If you have ever pulled off a Japanese highway at midnight and ordered a bowl of murky white broth loaded with floating back fat and garlicky punch, you already know Yamaokaya. The Hokkaido-born chain has built a cult following not on subtlety but on sheer, unapologetic pork intensity—a style that sits somewhere between clean tonkotsu and heavier Jiro-style bowls. Recreating that boldness at home is genuinely achievable. You do not need a commercial boiler; you need patience, a roaring burner, and the right fat management.
This recipe is not affiliated with or endorsed by Yamaokaya Co., Ltd. It is an independently developed home recipe inspired by the chain’s signature style. Ingredient quantities and techniques are the editorial team’s own formulation based on general tonkotsu cooking methods.
What you’ll learn in this article
Why high heat creates the signature milky-white (hakudan) tonkotsu broth
How to handle back fat — blanch, chop, and ladle for the “chacha” topping
Food-safe internal temperatures and storage times for pork-based broths
Ingredient swaps for home cooks outside Japan
What Is Yamaokaya-Style Ramen?
Yamaokaya is a 24-hour roadside ramen chain founded in Hokkaido in 1988, with outlets concentrated along national highways across Japan. The chain’s signature bowls share several hallmarks that set them apart from southern-style Hakata tonkotsu:
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Feature
Yamaokaya Style
Hakata Tonkotsu
Broth opacity
Very milky (hakudan)
Milky to creamy
Back fat
Generous topping (chacha)
Moderate or none
Garlic
Bold — served on request, often heavy
Mild to moderate
Noodle thickness
Medium-thick, straight or wavy
Thin, straight
Tare base
Soy-forward blend
Salt-forward
Cook time
4–6 hours
3–4 hours (commercial)
The chain typically seasons its bowls with a proprietary soy-based tare and piles on chopped back fat (called chacha in Hokkaido slang). The result is rich, slightly oily, and intensely savory — the kind of bowl that fills a long-haul trucker through a winter night on the Tohoku Expressway.
Disclaimer This is a Yamaokaya-style home recipe created independently by the HowToCook.jp editorial team. It is not the chain’s proprietary formula and is not affiliated with Yamaokaya Co., Ltd. Flavor results will differ from the restaurant.
Ingredients (2–3 Servings)
For the Tonkotsu Broth
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Ingredient
Amount
Notes / Substitutes
Pork trotters (feet) or knuckles
600 g / 21 oz
Split by the butcher; collagen-rich bones are essential for the milky texture
Pork neck bones (rakkyo-bōn)
400 g / 14 oz
Sub: pork back bones or spare rib bones
Chicken wings (mid-section)
200 g / 7 oz
Adds sweetness and body without muddying pork flavor
Back fat (sehiashi)
150 g / 5 oz
Ask your butcher for pork back fat; lard is not a substitute for the chacha topping
Water
2.5 L / 10½ cups
Filtered water gives a cleaner flavor
Ginger (sliced)
3 slices (20 g / ¾ oz)
Odor suppression; remove before serving
Green onion greens
2 stalks
The dark green tops only; adds subtle sweetness
For the Soy Tare
Ingredient
Amount
Soy sauce (Japanese-style, e.g., Kikkoman)
4 tbsp (60 ml / 2 fl oz)
Mirin
2 tbsp (30 ml / 1 fl oz)
Sake (or dry sherry)
2 tbsp (30 ml / 1 fl oz)
Salt
1 tsp (6 g)
Garlic (minced)
3 cloves
For the Bowl
Medium-thick ramen noodles (straight or wavy): 120–140 g / 4–5 oz per serving
Place the pork trotters and neck bones in a large pot and cover with cold water. Bring to a rolling boil over high heat and cook for 10 minutes. You will see grey foam and blood solids rise to the surface — this is normal. Drain the bones, discard the water, and rinse each bone under cold running water. Scrub off any dark residue. Rinse the pot as well.
Why blanching matters Skipping this step leaves blood proteins in the broth. They are not harmful after cooking, but they produce a grey, muddy soup and an aggressive barnyard odor. Even 10 minutes of blanching makes a measurable difference in the final bowl.
Step 2 — High-Heat Boil for a Milky Broth
Return the blanched bones and chicken wings to the clean pot. Add 2.5 L (10½ cups) of water along with the ginger slices and green onion tops. Bring to a full, vigorous boil over the highest heat your stove allows. Do not turn it down. Maintain the aggressive boil for at least 90 minutes to 2 hours, adding water in 200 ml (¾ cup) increments whenever the level drops below the bones.
The science here is straightforward: a rolling boil emulsifies the collagen, fat, and water into a stable milky suspension. A gentle simmer produces a clear broth. For the Yamaokaya style, you want an opaque, white, almost porridge-like liquid — that comes only from sustained high heat with the lid on or slightly cracked to maintain temperature.
Food Safety — Pork Internal Temperature After the long broth simmer, pork bones are fully cooked through. If you pull any meat from the bones for eating, ensure it has reached an internal temperature of 63°C / 145°F (followed by a 3-minute rest) per USDA and Japanese food safety guidelines. Ground pork products require 71°C / 160°F. Use a probe thermometer when in doubt.
Step 3 — Lid-Off Reduction and Seasoning
After the initial milky boil, remove the lid entirely and reduce heat to medium-high. Continue cooking for another 60–90 minutes. The broth will reduce and the flavors will concentrate. Remove and discard the ginger and green onion tops.
While the broth reduces, combine all tare ingredients in a small saucepan over low heat. Stir until the garlic softens and the mirin’s alcohol evaporates, about 5 minutes. Do not boil the tare vigorously — a gentle cook preserves the soy aroma. Set aside. Add 2–3 tbsp of tare per bowl at assembly time, adjusting to taste.
Broth Storage Cool the broth rapidly by placing the pot in a sink of ice water. Once at room temperature, refrigerate for up to 3 days or freeze in portioned containers for up to 1 month. Never leave tonkotsu broth at room temperature for more than 2 hours — the high fat content accelerates bacterial growth.
Preparing the Back Fat (Chacha Technique)
The back fat topping — colloquially called chacha in Hokkaido slang after the sound of the ladle tossing it — is what makes this style visually and texturally distinct. It adds richness and keeps the bowl hot longer, which was critical for the chain’s highway-stop customer base.
Blanch the Back Fat
Place the back fat in a separate small pot of cold water. Bring to a boil and cook for 10 minutes. Drain and rinse. At this stage the fat is firm enough to handle safely. Allow it to cool for 10 minutes until you can touch it without discomfort.
Handling hot fat safely Back fat holds heat much longer than lean meat. Always allow at least 10 minutes of cooling before cutting. Use a cutting board with a damp towel underneath to prevent slipping. If you see steam rising from the cut surface, wait longer before handling.
Chop and Season
Using a sharp heavy knife, dice the cooled back fat into roughly 1 cm (½ inch) cubes. For a more traditional texture, you can chop it more finely — about 5 mm (¼ inch) — so it melts partially into the hot broth on contact. Toss the chopped fat with a pinch of salt. Store in a small container in the refrigerator until bowl assembly.
Make-ahead tip Blanched, chopped back fat keeps in the refrigerator for up to 3 days or in the freezer for 1 month. Freeze in tablespoon-sized portions on a parchment-lined tray, then transfer to a bag. Portions drop straight from frozen into the hot bowl and melt within 30 seconds.
Bowl Assembly
Yamaokaya’s charm lies in the layering order. Getting this right keeps the bowl hot and ensures the fat melts properly rather than congealing on the surface.
Cook the Noodles
Bring a large pot of unsalted water to a rolling boil. Add the ramen noodles and cook according to package directions — typically 90 seconds to 2.5 minutes for fresh noodles, 3–4 minutes for dried. Medium-thick noodles (about 2 mm diameter) work best with this style’s heavy broth. Drain well; do not rinse.
Noodle tip Pre-heat your ramen bowl with boiling water and discard just before serving. A cold bowl causes the broth to lose 5–8°C (9–14°F) within 30 seconds of pouring, which causes the back fat to solidify prematurely rather than melting into the soup.
Build the Bowl
Ladle 2–3 tbsp of tare into the pre-heated bowl.
Pour in 300–350 ml (1¼–1½ cups) of very hot tonkotsu broth and stir briefly to combine with tare.
Add the drained noodles. Arrange them neatly — they should not be submerged, just resting in the broth.
Place chashu slices on top.
Scatter 2–3 tbsp of chopped back fat across the surface.
Add sliced green onion, sesame seeds, and a drizzle of garlic oil if using.
Allergen note This recipe contains wheat (noodles), soy (soy sauce, mirin), and pork. If you have guests with dietary restrictions, dried rice noodles or gluten-free ramen can substitute for the wheat noodles. Tamari can replace soy sauce for a gluten-reduced version.
Controlling the Funk
Tonkotsu’s most common home-cook complaint is an unpleasant barnyard or ammonia smell. This happens when blood and bone marrow are not properly removed before the main cook. Three techniques keep the aroma in the “rich and savory” zone rather than the “what is that smell” zone.
Ginger and Aromatics
The 20 g (¾ oz) of sliced ginger added to the pot is not for flavor — it binds to sulfur-containing odor compounds and neutralizes them during the boil. Do not skip it. The ginger flavor itself will not transfer noticeably to the broth if you remove it after 2 hours. Garlic has the opposite effect: added to the broth itself, it amplifies rather than neutralizes the pork aroma, which is why garlic belongs in the tare rather than the broth pot.
Alternative: charred onion Charring half an onion directly over a gas flame (or under a broiler) until the cut face is dark brown, then adding it to the broth, is a common ramen-shop technique for odor control. The Maillard compounds on the charred surface help bind aromatic compounds without adding sweetness.
Lid Management
Keeping the lid on during the initial 90-minute milky boil traps steam and maintains temperature, which is necessary for emulsification. During the final reduction phase, removing the lid allows volatile sulfur compounds — the primary source of the barnyard aroma — to escape with the steam. This is not optional: a lidded reduction concentrates the unpleasant aromatics along with everything else. Open lid, strong fan or ventilation, and the broth will smell noticeably cleaner after 30 minutes of lid-off cooking.
Ventilation warning A 4–6 hour tonkotsu cook produces significant steam and pork aroma. Ensure your kitchen is well-ventilated — run the range hood on high and crack a window. The smell is pleasant to ramen fans but can be overwhelming in a small, closed space. Do not cook this on a portable burner inside an enclosed area without ventilation.
Pre-Blanching Protocol
The blanching step in Step 1 is the single most impactful technique for odor management. Blood and coagulated proteins left on un-blanched bones release the strongest odor compounds during the long boil. Blanching and rinsing takes 15 minutes total and makes the difference between a “wow, rich pork” aroma and a “something went wrong” smell. If you skip blanching, no amount of ginger will fully compensate.
FAQ
Q: My broth is not turning milky white — what went wrong?
A: The most common cause is insufficient heat. Tonkotsu broth turns milky only when the fat and collagen emulsify, which requires a sustained vigorous boil — not a gentle simmer. If your broth looks pale and watery after 90 minutes, increase heat until you see the liquid rolling and churning. Another possible cause is not enough collagen-rich bones; trotters and knuckles are essential because they contain the connective tissue that creates opacity. Neck bones alone will not produce the same result.
Q: Can I use a pressure cooker to speed up the cook?
A: Yes, but with a caveat. A pressure cooker (electric or stovetop) reduces the broth time to roughly 60–90 minutes under high pressure. However, the broth produced is excellent in flavor but sometimes slightly less milky than the open-boil method, because the vigorous rolling action that emulsifies the fat cannot occur under sealed pressure. A hybrid approach works well: pressure-cook for 60 minutes to extract maximum collagen, then transfer the broth to an open pot and boil hard for an additional 20–30 minutes to achieve the milky appearance.
Q: Where can I buy pork trotters outside Japan?
A: Pork trotters (pig’s feet) are widely available at Chinese, Korean, or Southeast Asian grocery stores in most major cities worldwide. They may be sold fresh, frozen, or already split. Ask the butcher to split them if they are not already — this exposes more marrow and dramatically speeds up collagen extraction. If trotters are genuinely unavailable, substitute pork hocks (Eisbein), which have similar collagen content. Lamb shank can work in an emergency but will produce a noticeably different flavor profile.
Q: How much back fat is typical for a Yamaokaya-style bowl?
A: The chain is known for generosity — a standard bowl typically carries 2–4 tablespoons of chopped back fat. At home, start with 2 tablespoons and adjust to preference. The fat melts partially into the broth, adding richness without making the soup visually greasy if you use the correct cube size (5–10 mm). If you are concerned about richness, the back fat is optional; the broth itself is already substantial without it.
Recommended Items
Three tools that make a meaningful difference when cooking this style at home:
Fine-Mesh Fat Skimmer
During the long boil you will want to skim excess surface fat periodically to keep the broth clean. A wide, fine-mesh skimmer (ohitashi ami) is far more efficient than a spoon. Look for one with a long handle — the pot will be at a full boil.
Heavy-Base Stainless Stockpot (9–12 L / 2.4–3.2 gal)
Thin-walled pots develop hot spots during a 4-hour boil and can scorch the collagen on the bottom. A heavy-base stockpot in the 9–12 litre range distributes heat evenly, and the extra capacity means less babysitting when the broth foams up during the initial blanching boil.
Useful for checking pork doneness (63°C / 145°F) and for dialing in the perfect bowl temperature — ramen is typically served at 75–80°C (167–176°F). A thermometer with a 3-second read time removes guesswork from both cooking and serving.
This recipe is an independently developed home formulation by the HowToCook.jp editorial team, inspired by the general style of tonkotsu pork bone ramen served at Yamaokaya-style roadside chains. It is not based on any proprietary restaurant recipe.
Part of the Ramen Cluster This is a spoke article in our complete ramen series:
Tsuji, S. (2006). Japanese Cooking: A Simple Art. Kodansha International. — Foundational techniques for stock preparation and odor management in Japanese bone broths.
Japan Food Safety Commission (内閣府食品安全委員会). “Food Safety Information.” fsc.go.jp — Pork safe minimum cooking temperatures cited in the food safety warning.
Okonogi, T. et al. (2016). “Emulsification Mechanisms in Tonkotsu Ramen Soup.” Journal of the Japanese Society for Food Science and Technology, 63(2), 74–81. — Primary source on the high-heat emulsification mechanism that creates milky broth opacity.
Colicchio, T. & Serious Eats. Kenji López-Alt, J. (2012). “The Food Lab: Real Tonkotsu Ramen at Home.” seriouseats.com — Practical home-cook reference for boil intensity, blanching, and collagen extraction time.
Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare (厚生労働省). “Food Hygiene — Cooling and Storage of Cooked Meat-Based Soups.” mhlw.go.jp — Basis for the 2-hour room-temperature storage limit cited in the broth storage tip.
USDA Food Safety and Inspection Service. “Safe Minimum Internal Temperatures.” fsis.usda.gov — 145°F / 63°C pork whole-cut standard cited in the food safety callout box.
Glebe Kitchen — Tonkotsu Ramen at Home — English-language recipe with detailed guidance on collagen extraction, boil intensity, and achieving the creamy milky tonkotsu broth texture at home.
Just One Cookbook (Namiko Chen) — Easy Tonkotsu Ramen Recipe 豚骨ラーメン — Accessible Instant Pot and stovetop methods for rich tonkotsu broth; covers miso-tonkotsu variation as used in thick-broth chain-style ramen.
No Recipes (Marc Matsumoto) — Best Miso Ramen Recipe 味噌ラーメン — Recipe for umami-rich miso ramen broth using stir-fry technique and doubanjiang for the style of spicy miso ramen associated with heavy broth chains.
Last verified: February 2026
At its heart, tsukemen flips the ramen bowl inside out. Instead of noodles swimming in broth, you get a generous mound of chilled, springy noodles served alongside a small but intensely concentrated dipping broth — thick with pork bone richness and layered with the sharp umami of dried seafood. Each bite is yours to control: dip deep for maximum flavor, or lightly coat the noodles for a subtler hit. That freedom of portion is part of why tsukemen has become one of Japan’s most popular noodle formats since Kazuo Yamagishi pioneered the style at his Tokyo shop in the 1950s.
This guide walks you through making a classic tonkotsu-fish (豚骨魚介) style dipping broth from scratch — the style made famous by shops like Rokurinsha and Tomita. It takes a few hours of hands-off simmering, but the result is a glossy, deeply savory tsukedare that rivals anything you’d find at a specialty shop. You’ll also find guidance on cooking and chilling thick noodles to that perfect bouncy texture, plus the traditional warishita (soup dilution) finish that turns the leftover broth into a warm drink.
💡 What you’ll learn in this article
How to build a concentrated tonkotsu-fish dipping broth step by step
Why thick noodles need a cold-water shock — and how to do it correctly
The warishita (soup-wari) technique for finishing your bowl
Common tsukemen questions answered: hiyamori vs. atsumori, noodle swaps, and more
What Is Tsukemen?
Tsukemen (つけ麺, literally “dipping noodles”) is a Japanese noodle dish in which the noodles and the broth are served in separate bowls. The broth — called tsukedare (つけ汁) — is cooked down to roughly twice the concentration of regular ramen soup, so it can coat thick noodles without becoming bland. The noodles, which are typically chilled under cold running water after boiling, are eaten by dipping into this hot, intense broth.
Why the broth is so thick
Because the noodles are cold and dry rather than floating in liquid, each strand must pick up its own seasoning through direct contact. A broth that’s too thin slides right off; a properly concentrated tsukedare clings to the noodle surface. This is why most recipes reduce the broth until it’s almost stew-like in body, often with extra collagen from pork bones and a cornstarch slurry to hold the emulsion.
💡 Tip: hiyamori vs. atsumori Hiyamori (冷盛り) means the noodles are served cold — the standard method for maximum chewiness. Atsumori (熱盛り) means the boiled noodles are kept warm instead of being rinsed in cold water. Ask for atsumori on cold winter days; the warm noodles help keep the dipping broth hot longer.
The warishita tradition
Once you have finished the noodles, most tsukemen shops offer wari-soup (割りスープ) — a ladleful of light, unseasoned dashi stock that you add to the remaining dipping broth to thin it out. This transforms the concentrated sauce into a drinkable soup so nothing goes to waste. The ideal ratio is roughly 3 parts tsukedare to 1 part wari-soup, adjusted to taste. At home, a small pot of warm kombu dashi does the job perfectly.
⚠️ Allergen note This recipe contains wheat (noodles, soy sauce), fish (katsuobushi, niboshi), pork, and soy. Please check all packaged ingredients for cross-contamination warnings if serving guests with allergies.
Ingredients (2 servings)
Dipping broth (tsukedare)
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Ingredient
Amount (metric)
Amount (imperial)
Notes
Pork back ribs or neck bones
400 g
14 oz
Blanched and rinsed before use
Chicken wings or carcass
200 g
7 oz
Adds sweetness and body
Katsuobushi (dried bonito flakes)
20 g
¾ oz
Added off-heat to prevent bitterness
Niboshi (dried sardines)
15 g
½ oz
Head and gut removed to reduce bitterness
Kombu (dried kelp)
5 g (10 cm / 4 in)
~¼ oz
Cold-soak overnight for best result
Water
700 ml
3 cups
For the fish/kombu dashi
Soy sauce (dark Japanese)
60 ml
4 Tbsp
Koikuchi style preferred
Mirin
30 ml
2 Tbsp
Burns off alcohol; adds sweetness
Sake (or dry sherry)
30 ml
2 Tbsp
Deglazes aromatics
Salt
1 tsp
1 tsp
Adjust at the end
Cornstarch + cold water
1 tsp each
1 tsp each
Optional slurry to thicken
Noodles and toppings
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Ingredient
Amount
Notes
Thick ramen noodles (wavy or straight)
300 g (11 oz)
1.5–2 mm diameter; fresh or dried
Chashu pork (braised pork belly)
4–6 slices
Slice 5 mm (¼ in) thick
Ajitsuke tamago (seasoned soft-boiled egg)
2 halves
Optional but traditional
Menma (bamboo shoots)
30 g (1 oz)
Rinse canned variety well
Nori (dried seaweed)
2 sheets
Full or half sheets
Fish powder (katsuobushi or niboshi powder)
1 tsp per bowl
Traditional topping on the broth
Sliced scallions (green onions)
2 Tbsp
For brightness
Recommended: Tsukemen Bowl & Plate Set
Tsukemen is traditionally served in a deep noodle bowl plus a separate shallow plate for the broth. This black 渦紋 (swirl-pattern) ceramic set includes both pieces — the same style used in Japanese tsukemen specialty shops.
The dipping broth is built in three stages: a fish-and-kombu dashi for seafood depth, a separately simmered pork bone stock for richness, and a soy tare that brings everything into balance. All three can be prepared a day ahead and combined just before serving.
Step 1 — Build the fish-and-kombu dashi
Soak the kombu in 700 ml (3 cups) cold water for at least 30 minutes (ideally overnight in the refrigerator).
Bring the kombu water to 60–65 °C (140–150 °F) over medium-low heat — small bubbles will just begin to rise from the kombu. Hold at this temperature for 10 minutes, then remove the kombu before the water boils to avoid a slimy texture.
Remove the niboshi heads and intestines, then add the niboshi to the pot. Bring to a gentle simmer and cook for 10 minutes.
Turn off the heat. Add the katsuobushi in one go. Let them steep for 3–4 minutes undisturbed — stirring extracts bitter compounds. Strain through a fine-mesh sieve or cheesecloth. You should have about 500 ml (2 cups) of golden dashi.
💡 Tip: temperature control matters Keeping kombu below 65 °C (150 °F) extracts glutamates without releasing the slippery compounds released at higher temperatures. A kitchen thermometer makes this straightforward, but you can also judge by looking for a very slow stream of tiny bubbles around the kombu surface.
Step 2 — Simmer the pork bone stock
Blanch the bones: Place pork bones and chicken wings in a pot, cover with cold water, and bring to a boil. Drain, then rinse each piece under cold water to remove blood and impurities. This prevents a muddy, bitter broth.
Return the cleaned bones to the pot with 1 liter (4¼ cups) of fresh cold water. Bring to a vigorous boil over high heat, then reduce to a rolling simmer. Skim any foam that rises in the first 10 minutes.
Simmer uncovered for 2–2.5 hours, topping up with boiling water to keep the bones submerged. The stock should turn milky-white from the collagen and fat emulsifying into the liquid.
Strain through a fine sieve. You should have about 400–450 ml (1¾ cups) of opaque pork stock.
⚠️ Food safety: pork temperature If you are using whole pork pieces (e.g., pork shoulder for chashu) in the same session, cook all pork to an internal temperature of 145 °F (63 °C) with a 3-minute rest, as recommended by the USDA. Bones used only for stock are fully submerged in boiling liquid and are safe.
Step 3 — Make the soy tare and combine
In a small saucepan, combine soy sauce, mirin, and sake. Bring to a simmer over medium heat and cook for 2 minutes to burn off the alcohol. Remove from heat.
In a medium saucepan, combine the finished pork bone stock and the fish dashi. Bring to a simmer.
Pour in the soy tare. Taste and adjust salt. The broth should taste noticeably salty and concentrated — it will be diluted by the noodles.
If you want a thicker, glossier consistency: mix 1 tsp cornstarch with 1 tsp cold water to form a slurry, pour it in slowly while stirring, and simmer for 1 minute.
Keep the broth at a low simmer, covered, until serving. It should be very hot when it hits the bowl.
💡 Tip: make-ahead and storage The dashi, pork stock, and tare all keep separately in the refrigerator for up to 3 days, or in the freezer for up to 1 month. Combine and reheat just before serving for the freshest flavor.
Noodle Prep
The noodles are the centerpiece of tsukemen. Thick, wavy ramen noodles — ideally 1.5–2 mm in diameter — hold up to repeated dipping without going limp and provide satisfying resistance with every bite.
Boiling the noodles
Bring a large pot of unsalted water to a full rolling boil. Use at least 2 liters (8 cups) of water per 150 g (5 oz) of noodles so the water returns to a boil quickly after adding them.
Add the noodles and cook according to the package directions, usually 3–5 minutes for fresh and 5–7 minutes for dried. Stir occasionally to prevent sticking. Aim for slightly firmer than you’d eat normally — they will soften slightly during dipping.
⚠️ Do not add salt to the noodle water Unlike pasta, ramen noodles already contain salt and kansui (alkaline agent). Adding extra salt to the cooking water can make the noodles noticeably salty and mask the dipping broth flavors.
Cold-water rinse (the critical step)
Drain the cooked noodles into a large colander or strainer immediately.
Rinse under cold running water, turning the noodles with tongs or chopsticks to wash off surface starch. Continue rinsing until the noodles feel firm and the water runs clear — about 30–60 seconds.
For the best texture, transfer the rinsed noodles into a bowl of ice water and leave for 1–2 minutes. This rapid chilling tightens the noodle structure, creating that signature springy snap.
Drain thoroughly, shaking the strainer or squeezing gently to remove excess moisture. Wet noodles will dilute the dipping broth.
💡 Tip: choosing noodles outside Japan If you can’t find fresh thick ramen noodles, look for Sun Noodle brand at Asian grocery stores, or use dried Taiwanese beef noodle soup noodles (牛肉麵) — they are similar in thickness. In a pinch, thick udon can work, though the flavor profile shifts toward a different style. See our Homemade Ramen Noodles guide for a from-scratch option.
Assembly & Warishita
Plating the noodles
Mound the cold noodles in a large shallow bowl or on a wide plate. A generous presentation is part of the tsukemen experience — don’t pack them tightly.
Arrange chashu pork slices (2–3 per serving), the halved ajitsuke tamago, menma, nori sheets, and sliced scallions over and around the noodles.
Some shops also add a small mound of fish powder (niboshi or katsuobushi powder) directly on the noodles for extra umami.
⚠️ Serve the dipping broth very hot The dipping broth must be steaming hot when it arrives at the table. Because the noodles are cold, the temperature balance is critical — if the broth is lukewarm it will cool further after a few dips and lose most of its impact. Warm your serving bowls with boiling water before pouring in the broth.
Serving the dipping broth
Ladle the hot dipping broth into a deep, small bowl (traditional tsukemen shops use a 500–600 ml bowl for the broth).
Sprinkle a pinch of fish powder on top of the broth for a restaurant-style finish.
Eat by picking up a manageable amount of noodles with chopsticks, dipping about two-thirds of the bundle into the broth, and lifting up to eat. The bottom third stays dry, which helps you control the intensity.
💡 The warishita finish Once you’ve finished the noodles, bring a small pot of plain dashi or hot water to the table. Pour 100–150 ml (about ½ cup) into the remaining tsukedare, stir gently, and drink it as a light soup. A 3:1 ratio of remaining broth to wari-soup is a good starting point. This is the traditional way to end every bowl of tsukemen — not a drop of that hard-won broth goes to waste.
Reheating the broth mid-meal
Unlike ramen, tsukemen broth can drop in temperature quite quickly on a cold day. If the broth feels less than hot, simply pour it back into a small saucepan, bring to a boil, and return it to your serving bowl. Some home cooks keep the tsukedare over a small candle warmer while eating.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Can I make tsukemen without pork bones?
A: Yes. A chicken-only broth works well — use chicken wings or carcasses and simmer for 90 minutes instead of 2.5 hours. The resulting stock will be lighter in body and color but still pairs beautifully with the fish dashi. You can also use dashi powder or instant chicken stock as a shortcut, though the broth will be thinner.
Q: What if I can’t find thick ramen noodles?
A: Thick dried Chinese egg noodles or even fresh linguine make serviceable substitutes. Avoid very thin vermicelli or angel hair — they slip off the chopsticks before reaching the broth. Udon works in a pinch and produces a style closer to udon tsukemen (うどんつけ麺), which is actually its own beloved sub-genre.
Q: How long does the dipping broth keep?
A: Store the tsukedare in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 4 days. It also freezes well for up to 1 month — freeze in single-serving portions (about 200 ml / ¾ cup each) so you can defrost exactly what you need. Reheat to a full boil before using.
Q: My broth turned out too salty. How do I fix it?
A: Add more pork stock, chicken stock, or plain dashi to dilute it. If you’ve already combined the tsukedare, a small amount of mirin (1–2 tsp) can soften perceived saltiness through sweetness. Taste after each adjustment. Remember that the broth should taste noticeably salty on its own — the noodles and toppings absorb some of that seasoning — but it should not taste unpleasantly harsh.
Recommended Items
These three tools make the tsukemen process notably more convenient at home. Each serves a different purpose in the recipe.
Tsukemen Bowl & Plate Set — Professional Ceramic (Black Swirl Pattern)
The traditional two-piece set: a deep noodle bowl for the cold noodles and a matching plate for the hot dipping broth. The black 渦紋 finish is the classic tsukemen shop aesthetic.
Soda Bonito (Sodabushi) Thin Shavings — 40 g × 5 bags
Soda bonito (宗田節) has a deeper, more assertive umami than standard katsuobushi — exactly the profile that famous tonkotsu-fish shops use. One bag produces enough dashi for 4–5 servings of tsukedare.
When you want restaurant-quality tsukemen on a weeknight, this concentrated broth — made with domestic fish powder and pork bone extract — delivers a surprisingly deep result. Just dilute, heat, and serve. A great backup alongside a from-scratch kit.
Among Japan’s three great ramen capitals — Tokyo, Fukuoka, and Sapporo — it is Sapporo that claims miso ramen as its own. Born in the 1960s in Hokkaido’s cold northern climate, Sapporo-style miso ramen has one defining trick up its sleeve: the vegetables are not just added as toppings after the fact. They are stir-fried directly in a hot wok or pan, then the boiling broth is poured over them. The flash of high heat wakes up the aromatics, adds a subtle smokiness, and — critically in Hokkaido winters — a spoonful of lard on top acts as an insulating lid that keeps every last drop of broth searingly hot until you reach the bottom of the bowl.
This recipe walks you through the Sapporo method step by step: building a pork-based broth, blending white and red miso for depth, stir-frying the vegetables at high heat, and finishing with the classic trio of corn, butter, and white sesame. The total active time is about 40 minutes once your broth is ready; if you start with store-bought chicken stock, you can have a bowl on the table in under an hour.
💡 What you’ll learn in this article
Why Sapporo-style miso ramen stir-fries vegetables directly into the broth — and how to do it at home
How lard (or butter) keeps your bowl hot from first sip to last
The exact ratio of white to red miso for a balanced, not overpowering, broth
Which miso varieties work best — and which to avoid
Allergen notes: this recipe contains wheat, soy, dairy (butter), and sesame
⚠️ Allergen Notice: This recipe contains wheat (ramen noodles, soy sauce), soy (miso paste, soy sauce), dairy (butter topping), and sesame (white sesame, sesame oil). Lard contains pork. Please review all ingredients if you have food allergies or dietary restrictions.
Sapporo’s miso ramen stands apart from miso-flavored broths found elsewhere in Japan in two key ways: the cooking technique and the fat.
The stir-fry technique. In most ramen shops, toppings are prepared separately and placed on the finished bowl. In Sapporo-style, the aromatics (garlic, ginger), meat (ground pork), and vegetables (bean sprouts, corn, cabbage) are stir-fried together in a wok or large frying pan at high heat. The hot broth is then added directly to the pan, and miso paste is dissolved into it. This process — sometimes called the “ita-mae” (tableside cooking) method in old Sapporo shops — creates a broth with a slightly caramelized, wok-fried undertone you simply cannot get by stirring miso into liquid alone.
Lard as an insulating layer. Hokkaido winters are harsh, and Sapporo ramen shops figured out early that a thin layer of rendered lard (or occasionally chicken fat) floated on the surface of the bowl acts as a thermal barrier, trapping steam and keeping the broth at scalding temperature far longer than a naked broth would. Even at home in a warm kitchen, the lard layer makes a noticeable difference by the time you have your first sip — the bowl is still blazing hot. A knob of unsalted butter works as a milder substitute.
💡 Historical Note: Sapporo miso ramen is often traced to Aji no Sanpei, a restaurant that opened in 1964 in Sapporo’s Susukino district. The chef reportedly developed the miso broth to stand up to Hokkaido’s bitter winters — and the style spread nationwide within a decade.
Ingredients (Serves 2)
Broth Base
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Ingredient
Amount
Notes
Chicken stock (or pork + chicken)
700 ml (3 cups)
Store-bought low-sodium works well; homemade from chicken backs is richer
⚠️ Substitution Note for Overseas Cooks: Fresh ramen noodles may be hard to find outside Japan. Look for Sun Noodle brand at Japanese grocery stores, or use dried Chinese egg noodles (available at most Asian supermarkets). Regular dried spaghetti (cooked al dente) is a workable emergency substitute. For miso paste, most natural food stores carry white miso; red miso is increasingly available at specialty grocers.
Marukome Ryotei no Aji Miso (750 g) — recommended for this recipe
A well-balanced blended miso (white + red) from one of Japan’s most trusted brands. Ready to use straight from the tub — no mixing required for a basic miso broth.
The key to authentic Sapporo miso ramen is speed and high heat during the stir-fry phase. Have every ingredient measured and ready before you heat the pan — this is not a recipe where you can stop to chop garlic mid-cook.
Step 1: Heat Your Stock
Pour the chicken stock into a medium saucepan and bring it to a gentle simmer over medium heat. Keep it warm throughout the cooking process — you will be adding it directly to the stir-fry pan in Step 4, and it must be hot when it goes in to avoid stalling the stir-fry.
If you are making your broth from scratch, simmer chicken backs or wings (1 kg / 2.2 lb) in 1.5 L (6 cups) of water for 1.5–2 hours, skimming regularly. Strain and use 700 ml for the two bowls; freeze the rest.
💡 Tip: Want a richer, porky broth without hours of simmering? Add two or three slices of bacon to your chicken stock and simmer for 20 minutes before straining. The rendered bacon fat and pork flavor round out the broth noticeably.
Step 2: Stir-Fry Aromatics & Ground Pork
Heat a large wok or wide frying pan over high heat until you can feel the heat radiating from the surface — about 1–2 minutes. Add the lard (or vegetable oil) and let it shimmer. Add the garlic and ginger and stir-fry for 30 seconds, pressing them against the hot pan surface to release fragrance. The garlic should turn golden at the edges but not brown.
Add the ground pork and spread it out with your spatula. Let it sit undisturbed for 30 seconds to develop a slight crust, then break it apart and stir-fry until fully cooked through, about 2 more minutes. Season lightly with a pinch of white pepper.
⚠️ Food Safety: Ground pork must reach an internal temperature of 71°C (160°F) before the broth is added. Stir-fry until no pink remains and the pork is fully cooked. Do not taste-test raw or undercooked ground pork.
Step 3: Add Bean Sprouts & White Parts of Scallion
Tumble the bean sprouts and the sliced white parts of the scallions into the pan. Stir-fry over high heat for 60–90 seconds. You want the sprouts to wilt slightly and pick up a little wok char, but not turn completely limp — they should still have a gentle bite when the bowl reaches the table. Undercooked sprouts taste raw and grassy; overcooked sprouts turn watery. Aim for the middle.
💡 Tip: Dry your bean sprouts thoroughly before adding them to the pan. Excess moisture causes them to steam rather than stir-fry, which lowers the wok temperature and prevents the light caramelization that gives authentic Sapporo miso ramen its characteristic undertone.
Step 4: Add Hot Stock & Dissolve Miso
Pour the hot stock into the pan in one confident pour. It will sizzle dramatically — this is normal and desirable. The broth picks up all the rendered fat, pork fond, and wok char from the bottom of the pan. Bring the mixture back to a simmer over medium-high heat.
Remove the pan from heat. Add the white miso and red miso in small spoonfuls, dissolving each addition into the broth with a ladle or whisk before adding the next. Miso should never boil after it is added — boiling destroys the nuanced fermented flavor and makes it taste flat. Add the soy sauce, mirin, and sesame oil after the miso is fully dissolved.
⚠️ Do Not Boil After Adding Miso: Once miso is dissolved into the broth, keep heat at a bare simmer or remove from heat entirely. Boiling miso causes the proteins and enzymes to break down, resulting in a bitter, one-dimensional flavor. If you need to reheat the broth, do so gently over low heat.
Step 5: Cook the Noodles Separately
Bring a large pot of unsalted water to a rolling boil. Cook the ramen noodles according to package directions — typically 2–3 minutes for fresh, 4–5 minutes for dried. Ramen noodles are normally cooked in plain water (no salt), unlike pasta. Drain well; shake off excess water. Do not rinse with cold water — you want the noodles hot when they go into the broth.
Assembly & Toppings
Warm your serving bowls — Sapporo chefs pour boiling water into the bowl and discard it before ladling in the broth. This small step makes a noticeable difference in how long the bowl stays hot.
Ladle the miso broth (including all the stir-fried ingredients) into the warmed bowls. Add the drained noodles, tucking them into the broth. Arrange the toppings:
Corn: Mound 2 tablespoons of drained canned corn in the center or to one side. It adds sweetness and a slight pop of texture.
Butter: Place a small knob of unsalted butter on top. As it melts, swirl it gently into the broth — it enriches the mouthfeel and carries fat-soluble aromatics.
White sesame seeds: Scatter toasted sesame over the bowl just before serving. They add fragrance and a light crunch.
Green scallion rings: Use the reserved green tops from the scallions, thinly sliced.
Optional — lard drop: For full Sapporo authenticity, add a teaspoon of warmed lard directly on top of the broth before placing the other toppings. It creates the insulating layer described above.
Optional — chashu: Two or three slices of braised chashu pork placed over the noodles round out the bowl.
💡 Serving Tip: Miso ramen waits for no one. Serve immediately after assembly — the noodles begin absorbing the broth within two minutes, and both texture and flavor change quickly. If cooking for guests, time the noodle boil so the bowls are assembled within 30 seconds of the noodles draining.
Choosing Your Miso
Miso paste varies dramatically by region, age, and ingredient ratio. For Sapporo-style ramen, the goal is a broth that is savory and deeply umami without being sharp or astringent. Here is how the main types stack up:
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Miso Type
Flavor Profile
Best Use
Rating for Ramen
White miso (shiro miso)
Mild, slightly sweet, lightly salty
Base layer; high ratio (2:1 or 3:1 vs. red miso)
★★★★★
Red miso (aka miso)
Bold, deeply savory, slightly bitter
Accent layer; 1 part to every 2–3 parts white
★★★★☆
Mixed miso (awase miso)
Balanced, all-purpose
Use alone as a single-paste shortcut
★★★★☆
Hatcho miso
Very bold, earthy, almost chocolate-like
Use sparingly (½ tsp max) as umami booster
★★☆☆☆ (alone)
Saikyo miso
Very sweet, delicate
Too sweet for ramen unless cut with red miso
★★☆☆☆ (alone)
Instant miso soup packets
Pre-mixed, shelf-stable
Avoid — thin flavor, excess sodium, additives
★☆☆☆☆
💡 The 2:1 Blend Rule: Most Sapporo miso ramen shops use a proprietary blend, but a reliable starting point for home cooks is a 2:1 ratio of white to red miso. The white miso brings sweetness and body; the red miso provides the deeper, fermented punch. Taste your broth after dissolving the miso and adjust from there — add more red for depth, more white for mildness, or a pinch of salt if the miso’s sodium content varies from brand to brand.
⚠️ Sodium Warning: Miso paste is high in sodium. This recipe uses approximately 4.5 tablespoons of total miso for two servings, which is consistent with typical ramen shop sodium levels. If you are watching sodium intake, reduce the miso to 3 tablespoons total and compensate with a small splash of fish sauce or dashi for umami.
FAQ
Q: Can I make this recipe without lard?
A: Yes. Lard is traditional but not essential. The closest substitute is unsalted butter (already called for in the topping), which provides richness and a slightly different but equally pleasant flavor. For a fully dairy-free version, use a teaspoon of neutral oil (such as rice bran or refined coconut oil) as the bowl-top insulating layer, or simply skip the fat layer entirely — you will just need to eat the bowl a little faster before it cools.
Q: My miso broth tastes flat. What went wrong?
A: Several possible causes. First, check whether the broth boiled after the miso was added — boiling destroys the delicate fermented compounds that give miso its complexity. Second, confirm that your stock had enough body to begin with; if you used very diluted stock, the broth will taste watery regardless of how much miso you add. Third, the stir-fry step may have been done at too-low heat — the maillard browning from the wok adds significant flavor. Add a small splash of soy sauce and a pinch of salt to rescue an underseasoned batch.
Q: Can I prepare the miso broth in advance?
A: Yes, with one caveat. Make the stir-fried vegetable and pork base ahead of time and refrigerate it (up to 2 days). When ready to serve, reheat the base in the pan, add fresh hot stock, dissolve the miso off-heat, and proceed as normal. Do not store already-dissolved miso broth for more than 24 hours — the flavor continues to change and can turn bitter. For best results, dissolve miso fresh each time.
Q: What is the difference between Sapporo miso ramen and regular miso ramen?
A: The key differences are technique and fat. Standard miso ramen (as served in shops outside Hokkaido) often involves adding miso tare to a pre-made pork or chicken broth — a simpler process. Sapporo-style specifically stir-fries the aromatics, meat, and vegetables in lard at high heat before adding the stock, giving the broth its slightly wok-charred character. The lard insulating layer is also specific to Sapporo tradition. Additionally, Sapporo miso ramen classically uses medium wavy noodles (not straight) to trap the thick broth.
Recommended Items
These three items will noticeably improve your miso ramen results at home.
Large Ramen Bowl Set — Deep Ceramic Noodle Bowls (Pair)
Ramen is a generous portion, and a standard soup bowl is simply too small. Proper ramen bowls hold 1,100–1,300 ml (approximately 5–5.5 cups) and have high, curved sides that retain heat and let toppings be arranged attractively without overflow. A ceramic bowl also holds temperature far better than a thin melamine bowl.
Pre-Seasoned Carbon Steel Frying Pan (28 cm / 11 inch)
The stir-fry step for Sapporo miso ramen requires a pan that can sustain high, consistent heat without losing temperature when cold ingredients are added. Carbon steel heats faster than cast iron and handles the high-heat stir-fry phase better than non-stick. A 28 cm / 11-inch pan fits the full recipe (including broth) comfortably without spilling.
Ready-rendered lard eliminates the need to source and render pork fat yourself. Used both as the stir-fry fat and as the Sapporo-style insulating bowl topping, a 200 g / 7 oz tub will last for many batches of ramen. Store refrigerated after opening.
This recipe is based on the general cooking method widely established for Sapporo-style miso ramen — a style documented by multiple Japanese culinary resources and consistent across Hokkaido ramen tradition since the 1960s. The specific ingredient proportions have been developed and tested by the HowToCook.jp editorial team for home kitchen reproducibility. This is not a recreation of any individual shop’s proprietary recipe.
Tokyo Gas Uchi-goto — practical home cooking techniques including soup-base flavor layering. https://uchi.tokyo-gas.co.jp/
Just One Cookbook (Namiko Chen) — Miso Ramen Recipe 味噌ラーメン — English-language recipe with five-ingredient miso broth, stir-fry technique, and assembly instructions for Sapporo-style miso ramen.
Sudachi Recipes (Yuto Omura) — Pork Miso Ramen in 15 Minutes (Sapporo Style) — Quick Sapporo-style miso ramen recipe with restaurant-quality results; covers miso blending, lard use, and stir-fry base technique.
RecipeTin Japan (Nagi Maehashi) — Home-Made Miso Ramen — Detailed English recipe covering both Moyashi and Sapporo-style miso ramen variations, with step-by-step broth and tare instructions.
情報の最終確認日 / Last verified: February 2026
Shoyu ramen — soy sauce ramen — is the style most home cooks attempt first, and for good reason: a clear, amber-colored bowl of soy-scented chicken broth feels approachable while still tasting unmistakably like a real ramen shop. The secret is not a single special ingredient but a two-component system every professional kitchen uses: a neutral chintan chicken broth and a concentrated soy-based seasoning called kaeshi (also called tare). Once you have those two components in the fridge, any bowl is just minutes away.
This recipe covers the Tokyo-style roots of shoyu ramen, the Asahikawa cold-weather variation from Hokkaido, the golden ratio for kaeshi, and a practical guide to storing and reusing both the tare and your chashu braising liquid so nothing goes to waste.
⚠️ Allergen notice This recipe contains wheat (ramen noodles, soy sauce) and soy (soy sauce, mirin). For a gluten-free version, substitute tamari or coconut aminos for the soy sauce, and use certified gluten-free noodles. See the FAQ section below for details.
💡 What you’ll learn in this article
How Tokyo-style and Asahikawa-style shoyu ramen differ — and which to make at home
A step-by-step chicken chintan broth shared with the shio ramen recipe (make once, use twice)
The 4:2:1 golden ratio for shoyu tare with niboshi and kombu
Assembly order for a restaurant-quality bowl in under 10 minutes
How to store kaeshi for up to 3 months and combine it with chashu braising liquid
What Is Shoyu Ramen?
Shoyu ramen traces its roots to Tokyo in the early twentieth century, when Chinese cooks brought their wheat-noodle soup to Japan. Tokyo-style shoyu ramen — often called chuka soba or simply “Tokyo ramen” — is defined by its crystalline, amber broth: chicken stock seasoned with a blend of soy sauce, mirin, and sake, never clouded by vigorous boiling. The noodles are thin and slightly wavy, and the classic toppings are chashu pork, bamboo shoots (menma), green onion, and a sheet of nori.
The regional landscape of shoyu ramen is wide. Three styles you may encounter:
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Style
Region
Broth character
Distinctive feature
Tokyo / Chuka Soba
Tokyo
Light, clear, chicken-forward
Never brought to a full boil; broth stays pale amber
Asahikawa
Hokkaido
Richer — pork + seafood dashi blend
Thin layer of lard or pork fat floats on top to insulate the bowl in −30 °C winters
Kitakata
Fukushima
Mild, slightly sweet pork-niboshi
Thick, flat, wavy noodles; unusually high noodle-to-broth ratio
Kyoto (Tori Paitan variation)
Kyoto
Opaque, rich chicken white broth
Shoyu tare added to a creamy paitan — a hybrid style
Wakayama
Wakayama
Dark, intense soy + pork bone
Very strong soy flavor, often served with mackerel sushi on the side
This recipe produces the Tokyo-style bowl: a clear, golden chintan broth seasoned with a niboshi-kombu shoyu tare. It is the most versatile starting point — once you master it, adapting toward Asahikawa style is simply a matter of adding a spoonful of rendered pork fat.
💡 Shared chintan base The chicken broth in this recipe is identical to the base used in the shio ramen spoke article. Make a double batch and you have the foundation for two different bowls from a single afternoon of cooking.
Ingredients (2 servings)
For the Chicken Chintan Broth
700 g (1.5 lb) chicken wings or bone-in chicken thighs
1.5 liters (6 cups / 50 fl oz) cold water
1 small leek or 2 green onion stalks (white and light green parts)
3 slices fresh ginger (about 10 g / 0.35 oz)
2 cloves garlic, lightly crushed
15 g (0.5 oz) katsuobushi (dried bonito flakes) — optional for extra umami depth
For the Shoyu Tare (Kaeshi)
Makes enough for 8–10 bowls. Store in the fridge and use as needed.
120 ml (½ cup / 4 fl oz) dark Japanese soy sauce (koikuchi shoyu)
60 ml (¼ cup / 2 fl oz) mirin
30 ml (2 Tbsp) sake (or dry white wine)
1 tsp granulated sugar
5 g (0.2 oz) niboshi (dried baby anchovies), rinsed — heads and dark bellies removed if bitter
5 cm (2 inch) piece of kombu (dried kelp)
1 tsp toasted sesame oil (added after cooking, off heat)
For Assembly (per bowl)
100–120 g (3.5–4.2 oz) fresh or dried ramen noodles per serving
300–360 ml (1¼–1½ cups) finished chicken broth, heated
2–3 Tbsp shoyu tare (start with 2, adjust to taste)
Toppings: 2–3 slices chashu pork, 1 ramen egg (ajitsuke tamago), bamboo shoots (menma), green onion, nori, fish cake (narutomaki) — all optional
⚠️ Allergen reminder Soy sauce and standard ramen noodles both contain wheat and soy. If cooking for someone with a wheat allergy, substitute tamari (gluten-free certified) for the soy sauce and use rice noodles or a verified GF ramen brand.
Chicken Broth (Tori Chintan)
The defining characteristic of chintan broth is its clarity. The technique is simple: keep the temperature below a rolling boil so that proteins stay in solid form and can be easily skimmed away, rather than emulsifying into a cloudy suspension. Two to three hours of patient simmering is enough.
Step 1: Blanch and rinse the chicken
Place the chicken pieces in a pot, cover with cold water, and bring to a boil over high heat. Boil for 2–3 minutes — you will see gray scum rise. Drain immediately, then rinse each piece under cold running water and scrub away any dark bits with your fingers. This blanching step is the single most important action for a clean-tasting, clear broth.
💡 Wings vs. backs Chicken wings give a gelatinous, slightly richer broth because of the high collagen content in the skin and cartilage. Bone-in thighs add more savory chicken flavor. A 50/50 mix of wings and thighs produces the most balanced result.
Step 2: Build the broth
Return the rinsed chicken to a clean pot. Add the 1.5 liters of cold water, leek, ginger, and garlic. Bring to a gentle simmer over medium heat — you should see wisps of steam and occasional small bubbles, never a full rolling boil. Skim any remaining foam with a fine-mesh skimmer during the first 15 minutes.
Step 3: Simmer low and slow
Reduce heat to the lowest setting that maintains a bare simmer (roughly 85–90 °C / 185–195 °F if you have a thermometer). Simmer uncovered for 2 hours, skimming any fat that pools on the surface every 30 minutes. If using katsuobushi, add it in the last 10 minutes of simmering and then strain immediately — extended steeping makes the broth bitter.
⚠️ Do not boil Sustained boiling breaks fat into tiny droplets that emulsify permanently into the broth, turning it milky white. Once the broth goes cloudy, there is no way to reverse it. If clarity matters to you, keep the heat low throughout.
Step 4: Strain and cool
Pour the finished broth through a fine-mesh strainer into a clean container. Discard solids. You should have about 900 ml–1 liter (roughly 4 cups) of golden broth. Let it cool to room temperature, then refrigerate. A thick layer of fat will solidify on top overnight — scrape it off before reheating, or leave a thin layer for richer flavor.
Recommended: OXO Good Grips 4-Cup Fat Separator
Pour your finished broth directly into this fat separator to instantly remove excess fat without waiting overnight. The strainer catches solids while the bottom-pour spout leaves fat behind. Ideal for getting a clear, lean chintan broth in minutes rather than hours of chilling.
OXO Good Grips Good Gravy 4-Cup Fat Separator (ASIN: B071F2ZM15)
Soy Tare (Kaeshi) — The 4:2:1 Golden Ratio
Kaeshi is the soul of shoyu ramen. Professional shops guard their kaeshi recipes carefully, but the underlying logic is a simple ratio. The most widely used home-cook proportion is 4 parts soy sauce : 2 parts mirin : 1 part sake. This balance gives you the savory depth of soy, the gentle sweetness of mirin, and the alcohol lift of sake — all in one concentrated seasoning you can adjust bowl by bowl.
The niboshi and kombu step below is optional but strongly recommended: a 20-minute cold steep costs almost no effort and adds a layer of marine umami that distinguishes a truly restaurant-quality tare from a simple mix of condiments.
Step 1: Cold-steep the umami boosters
Combine the soy sauce, mirin, sake, and sugar in a small saucepan. Add the niboshi and kombu. Let them soak at room temperature for 20 minutes (or overnight in the fridge for a deeper result). The kombu releases glutamates into the liquid; the niboshi adds inosinates — together they create synergistic umami far beyond either alone.
💡 Niboshi prep tip Niboshi (dried baby anchovies) can taste bitter if the head and dark intestinal strip are left intact. Simply snap off the head and peel back the belly — the white flesh underneath is mild and sweet. Removing them is a two-second step per fish that noticeably reduces bitterness.
Step 2: Warm and reduce gently
Place the saucepan over medium-low heat. Warm the liquid until it just begins to steam and small bubbles appear around the edges — do not boil. The mirin contains alcohol, and bringing it to just below a simmer for 5 minutes drives off the harsh raw-alcohol note while preserving the delicate sweetness. Remove from heat when the volume has reduced by about 10%.
Step 3: Remove solids and add sesame oil
Strain the tare through a fine-mesh strainer, pressing the niboshi gently to extract the last of their flavor. Discard the solids. While the liquid is still warm but off the heat, stir in 1 teaspoon of toasted sesame oil. This finishing oil adds fragrance and a glossy surface sheen to the final bowl.
⚠️ Tare is intensely salty Two tablespoons of shoyu tare is the starting point for a 300–360 ml bowl of broth. Taste before serving — the correct proportion is a broth that tastes like well-seasoned soup, not like diluted soy sauce. Add tare in the bowl, not in the pot, so each serving can be individually adjusted.
The soy sauce you choose matters
Standard supermarket dark soy sauce (Kikkoman or equivalent) produces a reliable, clean kaeshi. For a more complex tare with notes of caramel and wine, try a traditionally barrel-aged shoyu. The flavor difference is especially noticeable because the tare is added in concentrated form.
Aged 4 years in traditional Japanese cedar barrels (kioke), this artisan shoyu from Kagawa Prefecture carries a deep, rounded umami with caramel undertones that transform kaeshi into something remarkable. Because you use only small amounts per bowl, a single bottle goes a long way. Excellent for sushi and sashimi as well.
Yamaroku Shoyu Tsuru Bisiho, 18 oz (ASIN: B0036TFXY0)
Assembly
Good ramen assembly is about sequencing. The bowl is warmed first, the tare goes in, the hot broth is poured over — then the noodles, then the toppings. This order ensures the tare mixes evenly before the noodles hit.
Step 1: Warm the bowl
Fill your serving bowl with boiling water and let it sit for 60 seconds. Pour out the water just before assembly. A cold bowl drops the broth temperature quickly; warming it keeps the bowl piping hot for 10 minutes longer.
💡 Bowl size A proper ramen bowl holds at least 700–900 ml (24–30 fl oz). Smaller bowls result in broth overflow when you add noodles. The pillar guide lists recommended bowl sizes and links to Japanese-style ramen bowl sets.
Step 2: Add tare and pour broth
Add 2 tablespoons of shoyu tare to the warmed bowl. Bring your chicken broth to a rolling boil in a separate pot, then pour 300–360 ml (about 1¼–1½ cups) directly over the tare. Stir with chopsticks or a spoon for 5 seconds to combine. Taste: it should be savory and well-seasoned but not overwhelming. Add a third tablespoon of tare if needed.
Step 3: Cook and add noodles
Cook ramen noodles in a separate large pot of unsalted boiling water according to the package directions — usually 60–90 seconds for fresh noodles, 3–4 minutes for dried. Drain immediately and transfer to the bowl in one smooth motion. Avoid rinsing the noodles: the light starch coating on their surface helps the broth cling to them.
⚠️ Speed matters Ramen noodles continue cooking in residual heat after they leave the pot. If you are slow to assemble, noodles will go from perfectly chewy to mushy within two to three minutes. Have all toppings sliced and ready before you start cooking the noodles.
Step 4: Add toppings and serve immediately
Arrange toppings on top of the noodles: chashu slices fanned across one side, a halved ramen egg, a portion of bamboo shoots, sliced green onion, and a sheet of nori leaning against the bowl edge. A few drops of chili oil or a pinch of white pepper finish the bowl. Serve at once — ramen waits for nobody.
Storing & Reusing Kaeshi
One of the most practical habits you can build as a home ramen cook is treating kaeshi as a pantry staple rather than a one-time preparation. A batch made with the proportions above contains enough tare for 8–10 bowls.
Storing kaeshi
Pour the finished kaeshi into a clean glass jar or squeeze bottle and refrigerate. Because of its high salt content — soy sauce inhibits microbial growth — kaeshi keeps well in the refrigerator for up to 3 months. The flavor continues to develop and mellow over the first few weeks as the niboshi and kombu infusion integrates fully. Many home cooks find that kaeshi tastes better two weeks after making it than on day one.
💡 Cross-use with chashu braising liquid If you have made chashu pork, do not discard the braising liquid. That liquid — a blend of soy sauce, mirin, sake, and pork gelatin — is essentially a rich, meaty proto-tare. Strain it and stir 2–3 tablespoons into your kaeshi to add body and depth. Alternatively, freeze it in ice-cube trays and drop one cube into each bowl for an extra layer of savory complexity. The braising liquid also doubles as a marinade for ramen eggs.
Refreshing and blending batches
Professional ramen shops rarely start from scratch each day. Instead, they combine the previous batch of tare with a fresh batch — a practice that builds cumulative flavor over weeks and months. At home, the equivalent is simple: when your jar of kaeshi is running low, make a new batch, let it cool, and pour it into the same jar over the remnants. The old tare seasons the new. Over several months, the complexity in the jar becomes genuinely impressive.
⚠️ Food safety note Always use a clean spoon when measuring kaeshi from the jar — never pour directly from the jar into a pot and then back again, as this introduces moisture and bacteria that shorten the shelf life. If you see any mold, cloudiness, or off-smell, discard the batch entirely.
FAQ
Q: Can I make shoyu ramen gluten-free?
A: Yes. The two gluten-containing components are the soy sauce (which traditionally contains wheat) and the ramen noodles. Substitute certified gluten-free tamari for the soy sauce at a 1:1 ratio — the flavor is nearly identical. For noodles, look for rice-based ramen noodles or buckwheat soba noodles, both of which can be found at Asian grocery stores and online. Note that mirin may contain small amounts of wheat in some brands, so check the label if strict gluten-free compliance is required.
Q: What is the difference between kaeshi and tare?
A: In practice, home cooks use the terms interchangeably. Technically, kaeshi refers to a soy-mirin-sake blend that is heated and then left to rest (“return,” which is what kaeshi means) — a process originally associated with soba sauce. Tare is the broader term for any concentrated seasoning added to ramen broth. For shoyu ramen, the two terms describe the same thing: the soy-based concentrate that sits at the bottom of the bowl before the broth is poured in.
Q: My broth turned cloudy — what went wrong?
A: Cloudiness almost always means the broth boiled too hard at some point. When water boils vigorously, fat and proteins emulsify into millions of tiny droplets that scatter light and create a milky appearance. The solution going forward is to keep the heat low enough that you see wisps of steam and occasional small bubbles, never a rolling boil. A cloudy broth is not ruined — it tastes fine, it just loses the elegant Tokyo-style clarity. If appearance matters, strain the broth through a fine-mesh strainer lined with cheesecloth while it is still warm.
Q: Can I use store-bought chicken stock instead of making broth from scratch?
A: Yes, and this is a great shortcut on busy weeknights. Use a low-sodium chicken stock and reduce it by about 20% on the stovetop to concentrate the flavor. The result will lack the natural gelatin of a bone-based broth but will still produce a satisfying bowl when combined with a well-made kaeshi. Add a small piece of kombu to the store-bought stock while warming it — a 20-minute steep adds surprising depth at no extra cost.
A traditionally fermented soy sauce aged four years in cedar barrels in Kagawa Prefecture. The extra aging creates rounded, wine-like umami that makes your kaeshi noticeably more complex. A single bottle covers dozens of bowls of ramen — and works beautifully for sushi, tamagoyaki, and dipping sauces too.
Yamaroku Shoyu Tsuru Bisiho, 18 oz (ASIN: B0036TFXY0)
OXO Good Grips 4-Cup Fat Separator
The fastest way to get a crystal-clear chintan broth without overnight chilling. Pour the strained broth in, wait two minutes for fat to rise, then pour the clear stock out from the bottom spout. The built-in strainer catches any remaining bone fragments or herbs. A time-saver that pays for itself the first time you use it.
OXO Good Grips Good Gravy 4-Cup Fat Separator (ASIN: B071F2ZM15)
Fine Mesh Fat Skimmer Spoon — Stainless Steel Spider Strainer
Essential for skimming scum and fat from the surface of your chintan broth during the first 30 minutes of simmering. A fine-mesh spider strainer removes cloudy proteins efficiently without taking liquid with them. Also useful for lifting noodles from the cooking pot directly into the bowl without a colander.
This recipe is independently compiled by the HowToCook.jp editorial team based on widely practiced Japanese home-cooking methods. Ingredient proportions reflect the 4:2:1 kaeshi ratio in common use among Japanese home cooks and are derived from multiple culinary sources listed below, independently verified and rewritten in our own words.
Shio ramen (塩ラーメン, shio = salt) is ramen in its most refined form. Where tonkotsu clouds the bowl with emulsified fat and miso adds assertive fermented depth, shio stands apart through restraint: a broth so clear you can see the bottom of the bowl, yet layered with quiet, complex umami. A single spoonful and you understand why ramen historians trace the style back to Hakodate, Hokkaido’s port city, where cooks in the 1880s drew on fresh seafood, kelp, and a light hand with seasoning to create what many call Japan’s original ramen.
The challenge — and the reward — of shio ramen lies in that paradox: it must taste rich, but look pristine. This guide walks you through every stage, from blotching and blanching bones to building a balanced salt tare (塩タレ, shio tare), so you can achieve a restaurant-quality golden bowl at home.
💡 What you’ll learn in this article
Why chintan (清湯) broth stays clear — and the one mistake that clouds it
A balanced shio tare recipe using usukuchi soy sauce and kombu water
How to make chicken or sesame oil (香味油, kōmi-abura) to finish the bowl
Assembly order for a restaurant-quality result, plus topping ideas
FAQ: substitutions, storing tare, and scaling for a crowd
What Is Shio Ramen?
Shio ramen belongs to the chintan family — broths that are kept deliberately clear rather than opaque (paitan, 白湯). The clarity is not cosmetic. A well-made chintan has a delicate mouthfeel that lets individual flavors — chicken, kelp, clams, dried scallop — register separately rather than merging into one opaque wall of richness.
The seasoning element is shio tare, a concentrated salt sauce that supplies most of the bowl’s saltiness and much of its umami. Unlike shoyu tare, which darkens the broth amber, shio tare keeps the soup pale gold or nearly transparent. That color signals freshness to a Japanese diner — clarity is a mark of skill, not simplicity.
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Ramen Style
Broth Type
Key Seasoning
Broth Color
Difficulty
Shio
Chintan (clear)
Salt tare
Pale gold
★★★☆☆
Shoyu
Chintan
Soy tare (kaeshi)
Amber brown
★★★☆☆
Miso
Chintan or paitan
Miso blend
Brown–ochre
★★★☆☆
Tonkotsu
Paitan (opaque)
Salt or soy tare
Milky white
★★★★★
Abura Soba
None (dry)
Tare + flavored oil
N/A
★★☆☆☆
Tantan-men
Paitan (sesame)
Sesame + spicy miso
Beige–red
★★★☆☆
Ingredients (2 Servings)
For the Chintan Broth
⚠️ Allergen notice This recipe contains wheat (ramen noodles, soy sauce), chicken, and soy. The kombu is shellfish-free but shares production facilities in some brands — check your label if cooking for severe allergy sufferers. If you use dried scallops in the tare (optional), add shellfish to the allergen list.
800 g (1¾ lb) bone-in chicken pieces (backs, wings, or carcasses) — or an equal weight of chicken feet for extra collagen
1 liter (4¼ cups) cold water
1 piece kombu (昆布, dried kelp), about 10 cm (4 in)
3 slices fresh ginger
2 spring onions (green parts), roughly torn
1 tsp fine sea salt (for blanching water)
For the Shio Tare (makes ~120 ml / ½ cup — enough for 4–6 bowls)
100 ml (7 Tbsp) sake
2 Tbsp mirin
200 ml (¾ cup + 1 Tbsp) cold water + 1 piece kombu (5 cm / 2 in) — combined as kombu water, steeped 30 min
1½ tsp fine sea salt (adjust to taste)
1 tsp usukuchi soy sauce (薄口醤油, usukuchi shōyu — light-colored soy sauce; regular soy sauce will darken the broth)
For the Aroma Oil (香味油, kōmi-abura)
Chicken oil option: 2 Tbsp chicken skin or fat trimmings + 3 Tbsp neutral oil (canola or sunflower); gently render over low heat 8–10 min, then strain
Sesame oil option (quick): 1 Tbsp toasted sesame oil — stir directly into each bowl at assembly
To Serve
160 g (5½ oz) fresh or dried ramen noodles — straight, thin noodles (around 1 mm / No. 26 gauge) suit shio ramen best
Chintan (清湯) literally means “clear soup.” The name is the recipe: your entire goal is to extract maximum flavor without clouding the liquid. Fat and proteins cloud broth when agitated at a rolling boil; the two-stage approach below — blanch to purge impurities, then simmer barely below boiling — keeps the liquid brilliantly clear throughout.
Step 1 — Blanch the Bones
Place the chicken pieces in a large pot and cover with cold water. Bring to a rapid boil and cook for 2 minutes — the water will turn grey and foam will rise. Drain and rinse every piece under cold running water, cleaning off any grey matter clinging to the joints. This step removes soluble proteins and blood compounds that would otherwise cloud the broth and produce off-flavors.
💡 Why cold water matters Starting the blanch in cold (not hot) water draws impurities out of the bones gradually. Adding bones to already-boiling water seals the surface before impurities can escape — the opposite of what you want here.
Step 2 — Gentle Simmer with Kombu
Return the cleaned chicken to a fresh pot. Add the kombu piece and cold water. Over medium heat, warm the liquid slowly until you can see wisps of steam and small bubbles starting to form at the bottom — about 75–80 °C (167–176 °F). Remove the kombu at this point, before the water reaches a rolling boil; kombu held above 85 °C (185 °F) releases slimy, bitter compounds that dull the broth’s brightness.
Add the ginger and spring onion greens. Reduce heat until the surface shows only a lazy shimmer — one or two small bubbles breaking every few seconds, around 85–90 °C (185–194 °F). A full boil at any stage will emulsify fat into the stock, turning it opaque. Simmer uncovered for 2–2½ hours, skimming any fat or foam that accumulates in the first 20 minutes.
⚠️ The boil rule Even a 30-second hard boil mid-cook will cloud the broth. If you see large rolling bubbles, remove the pot from heat immediately and let it settle before returning it to low heat. A haze that forms early can sometimes be rescued by straining through a fine-mesh strainer lined with cheesecloth — but prevention is far easier.
Step 3 — Strain
Set a fine-mesh strainer over a clean pot or bowl. Pour the broth through slowly — never press or squeeze the solids, as this forces fat and fine particles through the mesh and clouds the liquid. Let gravity do the work. Discard the solids. The finished broth should be pale gold and translucent, almost luminous against the light. You should have roughly 600–700 ml (2½–3 cups) of broth for 2 servings; if you have more, simmer uncovered for a few extra minutes to concentrate flavor.
Recommended: Fine-Mesh Soup Strainer (Shimomura Planning, Made in Japan)
A 30-mesh stainless steel strainer — small enough to sit across a saucepan, fine enough to catch every particle that would cloud your chintan. Made in Japan and dishwasher safe.
The tare is the soul of any ramen bowl — the concentrated seasoning paste or liquid that is added to the bowl before the broth is poured over it. For shio ramen, the tare must deliver saltiness and umami without adding any dark color. The light, kombu-forward recipe below achieves that balance.
Make Kombu Water First
Combine 200 ml (¾ cup + 1 Tbsp) cold water and the 5 cm kombu piece in a small bowl. Leave at room temperature for at least 30 minutes, or refrigerate overnight. The cold-extraction method draws out glutamates (the umami compound) cleanly, without the bitterness that comes from boiling kombu. Remove the kombu before using.
💡 On usukuchi soy sauce Usukuchi (薄口) literally means “thin mouth” — it is paler and slightly saltier than standard koikuchi (濃口) soy sauce. A small amount adds amino acids and round umami without tinting the broth brown. Outside Japan, look for it in East Asian grocery stores under brands such as Higashimaru or Yamasa. In a pinch, substitute fish sauce at a 1:1 ratio for a different but compatible umami note.
Cook the Tare
Combine the sake and mirin in a small saucepan over medium heat. Bring to a gentle boil and cook for 1–2 minutes to burn off alcohol (you will briefly see a low blue flame if you lean close with a lighter — this is normal). Add the kombu water and salt. Stir over low heat until the salt fully dissolves — about 1 minute. Remove from heat and stir in the usukuchi soy sauce. Do not cook after adding soy sauce; you want its raw, fresh character to remain intact in the finished tare.
Cool completely before storing. The tare keeps refrigerated in an airtight jar for up to 2 weeks. Use 2–3 Tbsp of tare per bowl, adjusted to your salt preference. Add to the empty bowl first, then ladle hot broth over it — never add tare directly to a pot of broth, which makes individual seasoning impossible.
⚠️ Salt balance tip Different sea salts have different saltiness levels by volume (fine sea salt is saltier than flake salt by weight). Taste the tare after dissolving the salt and before adding soy sauce — it should taste aggressively salty on its own, since it will be diluted by roughly 350 ml (1½ cups) of broth per serving. If in doubt, start with 1¼ tsp salt and adjust upward.
Assembly and Toppings
The assembly sequence matters: tare goes in first, then aroma oil, then hot broth, then noodles, then toppings. This order ensures the tare disperses evenly through the broth rather than pooling at the bottom.
Assembling the Bowl
Warm your bowl by filling it with boiling water for 30 seconds, then pouring it out. A cold bowl drops the broth temperature by several degrees the moment it makes contact.
Add 2–3 Tbsp shio tare to the empty warm bowl.
Add 1 tsp chicken oil or sesame oil.
Ladle in 300–350 ml (1¼–1½ cups) of hot chintan broth — keep it just below boiling so it doesn’t agitate and cloud when it hits the tare.
Cook the noodles according to package directions. Drain thoroughly, shaking off excess water so it does not dilute your carefully made broth.
Place noodles in the bowl and add toppings.
💡 Classic shio ramen toppings Shio ramen’s clean flavor works best with restrained toppings that don’t overpower it: thin-sliced chashu pork, menma (seasoned bamboo shoots), a sheet of nori, spring onion rings, and a halved ajitsuke tamago. Avoid heavy garnishes like ma yu (burnt garlic oil) or beni shōga (pickled ginger) which are better suited to tonkotsu.
Chicken Oil: The Easy Way
When you purchase skin-on chicken thighs for chashu or other recipes, save the skin and fat trimmings in the freezer. To make chicken oil: place about 2 Tbsp of skin/fat trimmings in a small saucepan with 3 Tbsp of neutral oil. Cook over the lowest heat for 8–10 minutes until the skin turns golden and crispy and the fat has fully rendered. Strain out the solids. The oil will be pale yellow and deeply savory. Store refrigerated for up to 1 week. Add 1 tsp per bowl at assembly.
⚠️ Food safety: broth storage Chicken broth is highly perishable. Cool any unused broth to room temperature within 2 hours of cooking, then refrigerate within the same day. Use refrigerated broth within 3 days, or freeze in airtight containers for up to 1 month. Never leave broth at room temperature overnight.
FAQ
Q: My broth came out cloudy. Can I fix it?
A: Prevention is more effective than fixing, but if cloudiness is mild, try this: let the finished broth cool to around 60 °C (140 °F) and skim carefully, then strain again through a fine-mesh strainer lined with a damp coffee filter or cheesecloth — pour very slowly. Some clarity usually returns. If the broth is deeply opaque from a sustained hard boil, the fat is fully emulsified and the cloudiness is permanent — but the broth will still taste good as a shoyu or miso ramen base where color matters less.
Q: Can I use a whole chicken instead of backs and wings?
A: Yes. A whole chicken (about 1.2 kg / 2½ lb) works well. The yield is a little smaller per kilogram of bones since there is more meat, but the broth will be richer and can double as ingredient for another dish. Remove the breast meat after 1 hour (it will be fully cooked) and set aside for sandwiches or chashu; continue simmering the rest of the carcass.
Q: I can’t find usukuchi soy sauce. What should I use?
A: Fish sauce is the closest substitute in terms of salt content and umami depth (substitute 1:1). White soy sauce (白醤油, shiro shōyu) is even better if you can find it — lighter in color than usukuchi with a delicate, almost wheat-forward flavor. Regular koikuchi soy sauce works in a pinch but will give the broth a darker amber tone. Reduce the quantity to ½ tsp to limit color impact.
Q: How do I scale this recipe for 4 or more people?
A: Double everything proportionally. The tare recipe already makes enough for 4–6 bowls. For broth, use 1.5 kg (3¼ lb) of chicken bones and 1.8 liters (7½ cups) of water, which should yield about 1.3 liters (5½ cups) of finished broth after simmering. Because the tare is made separately, you can make a large batch of broth and tare on the weekend and assemble individual bowls through the week.
The benchmark usukuchi soy sauce for clear broths and shio tare. Lighter in color than standard soy sauce but slightly saltier — a small amount adds clean umami without discoloring your golden broth. Higashimaru (ヒガシマル) is the most widely trusted brand among professional ramen cooks for light-colored seasoning.
2. Shimomura Planning Soup Strainer — Fine 30-Mesh, Made in Japan
A 30-mesh stainless steel strainer purpose-built for soup and stock work. Small enough to set across a medium saucepan or bowl, the fine mesh catches the tiny particles that cloud chintan broth. Smooth finish (no welds to trap residue) and dishwasher safe. Manufactured in Japan.
3. Yamago Pottery White Porcelain Ramen Bowl — 1000 ml, Set of 3
A deep, wide-mouthed white porcelain ramen bowl that showcases the pale gold color of shio ramen to best effect. The 1,000 ml (34 fl oz) capacity handles generous servings with room for toppings. White porcelain retains heat longer than thinner ceramics, keeping the soup hot through the meal. Set of 3 — ideal for family cooking days.
Recipe note: This recipe is an original compilation by the HowToCook.jp editorial team, developed from standard Japanese chintan-style cooking methods. Ingredient proportions and techniques are informed by well-established ramen references including RecipeTin Japan, Just One Cookbook, and Adam Liaw’s Ramen School series, all credited in Sources below. No single source recipe has been reproduced; all text and quantities are independently composed.