Walking into Juu.Ku, chef Andrew Fung’s new restaurant in Terwillegar, is like climbing into the sleek interior of a red-and-black lacquered bento box.
Divided into sections, Juu.Ku is designed to offer diners several different ways to approach its pan-Asian menu. Couples may enjoy the side-by-side seats at one end of the restaurant, while larger groups might want a dim sum-style roundtable. No matter where you sit, you’ll have a view of three large and stunning portrait paintings with Japanese iconography by Tim Okamura, a Sherwood Park-born superstar of the art world.
Juu.Ku is the Japanese word for “nineteen,” or rather XIX Nineteen, the name of Fung’s flagship restaurant located next door. While his first spot immediately earned the Hong Kong–born chef a reputation for tireless attention to food and service when it opened in 2012, his new venture is the restaurant that Fung, now 47, has wanted to open since culinary school at NAIT.
Driven by a creative east-meets-west collision of style and craft, Juu.Ku reflects Fung’s roots, but also his evolution as a chef. And with the success of XIX Nineteen tucked under his chef whites and the backing of loyal investors for the $2.2 million build, Fung says the time feels right to make his dream come true. “Nineteen was a great show,” he says. “We wondered, can we do another great show?”
The answer is yes.
We began our night at the cozy bar, sipping an Umeshu Sidecar. Heady with the floral scent of plum wine, the cocktail paired well with two appetizers: a poké taco finished with a salty snap of Canadian caviar and a classic NYC Chinatown pork and shrimp eggroll with a crunchy shell. For our next course, we moved to the sushi bar. Munching through the signature Juu.Ku roll, a collaboration of cream cheese and crab meat with spicy mayo, we marvelled as chef Jack Lee prepared sushi with a blow torch and a razor-sharp knife while answering numerous questions by diners. It was impressive, and just plain fun to watch.