Enma

Top choice in Beppu


This busy spot may be the only restaurant in the world where you steam your own meal and eat it while dangling your feet in a foot bath. Order from a machine, take your lunch to the steamer (you can even order onsen-steamed pizza; up to ¥1500) and – ba-da-bing! – welcome to Beppu. Reservations suggested.


Lonely Planet's must-see attractions

Nearby Beppu attractions

1. Shira-ike Jigoku

0.24 MILES

One of the Kannawa group's hells, Shira-ike has blue-white water and a Japanese garden. It tends to be the quietest of the neighbourhood's jigoku (hells;…

2. Kamado Jigoku

0.27 MILES

So named because it was once used for cooking (kamado means stove in Japanese). One of the Kannawa group's jigoku (hells; boiling hot springs).

3. Oni-yama Jigoku

0.27 MILES

Oni-yama is especially known for the 80-plus crocodiles that have been bred here since the Taishō period (1912–26). It's one of the Kannawa group's jigoku…

4. Yama Jigoku

0.39 MILES

Yama is not included in the onsen meguri ticket and must be visited separately. A variety of animals are kept here in enclosures that look uncomfortably…

5. Oniishibōzu Jigoku

0.42 MILES

One of the Kannawa group's jigoku (hells; boiling hot springs), Oniishibōzu has bubbling grey mud that looks like a monk's shaved head.

6. Umi Jigoku

0.42 MILES

Umi is a steamy blue due to iron oxide in its 98°C water. It's said to be about 200m down to the source. One of the Kannawa group's jigoku (hells; boiling…

7. Tatsumaki Jigoku

0.85 MILES

Set in Beppu's smaller group of jigoku (hells; boiling hot springs), Tatsumaki has a geyser that shoots off about every 35 minutes.

8. Chi-no-ike Jigoku

0.86 MILES

Chi-no-ike is named for its photogenic waters, said to be red like blood (chi). The colour comes from iron oxide and magnesium oxide. This is said to be…