Tori 44 in the Victory neighborhood of Minneapolis specializes in broth made only with poultry stock and the noodles are fresh with an appealing chew. 2. Origami This Uptown sushi landmark serves several varieties of ramen on the dinner menu with silky broths and tangles of noodles.
You can eat it at almost any ramen restaurant in Japan. You can ask for it like this: Miso Tonkotsu, please. But, if you live in Shanghai, I’ve great news for you. A couple of months ago, the first official Naruto ramen restaurant in the world opened in Shanghai.
If your kids love Dragon Ball Z, or if YOU happen to love giant bowls of ramen you can barely fit your arms around, this spot is for you. Soupa Noodle Bar in Florida, also known as Soupa Saiyan is an Orlando hotspot that just opened its second location in Jacksonville.
PinKU Japanese Street Food PinKU is the Japanese street food restaurant on University Avenue in Northeast. It’s an excellent spot for the brothless ramen, mazamen. The focus is on full flavor and long tendrils of noodles. 8. Masu Sushi & Robata
The meaty ramen is a bowl of bone broth topped pulled pork, poached egg and slices of shitake. Open in Google Maps. Also Featured in: Where to Get Dumplings for Takeout and Delivery Around Boston. Where to Eat and Drink After Pond Hockey Around Lake Nokomis.
Ramen is the Japanese soup beloved and obsessed over by many, but mastered by only a few talented chefs. The broth is carefully built from bones and labored over, creating gorgeously subtle, unbelievable flavors. The noodles are long, squiggly and with just the right amount of chew. Luxuriating in that steamy bath is a soft cooked egg, nori and a few other select ingredients.
This quick service eatery is located inside United Noodle, an expansive Asian grocery store and serves up a wide range of ramen options. The Tantanmen is lightly spicy topped with ground pork and a slow-poached egg.
PinKU is the Japanese street food restaurant on University Avenue in Northeast. It’s an excellent spot for the brothless ramen, mazamen. The focus is on full flavor and long tendrils of noodles.
Located just north of I-94 on Dale Avenue in St. Paul, Ishita offers a full menu of traditional and stir-fried ramen dishes. Well-known as some of the best ramen in St. Paul, the portions are perfectly sized and priced right. Their daily happy hour menu (3:30 PM to close) includes $5 sake and appetizers to add to your steaming bowl of noodles.
Ichiddo Ramen has become a household name around the Twin Cities, with locations in Minneapolis, St. Paul, and several suburbs. A good spot for getting an introduction to the world of house-made ramen, Ichiddo is both affordable and authentic.
Frequently voted among the best Sushi and best Japanese restaurants in the Twin Cities, Kyatchi also holds claim to People Magazine’s national award for Best Hot Dog in Every State . Their focus is on offering traditional Japanese meals with fresh and sustainable ingredients.
While sushi dominates the menu at Masu, this Twin Cities fan favorite has plenty of ramen love to go around. Masu perfectly prepares their traditional pork belly bowl every time, and you won’t find the flavors of the Tonkatsu curry bowl anywhere else on this list.
Honestly, there aren’t many of my “Best of” lists that Ngon doesn’t appear. So, of course, this award-winning, farm-to-fork restaurant would have some of my favorite ramen in town. Their “My Kind of Ramen” on the lunch and dinner menu is an incredible melt-in-your-mouth experience. Great for date nights and milestone celebrations.
Origami has been serving up traditional ramen, sushi, and Japanese fare since the 1990s, first in downtown and now in Uptown. Expect to spend a bit more here than some of the other options on the list, but the miso pork belly ramen is so worth it.
So much to love about Ramen Kazama. A simple but flavorful menu. A clean and cozy atmosphere. And a restaurant name that’s just fun to say. These “ramen specialists” serve up a bowl of spicy miso ramen you will want to write home about.
Kishimoto Masashi, the author of Naruto, was inspired by one of the branches of the company Ichiraku Ramen (same name as the anime).
According to the restaurant that was located in J-World (already shut down ?, the ramen that Naruto eats is called Miso Tonkotsu, which, as the name implies, is made with miso broth and pork.
You can eat it at almost any ramen restaurant in Japan. You can ask for it like this:
There is an anime-themed restaurant located in Orlando, Florida that is a fun, fresh adventure the whole family will love. If your kids love Dragon Ball Z, or if YOU happen to love giant bowls of ramen you can barely fit your arms around, this spot is for you. Soupa Noodle Bar in Florida, also known as Soupa Saiyan is an Orlando hotspot ...
Soupa Noodle Bar in Florida, also known as Soupa Saiyan is an Orlando hotspot that just opened its second location in Jacksonville. We guarantee you haven’t seen anything like it.
Our ramen are Springy and Delicious, and it does not easily absorb water and avoids sticking to the bowl. we serve different types and favors of ramen.
We offer a rich, opaque pork bone broth based in soy sauce, miso. Our 2 kinds of house special sauce bring their own unique flavors to the thick, flavorful broth.
Here you can find ingredients and menu according to your own flavor, and make your own ramen. It would be a brilliant combination of flavors.
In our restaurant, different appetizer has its unique homemade sauce which makes the appetizer very delicious.
We also serve a variety of our own special menu, and it includes Beef, Chicken, and Seafood Donburi and Fried Rice.