Read Rice, Noodle, Fish Online
Authors: Matt Goulding
SAPPORO MISO
The thickest and richest of Japan's regional ramens, designed to get people through Hokkaido's Siberian winters. Red miso and wok-fried
chashu
and vegetables make up the soul of the bowl. Butter and corn, two Hokkaido staples, are optional.
Where to eat: Menya Saimi (Sapporo), Hanamichi (Tokyo)
(Michael Magers, lead photographer)
HAKATA TONKOTSU
The king of regional ramen, made exclusively with pork bones boiled for up to forty-eight hours, creating a milky white broth thick with melted marrow and collagen. Served with straight, thin noodles.
Where to eat: Mengekijo Genei (Fukuoka and Tokyo)
(Matt Goulding)
KAGOSHIMA HYBRID
Kagoshima ramen cooks cut a
tonkotsu
base with chicken and vegetables for a lighter version of Hakata
tonkotsu
. Noodles are flat, broad, and cooked soft, and the
chashu
, made from local
kurobuta
pig, is Japan's best.
Where to eat: Ramen Kokinta, Tontoro
(Matt Goulding)
TOKYO SHOYU
Chicken-based broth spiked with a generous amount of shoyu (soy sauce) and often a current of
nibosh
(dried sardine). Expect curly yellow noodles,
menma
(pickled bamboo), seaweed, and a soy-soaked egg. Along with
tonkotsu
, the most common style of ramen in Japan.
Where to eat: En, Taishoken
(Michael Magers, lead photographer)
TOKYO TSUKEMEN
Thick room-temperature noodles slicked with warm pork fat and served with
chashu
and a concentrated broth for dipping. One of the most popular ramen trends of the past decade, perfect for steamy summer afternoons.
Where to eat: Rokurinsha
(Michael Magers, lead photographer)
ASAHIKAWA SURF-AND-TURF
Blending the best from the two extremes of Japan: pork
tonkotsu
from Kyushu mixed with the best seafood from Asahikawa's northern Hokkaido backyard to create a complex broth of land and sea.
Where to eat: Santouka (throughout Japan)
(Michael Magers, lead photographer)
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Our favorite picks from Japan's ubiquitous army of vending machines
(Ioanna Morelli)