Showing posts with label Higashi Osaka-shi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Higashi Osaka-shi. Show all posts

Sunday, September 17, 2017

Niboshi Ramen Rarara

On one lazy Sunday I needed to get out of my house, and used that as an excuse to hit up a shop outside my normal radius. I visited Niboshi Ramen Rarara, a shop founded by an alum of Tamagoro, and got their dried sardine ramen.

だらだらとしている日曜日に家を出かけないとなと思っていて、まあまあ遠くにあるラーメン屋さんに行こうかなと決めました。「玉五郎」で終業した人の「二星らーめん ららら」というダジャレの名前の店に行って、味玉煮干しらーめんを頼みました。

The Bowl
As in the Tamagoro mould, the ramen was a cloudy, salty, sardine broth that was thick but far from impenetrable. The noodles were square and firm, in a good size to fit the saltiness of the soup. The chashu and egg were pretty simple when it came to flavor, but the egg was nice and creamy, and the dash of pepper on the pork went a long way.

玉五郎と似ていて、濁っている煮干し系のとろみがある塩辛いスープでした。麺が四角てまあまあ太くて、スープの塩分と合っていました。チャーシューと味玉の味が薄めでしたけど、玉子がクリーミーでチャーシューに乗っている胡椒が効いていました。

Would I Go Again?
This was solid but I don't think I'll make it out here again.

うまかったですけどまた行く機会がなさそうです。

Should You Go?
It's a solid addition to the Fuse ramen scene, but maybe not worth the trek out there.

この店を含めて布施がだんだん激戦区になりますけど、市内の人にはちょっと行きづらいかな。

Information
二星らーめん ららら

Sunday, January 22, 2012

Mikaeri Ramen

I've only been so far east in Osaka before, so I decided to push the boundaries.  I gave myself a decent amount of time and headed to Shinfukae for one of the few places that is supposed to be open between lunch and dinner on a Sunday.  I arrived to a restaurant with all its lights off.  I was hungry and in the middle of nowhere, but luckily I had Ramen Walker with me.  I looked up a place that was a bit farther east, and would be open after the additional time it would take me to get there.  All the way to Fuse Station, a place I've never been before, and is not even in Osaka city.

Mikaeri is a branch of a shop from Wakayama.  The ramen was available available in thin, regular or rich.  I would normally go with rich soup, but according to the menu, the thin soup has a light chicken base, the rich has a chicken and pork base, and the regular is a mix of two.  Well, when you have a tough time deciding, I say get both, so regular it was.

Information
みかえりらぁめん
Ōsaka-fu, Higashiōsaka-shi, Ajiro, 1丁目19−6
Mikaeri is directly south of Fuse Station, on the west side of the street.

The Bowl
The broth was a very thin and chicken-tasting soup.  There was something very familiar about the taste of it; it tasted maybe more like the broth of nabe than it did ramen.  They allow you to choose which noodles you want, and the flat noodles I ordered were easy to gulp down.  Most of the toppings were nothing special, but the one that stood out is the ball of processed chashu and garlic in the center.  I started out by sampling it directly for a delicious taste of garlicky goodness, then afterwards mixed it into the broth.

Would I Go Again?
Yeah, this ramen tasted different from others I've had before, and the garlic chashu clump was great.

Should You Go?
It's not a must-go, but if you ever find yourself east of the border it's certainly worth checking out.