Shobosho
The name nods to a fire station, and fire is the organising principle of this Leigh Street room: a customised yakitori pit, a wood oven, a hydraulic grill and a rotisserie all working at once. The menu is built as a journey from raw to cooked, sashimi and cured, pickled and fermented things at one end, charcoal-blackened skewers and slow-turned meats at the other, so a meal can move from delicate to smoky in a single sitting. It is modern Japanese cooking that respects the discipline of yakitori while borrowing the finesse of the raw bar, and the one-hat recognition it has drawn reflects that balance. The space suits Adelaide's small-lane dining culture, loose and convivial, better shared, with banquet menus for the table and a private room tucked away for six. Next door, a compact offshoot narrows the focus to charcoal-grilled sticks alone, an intimate perch for a smaller group and a stack of skewers. Open from midday into the evening across the back half of the week and dinner earlier on, it reads as a serious grill kitchen that never loses its sense of fun, smoke, steam and precision held in the same hand.