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らぁ麺屋 飯田商店 (Iidashoten in Yugawara)

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らぁ麺屋 飯田商店

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Here it is. This is one of Kanto’s most celebrated ramen shops. Some of Ida Shoten’s accolades:

  • #13 in the country according to Tabelog
  • A 95.134 rating on the ramen database
  • TRY magazine #3 shoyu, #7 shio, #1 light tsukemen
  • A massive line every day

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Yes, the line here is long. On a warm Saturday in November, I waited over two hours. Be prepared.

I should also note that this shop, though technically in Kanagawa Prefecture, is very far from Tokyo. The fastest trip by train involves riding the Shinkansen bullet train which takes about an hour and a half.

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The menu is simple. The top row is shoyu, followed by shio, with tsukemen just under that. What to eat, what to eat? One of each sounds good.

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This shoyu is on another level. Master Ida-san trained at the famed Shinasobaya, and it shows. A deep shoyu sits underneath that golden layer of aromatic chicken oil. On many levels, this could be considered a perfect bowl of ramen; every detail is accounted for. Thick-cut menma alongside thick-cut chashu. The special version also came with slow-cooked chicken slices and shrimp wontons.

Despite the distance from central Tokyo, this one is a must-hit for ramen lovers.

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The shio is up there as well. Notice how he uses slightly different toppings? While the robust shoyu has thick cut menma bamboo shoots, the lighter shio uses a thinner, more delicate one. Also, the bowls are different shapes, meant to affect the aroma and slurpability. This is where my fellow ramen nerds and I geek out.

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Oh, they were having a limited bowl of duck shoyu, so we tried that as well. I’ve had a few bowls of duck shoyu recently, and when done right, it’s fantastic. This might have been a reason for the huge line that day.

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The tsukemen is a different beast all together. If it looks complicated, well, it is. So complex, in fact, that you need a nine step instruction manual to do it right.

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  1. Sprinkle some salt on the noodles.
  2. Eat the noodles a la carte. The noodles are sitting in a light konbu dashi that deserves to be tasted alone.
  3. Taste just the soup. Rich, isn’t it?
  4. Eat the tsukemen like a normal person normally would.
  5. These toppings are amazing!
  6. Now dip the noodles in the shoyu soup, then sprinkle with salt.
  7. Eat it! Finish it!
  8. Pour the remaining soups together and drink them down.
  9. Tell a friend! 行くべ!

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But, to be honest, I didn’t like this one at all!

The konbu dashi that the noodles sit in was so rich that it became slimy. The word slimy sounds bad in English, while the Japanese onomatopoeia for the word ネバネバ, neba neba, is used to describe many tasty foods. I’m not a huge fan, an aspect I blame on being raised in a Western household where slippery, slimy foods were never on the menu. I’ll eat the stuff, but I’m not going out of my way for the likes of natto, okra, or grated yam (tororo).

I’ve been told by EVERY other ramen nerd that this tsukemen is one of the best in Japan. That overabundance of konbu means an overabundance of umami. Even though I don’t love it, I kind of recommend it.

*Edit some eight years later*

I kind of love konbusui tsukemen now. There are a dozen or so shops that do it very well. As long as the viscosity doesn’t ruin it for you, the underlying flavors are excellent.

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You could easily make a day out in Yugawara. There are plenty of onsen, natural hot springs, in the area. Dopponoyu, Japan’s largest foot bath, isn’t far from Ida Shoten. And in nearby Atami is one of my favorite art museums in Japan, the MOA. Sounds like a perfect day to me!

 

神奈川県足柄下郡湯河原町土肥2-12-14
Kanagawa-ken, Ashigarashimagun, Yagawaramachi, Doi 2-12-14
Closest station: Yugawara

Open 11:00-15:00
Closed Mondays

 

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