Set on the edge of the Noosa River, this long-running modern Japanese room has built its name on an omakase that trusts the kitchen entirely: a seven- or nine-course degustation that shifts with the season and the day's fish. What sets it apart is the ground it stands on. Since 2012 the restaurant has run its own farm, Honeysuckle Hill, growing the Japanese herbs, vegetables and rarities that would otherwise be near impossible to source in coastal Queensland, and pairing them with the Sunshine Coast's produce and seafood. The result is Japanese technique rooted in a specific place, river below and hinterland behind, rather than an imported template. The dining room makes the most of the water, poised for a slow, considered meal where courses arrive in sequence and the wine and sake list is chosen to keep pace. This is degustation dining rather than a quick sushi stop, and it reads as such: measured, seasonal, quietly ambitious. It has become a Noosa destination for special-occasion eating, the sort of table booked for an anniversary or a long lunch that unspools across the afternoon. For modern Japanese on the Sunshine Coast, few kitchens match its commitment to growing what it plates.