
Veronica Penney

Audio By Carbonatix
Stanley Marketplace boasts two charcuterie shops, a pizzeria, a brewery, a winery, barbecue, bagels, empanadas, even a chocolatier. Misaki, the newest addition to the restaurant lineup, now brings sushi to 2501 Dallas Street, at the edge of Aurora and Stapleton.
Misaki’s menu offers a full selection of nigiri, sushi rolls and chef specialties, with most standard sushi rolls coming in under eight dollars – the typical happy-hour pricing at many Denver sushi restaurants. Executive chef Jesus Silva, known in the Denver restaurant scene for his work at Osaka Ramen and Silva’s Fish Market, has crafted a menu full of options.

The Stanley Roll combines bincho, avocado tempura and lightly seared tuna tataki, all finished with a spicy ponzu.
Veronica Penney
In addition to classic rolls including shrimp tempura and spicy poke, Silva’s lineup of chef sushi rolls includes the Misaki roll with tuna poke, avocado tempura, mustard yuzu sauce and maguro tataki sashimi; and a salmon tartare roll with salmon, capers, white onions

Misaki’s chicken karaage boasts tender chicken and a flaky, crisp breading.
Veronica Penney
You won’t find Misaki’s chicken
Owners Charlene and Robert Thai are no newcomers to sushi. Charlene is the general manager of Asahi Food, an HAACP-certified seafood warehouse and importing company, which gives Misaki access to the freshest fish available. Robert, in turn, brings over a decade of experience managing Denver sushi restaurants.
Misaki softly opened in December with the intent of weekend-only hours, but unanticipated popularity spurred the Thais to stay open for business seven days a week since day one. Daily hours are 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. for lunch and 4 to 9 p.m. for dinner.
In the coming months, customers will be able to get a taste of Silva’s famous ramen as he continues to build out Misaki’s menu.