There are lunch spots, and then there are lunch experiences that make you rearrange your entire afternoon just to linger a little longer. Hai Street Kitchen & Co., tucked into the bustling Frisco Square development near the intersection of Main Street and the Dallas North Tollway, falls firmly into the second category. The moment you walk through the door, the energy is immediate — bright, lively, and unmistakably welcoming.
Hai Street Kitchen is built around one beautifully simple idea: the Japanese-inspired sushi burrito. Picture a full-sized hand roll, roughly the diameter of a softball, packed with fresh, vibrant ingredients that span cultures and cravings with equal confidence. You choose your base — think seasoned sushi rice or crispy quinoa — then layer on proteins like spicy tuna, miso-glazed chicken, or roasted sweet potato, and finish with sauces, crunchy toppings, and house-made additions that bring everything together. It sounds straightforward on paper, but the execution is anything but ordinary.
What sets Hai Street apart from your average fast-casual build-your-own concept is the quality and intentionality behind every component. The fish is fresh, the vegetables are prepped daily, and the sauces — oh, the sauces — are house-crafted and genuinely complex. The signature Baller sauce, a creamy, slightly sweet blend that works on virtually everything, has developed a loyal following among regulars who plan their weekly schedules around a visit. The Frisco location draws a diverse crowd: young professionals grabbing a power lunch, families seeking something more interesting than the usual burger run, and college students from nearby campuses who have quietly made this their unofficial dining hall.
The space itself is cheerful and casual without feeling generic. Counter seating lines the windows, making it an excellent perch for people-watching in the Frisco Square plaza. The staff moves with practiced efficiency while still managing to be genuinely warm — a combination that is rarer than it should be.
If you are visiting Frisco for the first time or you are a longtime local who somehow has not made it through these doors yet, go hungry and go curious. Try the sushi burrito first, then circle back for the poke bowl on your next visit, because there absolutely will be a next visit. The portions are generous, the prices are reasonable for the quality, and the whole experience leaves you feeling like you discovered something worth telling people about.
Frisco Square itself is worth a stroll before or after your meal — there are boutique shops, coffee spots, and a lovely central plaza that captures the best of what this city has become: polished, approachable, and full of pleasant surprises. Hai Street Kitchen is one of the brightest among them.