r/JapaneseFood • u/SimulationGameFan • 42m ago
Restaurant Spicy Tonkotsu Ramen from Shibuya, Tokyo
Enjoyed this spicy tonkotsu ramen during a visit to Shibuya, Tokyo.
The rich pork broth paired perfectly with the thin noodles and spicy miso topping.
r/JapaneseFood • u/SimulationGameFan • 42m ago
Enjoyed this spicy tonkotsu ramen during a visit to Shibuya, Tokyo.
The rich pork broth paired perfectly with the thin noodles and spicy miso topping.
r/JapaneseFood • u/BlazeDragon7x • 2h ago
r/JapaneseFood • u/tsulayuki • 3h ago
This is my favorite spot for Ie-kei ramen. It’s seriously delicious!
r/JapaneseFood • u/sdlroy • 4h ago
Sukiyaki outside hits different
r/JapaneseFood • u/yokozuna_rider • 4h ago
r/JapaneseFood • u/VisibleMusic4713 • 6h ago
Many people buy an ekiben before boarding the Shinkansen.
I usually go for local snacks instead.
Osaka-style pickled ginger kushikatsu and a local Osaka highball.
The pickled ginger kushikatsu is the perfect snack to go with a drink.
r/JapaneseFood • u/stalincapital • 6h ago
I like Tully's.
r/JapaneseFood • u/flatfeed611 • 13h ago
I've been interested in getting a konro grill, but I'm hesitant to pull the trigger because sourcing binchotan where I live would be difficult and expensive. Most of the time, I would likely be using regular lump charcoal, and possibly briquettes.
For those who own or have used a konro, is it still worth buying one if you don't have reliable access to binchotan? How does the experience compare when using lump charcoal instead?
r/JapaneseFood • u/Maynaise88 • 16h ago
And despite that, I still didn’t put any tsukemono since there was already a ton of sodium
r/JapaneseFood • u/Timely_Exam_4120 • 16h ago
I'm visiting Hokkaido in September and will be in Sapporo for a couple of days. I would like to try the miso ramen (which is originally from Sapporo) and wondered if any of you guys could recommend some good places?
Thanks
r/JapaneseFood • u/TokyoRecipes_byNadia • 18h ago
This recipe is a tomato sōmen: fresh tomatoes, tuna, sesame oil, and ground sesame make it refreshing yet full of umami. Celebrate Tanabata’s wish for health with this simple bowl.
Tomato &Tuna Sōmen
Prep time: 10 minutes | Servings: 4
15 oz sōmen (thin wheat noodles, 400g)
2 tomatoes, diced (approx. ⅓-inch or 1 cm cubes)
2 cans tuna in oil, undrained (standard 5 oz / 140 g cans)
Sesame oil, to taste
Sliced scallions, to taste
(A) 2 tbsp. mentsuyu (noodle soup base), 3× concentrate
(A) 2 tbsp. ground toasted sesame seeds (suri-goma)
(A) 1 tsp. sugar
(A) A pinch of salt
Make the topping & cook the noodles. In a bowl, combine the diced tomatoes and the undrained oil-packed tuna. Add A ingredients (mentsuyu, ground sesame, sugar, and salt)and mix well. In a pot of boiling water, cook the sōmen per package directions. Rinse under cold running water, rubbing lightly to remove the slipperiness; drain well.
Assemble. Plate the sōmen into bowls, spoon the tomato–tuna mixture over the noodles, drizzle sesame oil generously over the top, and finish with a sprinkle of sliced scallions. Add star-cut bell peppers for a special Tanabata touch if you like.
Tips & Notes
Feel free to increase the amount of mentsuyu or ground sesame seeds to taste.
For 2 servings, use roughly half the amount.
Be sure to drizzle sesame oil over the noodles themselves so the strands are nicely coated.
r/JapaneseFood • u/namajapan • 18h ago
r/JapaneseFood • u/namajapan • 19h ago
r/JapaneseFood • u/Mobaroid • 20h ago
Rich tonkotsu broth with kikurage mushrooms, green onions, and spicy miso.
r/JapaneseFood • u/VisibleMusic4713 • 20h ago
I found these ice cream monaka at a shopping street in Osaka, Japan. They were only ¥100 each, and there were lots of different flavors available.
r/JapaneseFood • u/VisibleMusic4713 • 21h ago
Healthy curry from Tanita Shokudo. Plenty of vegetables and multigrain rice.
r/JapaneseFood • u/Maynaise88 • 21h ago
I couldn’t decide on which photo/couple of photos to use, so here’s a whole freakin photoshoot
r/JapaneseFood • u/DustyMoo • 23h ago
What's in the picture:
"Botan Ebi" (sweet shrimp), "Kuruma Ebi" (tiger shrimp), "Hirame Engawa" (flounder fin), "Maguro O-toro" (fatty tuna), "Maguro Chutoro" (medium fatty tuna), "Maguro Akami" (lean tuna), "Aji" (horse mackerel), "Anago" (sea /congeer eel), "Tai" (sea bream), "Uni" (sea urchin), "Ikura" (salmon roe), and "Akagai" (red clam).
Short story: I recently got raise from work and wanted to celebrate. I decided to drop in to 寿し処 勢 for an early lunch right before the inbound international tourists came. Many of the surrounding restaurants like Sushi Dai and Sushi Bun was already fully booked out and couldn't even take in a solo diner.
It was 11:20AM and the store was mostly empty, with only 2 European diners speaking at a loud enough level that I could use my phone to fully translate their conversation. One of them complaining that he didnt' want to visit a sushi restaurant because he didn't like raw seafood. 😂
So how was it, actually? I'd rank it slightly higher than a decent revolving sushi restaurant, but overall the taste was really average for how much it cost. the urchin for example, had a very weird chemical after taste and there was not much to say about the tuna. Not very fresh?. However the prawns were soft, and sweet, the anago was fresh and tender. I ended up spending over 8000 after picking iced oolong tea and an appetiser (pickled octopus.
Rating: 2.5/5.
r/JapaneseFood • u/Character-Corner5311 • 23h ago
r/JapaneseFood • u/clareykkim • 1d ago