Skip to content
  • X

Subscribe

Magazine | Newsletters
  • Food & Drink
  • News
  • Culture
  • Style
  • Home
  • Family
  • Wellness
  • Things to Do
  • Travel
  • Best of NoVA
  • Best Restaurants
  • 50 Most Influential
  • Top High Schools
  • In This Issue
  • Home
    • Food & Drink
  • First Bite Review: Try Chantilly’s Izakaya Nana for Japanese Pub Grub
interior photo of the bar at Izakaya Nana
  • Food & Drink

First Bite Review: Try Chantilly’s Izakaya Nana for Japanese Pub Grub

With a wide variety of dishes on the menu, you’ll be transported to Tokyo at this new Japanese restaurant in Chantilly.

By Alice Levitt March 18, 2025 at 6:00 am

Earlier this month, I wrote about Japanese curry and its geographically back-and-forth inception. From Modan to Marufuji Japanese Market, Japanese food is gaining ground in our region. Part of that explosion is the recent debut of Izakaya Nana, which serves not only curry but other Japanese-Western fusion dishes, as well as its fair share of unique creations.

The sequel to a Flushing, Queens, location of the same name, the restaurant is an almost-theme-park-perfect representation of a Tokyo street. In fact, a YouTube video of a walk leading up to the Shibuya neighborhood plays on a screen at the front of the restaurant, demonstrating the similarity between Izakaya Nana’s urban-styled interior and the real city.

noodle dish at Izakaya Nana
Photo by Alice Levitt

Izakaya Nana’s Menu

The menu during the soft opening is abbreviated. In a few weeks, diners will be able to order from a yakitori menu and will have more sushi and dessert options. But I had more than enough choices.

My server told me that the must-try was the mentaiko cream udon bowl. Fun sushi dishes like sushi tacos and Crazy Nana roll, which features shrimp tempura, spicy lobster, and fried soft-shell crab, were priced too high for the day’s budget. So were the sizzling wagyu, foie gras, uni bowl and Ramen Nana with lobster and wagyu. I’ll consider returning for such unusual indulgences.

Instead, I started with the Bun Nana, a pair of pillowy bao filled with yielding pork belly and crunchy pickles. At $7.99, it was a steal, but not as much as the $8.99 crispy chile wings. The five oversized flats and drumettes crunched impressively despite their sweet, sour, and spicy coating of mango-based glaze.

Izakaya Nana
Photo by Alice Levitt

Curry for the Win

Speaking of Japanese curry, I tried Nana’s in the form of a tornado omurice. The restaurant’s gravy leans sweet with little spice to speak of, but it still made it hard to put down the swirled omelet that covered a chunky portion of chicken fried rice. That dish was my favorite of the day, and return trips will likely feature the katsu curry, too.

And that udon? A beautiful fusion of a sauce, which combines the European-style satisfaction of a creamy pasta dish with pollock roe. It was even better with a dusting of the chile powder, togarashi. Those who adhere to the old-fashioned rule of never mixing seafood and dairy need not apply. But those who don’t will be thoroughly satisfied, even if the noodles themselves could have been a touch more al dente.

I finished with a cute $3.99 taiyaki. The fish-shaped pastry was fried crisp and greasy, which is unusual, but did little to diminish my enjoyment of the sweet red bean paste inside.

When I moved to Virginia five years ago, there were shockingly few Japanese restaurants worth any notice. Now businesses like Izakaya Nana give me something to recommend when the craving strikes.

13882 Metrotech Dr., Chantilly

Feature image by Alice Levitt

Alice Levitt

Alice Levitt

Contributing Food Critic/Editor

Alice Levitt has been writing for Northern Virginia Magazine since 2020. She began her restaurant critic journey at Seven Days in Vermont in 2007 before moving on to Houstonia Magazine in Texas. Her food, travel, and health innovation stories have appeared in Vox, EatingWell, Simply Recipes, Allrecipes, and many other national publications.

  • Email

Trending in NoVA

Michelle Obama’s New Book Highlights Northern Virginia Hairstylists

Northern Virginia’s 10 Best Restaurant Dishes of 2025

13 Northern Virginia Houses with the Best Christmas Decorations

15 DMV Light Displays Still Open After Christmas Day

25 Things to Do in Northern Virginia this Winter

things to do newsletter

Our Top Stories In Your Inbox

Our newsletters delivered weekly.

Subscribe

Feeds

RSS Feed Follow in Feedly

You May Also Like

goat cheese ravioli at Brasserie Royale

Northern Virginia’s 10 Best Restaurant Dishes of 2025

interior photo of the bar at Izakaya Nana

7 Northern Virginia Izakaya-Style Restaurants for Japanese Bites

bakery items and coffees on blue plates on a white table

Sip and Snack at These 8 New Northern Virginia Cafés 

  • X

Company

  • About Us
  • Advertising
  • Writer’s Guidelines
  • Internships
  • Terms of Use

Magazine

  • Magazine
  • Subscription
  • Newsletter
  • Back Issues

Talk to Us

  • Contact Us
  • Submit an Event
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Instagram

Shopping

  • Subscription
  • Back Issues
  • Plaques
  • Realtor Client Gift Subscriptions

On Newsstands Now

january 2026 cover

Copyright © 2025 Northern Virginia Magazine

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply. Hey AI.