
“Individual hot pot counters where the sukiyaki broth is the real star and vegetarians actually get treated right.”
Bar-style counter seating where you cook your own hot pot — keeps the experience intimate and the prices moderate.
Counter seating with personal hot pot stations — reviewers note it's 'better for a date or going solo rather than for big groups'.
Sweet broth specifically called out as 'one of the best broths I've had' — this is what regulars come back for.
One reviewer notes 'great vegetarian options' and fair pricing ('don't have to pay full price although I'm vegetarian').
“Tabu Shabu brings individual-pot hot pot to the 30th Street corridor—a DIY broth ritual at a bar counter, not a group-table steam pit.”
While Olympic's doing forty-year phyllo and Kin Len's locked into Isaan street funk, Tabu Shabu operates in a different rhythm entirely: you sit at a counter, tend your own bubbling pot, and cook premium cuts to order in broths that split the difference between dashi clarity and sukiyaki sweetness. This isn't the communal-vat hot pot experience where everyone shares one broth and debates when the noodles are ready—each diner gets their own induction burner and builds their bowl in real time, which makes it weirdly meditative for solo weeknight eating or functional for dates where conversation matters more than coordination.
The sukiyaki broth consistently gets called out in reviews for good reason—it's rich, slightly sweet, subtly savory, and holds up through multiple dips without turning muddy. The Angus ribeye and Wagyu plates arrive with visible marbling and cook fast in the simmering liquid; portions of vegetables, rice, and noodles come standard and generous enough that you're not nickel-and-dimed into satiation. The bar-counter setup means you're watching your own pot instead of flagging down a server, which works if you want control and fails if you prefer to be hands-off.
The space skews clean and modern without trying to cosplay as a Tokyo import—it's a North Park build-out that knows its role in the 30th Street ecosystem: approachable enough for weeknight regulars, novel enough to pull date-night curiosity, vegetarian-friendly enough that non-meat eaters aren't paying full price for half a meal. Kids get crayons and coloring sheets; solo diners get a functional bar seat and the rare satisfaction of controlling every variable in their dinner. It's not theatrical, it's not trying to teach you hot pot history—it's just a clean execution of a format that works whether you're killing time before the Observatory or meeting friends who actually want to talk instead of coordinate.
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Pretzels & Pints offers casual drinks and bar bites after a hot pot dinner, perfect for extending the evening with a complementary vibe.
North Park · Venue
Jeni's Splendid Ice Creams provides a sweet, cold dessert to cool down after the warm shabu shabu experience, just a short walk away.
3647 30th St, San Diego, CA 92104, USA
7 months ago