in together, each doing one thing with real conviction and letting you have both.