Kajiken-Style Abura Soba — Nagoya’s Infinite-Topping Oil Noodles at Home
If you’ve ever eaten at Kajiken — Nagoya’s beloved abura soba chain, now with locations across Japan and internationally — you know the drill: chewy noodles hit the bowl, a glossy soy-oil tare pools at the bottom, and a dizzying topping menu stretches before you. Mix, slurp, customize. Repeat. That “BASE × SPICE × TOPPING” endless-combination philosophy is what sets Kajiken-style abura soba apart from ordinary brothless ramen.
This recipe is inspired by the Kajiken concept and is not affiliated with or officially endorsed by Kajiken Co., Ltd. Think of it as a home cook’s tribute: you get the same rich tare, the same satisfyingly chewy noodles, and a full guide to recreating those famous topping variations — mentaiko-cheese, kimchi-sesame, bibimbap-style, and more — in your own kitchen.
- The base tare formula (soy sauce + oyster sauce + sesame oil + vinegar)
- How to cook and dress the noodles for maximum sauce adhesion
- 5 topping variation combos with a mix-and-match table
- Pro tips for recreating Kajiken’s signature chewy noodle texture
- FAQ on ingredient swaps for overseas home cooks
Table of Contents
- What Is Kajiken-Style Abura Soba?
- The Base Tare (Sauce)
- Choosing and Cooking the Noodles
- Bowl Assembly
- Topping Variations Table
- Pro Tips for the Perfect Bowl
- FAQ
- Recommended Items
- Sources & References
What Is Kajiken-Style Abura Soba?
Abura soba (油そば, literally “oil noodles”) is a brothless ramen style that originated in Nagoya and Tokyo in the 1950s-60s. Instead of swimming in soup, the noodles sit in a concentrated tare of soy sauce, sesame oil, and cooking fats. You mix everything tableside, coating each strand in a sticky, umami-rich glaze.
Kajiken (歌志軒), founded in Nagoya, made abura soba famous by emphasizing near-infinite customization. Their formula — BASE × SPICE × TOPPING — turns a simple bowl into a personal creation. Vinegar, chili oil, and garlic powder sit on every table for on-the-fly adjustments. This home version captures that spirit: master the tare and noodles, then build your own variation.
At Kajiken, you’re told to mix 20 times before eating. This coats every noodle strand in the tare and emulsifies the oils. Apply the same rule at home — pick up the noodles from the bottom of the bowl and fold thoroughly before the first bite.
The Base Tare (Sauce)
The tare is the heart of abura soba. Unlike ramen broth that takes hours, a good abura soba tare comes together in under 10 minutes. The recipe below yields enough for 2 servings.
Ingredients — Base Tare (serves 2)
- 3 tbsp (45 ml) soy sauce — use Japanese-style; tamari for gluten-free
- 2 tbsp (30 ml) oyster sauce
- 2 tbsp (30 ml) sesame oil (toasted)
- 1 tbsp (15 ml) rice vinegar
- 1 tbsp (15 ml) mirin (or 2 tsp sugar + 1 tsp water)
- 1 tsp chicken fat (schmaltz) or neutral oil
- 1 tsp garlic, finely grated
- ½ tsp sugar
- A few drops of chili oil (rayu), to taste
Method
- Combine soy sauce, oyster sauce, mirin, vinegar, and sugar in a small saucepan over low heat. Stir until sugar dissolves — do not boil, just warm through (about 1 minute).
- Remove from heat. Stir in sesame oil, chicken fat, and grated garlic.
- Taste and add chili oil if you want heat in the base. (Additional condiments can be added tableside.)
- The tare can be refrigerated for up to 5 days. Bring to room temperature before using.
Choosing and Cooking the Noodles
Kajiken uses fresh, thick, high-hydration curly noodles — noticeably chewier than standard fresh ramen. At home, choose the chewiest noodles you can find.
Best noodle options (in order of preference)
Since there is no broth to carry flavour, the noodle texture is the star. Opt for thick, wavy fresh noodles (around 2 mm / #12). If using dried noodles, cook them 1 minute less than the package says, then cool immediately in cold water to firm up the surface.
- Fresh thick wavy ramen noodles (labeled “chijire” or “wavy”) — best texture, sold at Asian grocery stores
- Fresh udon noodles — excellent chewy substitute; slightly milder flavour
- Dried ramen noodles (medium-thick) — widely available; undercook by 1 minute
- Spaghetti (no. 2 / 2 mm) — overseas emergency option; add ½ tsp baking soda to cooking water to mimic the alkaline bite of ramen noodles
Cooking the noodles
- Bring a large pot of unsalted water to a rolling boil. Add noodles and cook per package directions.
- Drain well; shake off excess water thoroughly — excess water dilutes the tare.
- Immediately add hot noodles to the bowl containing the warm tare. Do not rinse.
Bowl Assembly
Abura soba is assembled differently from regular ramen — the tare goes in the bowl first, the noodles land on top, and toppings crown the noodles.
Step-by-step bowl build
- Add 3–4 tbsp tare to the bottom of a deep, wide bowl. If you like heat, add 1 tsp chili oil to the tare now.
- Add drained hot noodles directly on top of the tare.
- Place toppings around the noodles (not piled in the center — leave a “mixing path”).
- Add a raw or soft-boiled egg yolk in the center if using.
- Drizzle an extra ½ tsp sesame oil over everything.
- Mix 20 times from the bottom up before eating. This is the Kajiken ritual.
Topping Variations Table
This is where the Kajiken inspiration really shines. The table below lists five popular combinations — including the mentaiko-cheese and kimchi styles — plus a DIY column so you can mix and match freely. All toppings below go on top of the base tare + plain noodles.
→ Scroll right to see all columns on mobile
| Variation | Core Toppings | Spice Level | Tare Tweak | Finishing Touch |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Classic | Chashu pork, green onion, nori, soft-boiled egg, menma (bamboo shoots) | Mild | Base tare as-is | Rice vinegar + rayu |
| Mentaiko-Cheese | Spicy pollock roe (mentaiko), shredded mozzarella or processed cheese, green onion, nori | Medium | Reduce sesame oil by half; add 1 tsp butter | Torch cheese before mixing; squeeze lemon |
| Kimchi-Sesame | Fermented kimchi, toasted sesame seeds, green onion, thin-sliced pork belly (shabu style) | Hot | Add 1 tsp gochujang to tare | Extra sesame oil drizzle |
| Bibimbap-Style | Julienned carrots, spinach (blanched), bean sprouts, egg yolk center, sesame seeds | Mild-Medium | Add 1 tbsp gochujang + 1 tsp honey to tare | Mix everything in a hot stone bowl for crispy bottom |
| Umeboshi-Shiso | Umeboshi paste, shredded shiso (perilla), cucumber, roasted nori strips, sesame seeds | Mild | Omit chili oil; use base tare as-is | Rice vinegar (extra 1 tsp) |
| Gyudon-Style | Thinly sliced beef simmered in soy-mirin-dashi, ginger, pickled ginger, white sesame | Mild | Add 1 tsp of the beef braising liquid to tare | Sansho (Japanese pepper) sprinkle |
Tableside condiment bar
The Kajiken experience relies on self-service seasoning adjustments. Set out the following on your dining table:
- Rice vinegar — brightens and cuts richness
- Rayu (Japanese chili oil) — adds heat and fragrance
- Garlic powder or fresh minced garlic — builds depth
- Toasted sesame seeds (shichimi togarashi optional)
Halfway through eating, add a small splash of rice vinegar directly to your bowl. The acidity refreshes your palate and transforms the flavour profile — a tactic locals in Nagoya swear by.
Pro Tips for the Perfect Bowl
Use high heat for your noodles
A rolling boil is non-negotiable. If the water isn’t at a full, vigorous boil when the noodles go in, they absorb too much water and turn gummy. Use a large pot — at least 3 qt / 3 L — with plenty of room for the noodles to move.
Warm the tare before adding noodles
Cold tare makes the sesame oil congeal and cling unevenly to the noodles. Warm the tare in the bowl by pouring a ladle of hot pasta water into the bowl, waiting 30 seconds, then discarding the water before adding the tare. A pre-warmed bowl also keeps your noodles hotter longer.
For a rich variation, drop a raw egg yolk (tamago kake gohan style) directly onto the hot noodles after mixing the tare in. The residual heat of the noodles gently cooks the yolk as you mix. The result is a silky, custardy coating — closer to carbonara than typical ramen.
Match toppings to noodle temperature
Abura soba is served hot. Cold toppings like cucumber and kimchi are fine, but avoid toppings that will make the noodles go cold quickly (e.g., frozen corn, ice-cold tofu). If using cheese, add it directly onto the hot noodles — the residual heat will melt it without need for a torch.
FAQ
Q: What’s the difference between abura soba and mazesoba?
A: The terms overlap, but there are subtle distinctions. Abura soba (oil noodles) traditionally has a simpler, soy-and-sesame tare with a focus on noodle texture. Mazesoba (mixed noodles, popularized in Nagoya as “Taiwan mazesoba”) typically includes minced pork, fish powder, and more complex toppings from the start. Kajiken’s abura soba sits in the traditional camp — clean tare, customizable toppings — while Taiwan mazesoba is a more built-in topping experience.
Q: Can I make this gluten-free?
A: Yes, with adjustments. Use 100% buckwheat soba noodles instead of ramen noodles. Replace soy sauce with tamari (gluten-free certified) and oyster sauce with a gluten-free oyster sauce or a mix of hoisin sauce and fish sauce. The toppings are naturally flexible — most vegetables, eggs, and meats are GF-safe. Always check your nori and menma packaging for hidden wheat starch.
Q: I don’t have chicken fat. Can I use something else?
A: Yes. Chicken fat gives a subtle richness but is entirely optional. Lard is the most authentic substitute. Unsalted butter works well (especially for the mentaiko-cheese variation). Or simply use an extra teaspoon of sesame oil and a few drops of neutral oil. The tare will still taste excellent.
Q: How do I store leftovers?
A: Abura soba does not store well once assembled — noodles absorb the tare and become soggy within 30 minutes. Store tare separately (refrigerator, up to 5 days). Cooked noodles can be refrigerated for up to 2 days in a sealed container with a light coating of sesame oil to prevent sticking. Reassemble fresh when ready to eat.
Recommended Items
A Japanese classic — deep, toasted aroma that is the backbone of any abura soba tare. Widely available in North America.
A versatile, widely available chili oil made from dried chili peppers and soybean oil. Adds a clean, straight-up heat to the abura soba tare — perfect for dialling up spice without overpowering the sesame base. Great for tableside customization.
Wide, deep bowls with room to mix vigorously — essential for the 20-mix abura soba ritual. Microwave and dishwasher safe.
→ See also: The Complete Guide to Homemade Ramen — 11 Styles Compared | Basic Abura Soba (No-Broth Ramen in 15 Minutes)
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Sources & References
- What Is Aburasoba? — Kajiken USA Official
- Abura Soba (Soupless Ramen) Recipe — Sudachi Recipes
- Abura Soba (Soupless Ramen Noodles) — Okonomi Kitchen
- Abura Soba — Recreating Tokyo’s Favourite Soupless Ramen — Indulgent Eats
- Abura Soba (Soupless Japanese Oil Ramen, Ready in 20 Minutes!) — Give Me Umami
- Kajiken USA Official Site — History and Concept
本レシピはHowToCook.jp編集部が一般的な調理法を元に独自にまとめたものです。Kajiken Co., Ltd.の公式レシピではなく、同社との提携・関係はありません。
This recipe is independently developed by the HowToCook.jp editorial team based on general cooking methods. It is not an official recipe of Kajiken Co., Ltd., and has no affiliation with or endorsement by the company.
情報の最終確認日: 2026年02月 / Last verified: February 2026