Thursday, July 16, 2009

Oyakodon

Oyakodon is Japanese chicken and egg rice bowl.








Ingredients:
* 4 cup steamed rice
* 3/4 lb chicken thighs or chicken breasts
* 1 onion
* 1 2/3 cups soup stock (dashi)
* 7 tbsp soy sauce
* 4 tbsp mirin
* 3 tbsp sugar
* 4 eggs

Preparation:
Cook steamed rice. Cut chicken into bite-size pieces and thinly slice onion. Put dashi soup stock in a pan and heat. Add soy sauce, mirin, and sugar in the soup. Put chicken in the pan and simmer on low heat for a few minutes. Add onion slices to the pan and simmer for a few more minutes. Beat eggs in a bowl. Bring the soup to a boil, then pour the eggs over chicken and onion. Turn the heat down to low and put on a lid. After one minute, turn off the heat. To serve, first put steamed rice in a deep bowl, then place the chicken and egg on top of the rice.

Edamame Rice

Edamame are green soy beans which are rich in proteins, vitamins, and fibers. Boiled edamame in pods is known as a healthy snack. Shelled edamame beans can be added in various dishes, such as stir-fry, soup, and so on. Adding edamame makes a dish more colorful and nutritious.

Ingredients:
* 2 cups Japanese rice
* 2 1/4 cups water
* 3 inches kombu
* 2 Tbsp sake
* 1 Tbsp soy sauce
* 1 tsp salt
* 1 cup boiled and shelled edamame, or frozen shelled edamame

Preparation:
Put the rice in a bowl and wash it with cold water. Repeat washing until the water becomes clear. Drain the rice in a colander and set aside. Place the rice in rice cooker and add water. Further, add konbu, sake, soy sauce, and salt in the rice. Let the rice soak in the water at least 30 min. Start the cooker. Meanwhile, shell boiled edamame, or thaw frozen shelled edamame. When rice is cooked, add shelled

Omurice (Omelette Rice)


Omurice is a Japanese word for "omelet and rice." Seasoned and fried rice is wrapped or topped by omelet. Omurice was invented in Japan, and it became a popular dish.

Ingredients:
* 4 cups steamed Japanese rice
* 1/2 lb. chicken breast
* 1 green peppers, chopped
* 4 white mushrooms, sliced
* 1/2 onion, chopped
* *salt and pepper to season
* 4 Tbsp. ketchup
* *vegetable oil for frying
* 8 eggs

Preparation:
Cook steamed rice. Cut chicken into small pieces. Chop green pepper and onion. Slice mushrooms thinly. Heat vegetable oil in a large skillet and saute chicken. Add onion, mushrooms, and green pepper in the skillet and saute together until softened. Add steamed rice in the pan and stir-fry together. Sprinkle some salt and pepper. Stop the heat and add ketchup and mix well. Set the seasoned rice aside. Heat 1 tsp of vegetable oil in a large skillet. Beat two eggs in a small bowl and pour the egg in the skillet. Quickly spread the egg and make a round omelet. Place 1/4 of the seasoned rice in the middle of the omelet and fold top and bottom sides of omelet over the rice. Cover the frying pan with a plate and turn them over to place the omerice in the plate. Repeat this process to make four omelet rice. Put some ketchup on top of omurice just before serving.

Takikomi Gohan (Mixed Rice)

Takikomi gohan is known as mixed rice since a number of ingredients are added in the rice.





Ingredients:
* 2 1/4 cup Japanese rice
* 4 shiitake mushrooms
* 1/4 gobo (burdock root)
* 1/4 konnyaku
* 3 inches carrot
* 1/4 lb.boneless chicken thigh
* 1 tbsp sake
* 2 tbsp soy sauce / 1 tsp soy sauce
* 1 tbsp mirin
* 1/2 tsp salt

Preparation:
Wash Japanese rice and drain in a colander. Set aside. Cut chicken into small pieces. Season the chicken with 1 tsp of soy sauce. Shred gobo thinly and soak in water for a few minutes. Drain the gobo. Boil konnyaku once and cut it into small rectangles. Peel and cut carrot into small rectangles. Remove stems from shiitake mushrooms and thinly slice them. Put 2 1/2 cup of water in a pan. Add sake, mirin, 2 tbsps of soy sauce, and salt. Heat the soup. Add chicken, carrot, gobo, shiitake, and konnyaku in the soup and simmer for about five minutes, skimming off any foam or impurities that rise to the surface. Stop the heat and cool it off. Separate the simmered ingredients and the soup, using a colander. Add some water in the soup to make 2 1/2 cup of liquid. Put washed rice in rice cooker and pour the liquid over the rice. Place simmered ingredients on the top. Start cooking the rice.

Takenoko Gohan

Takenoko (bamboo shoots) is a popular ingredient in Japanese cooking, and this is the most popular Japanese takenoko dish. It's a kind of Japanese takikomi gohan (mixed rice).



Ingredients:
* 2 1/4 cup Japanese rice
* 2 1/2 cup dashi
* 1 Tbsp sake
* 2 Tbsp soy sauce
* 1/2 tsp salt
* 1 Tbsp mirin
* 1/2 lb. boiled bamboo shoots, thinly slice into small pieces
* 1 aburaage (fried tofu), pour boiling water over them and cut into thin strips
* *sansho leaves for garnishing if available

Preparation:
Wash Japanese rice and drain in a colander. Set aside for 30 minutes. Put washed rice in rice cooker and pour dashi soup stock over the rice. Add soy sauce, sake, and mirin. Put takenoko and aburaage on the top. Start cooking the rice. When rice is cooked, let the rice steam for 10 minutes. Serve into individual rice bowls. Garnish with sansho leaves.

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

Unadon


Japanese rice bowl topped with glaze-grilled unagi eel (unagi-no-kabayaki) is called unadon or unaju. This is the most common unagi dish in Japan. Precooked and vacuum-sealed unagi-no-kabayaki are available at Asian grocery stores.

Ingredients:
* 4 packages unagi-no-kabayaki, about 1lb
* *sake rice wine
* 2 1/4 cups Japanese-style rice
* For kabayaki sauce:
* 1/2 cup soy sauce
* 1/2 cup mirin (sweet rice wine)
* 1/4 cup sugar

Preparation:
If you are using frozen unagi, defrost them in the refrigerator. It might take 5-6 hours. Start cooking steamed rice. Make kabayaki sauce and set aside.

Heat unagi, following the instructions on the package. If there are no instructions on the package, place unagi the skin side down on a large skillet. (*Cut unagi into halves lengthwise if they are long.) Pour 1 Tbsp of sake rice wine over unagi. Cover the skillet with a lid and steam cook for a couple minutes on low heat.

Or, place defrosted unagi on a microwavable plate and pour sake rice wine over unagi. Then, cover with plastic wrap and miscrowave on high for about one minute.

Serve hot steamed rice into four large rice bowls. Pour some kabayaki sauce over the rice. Top with heated unagi pieces. Pour more kabayaki sauce over unagi.

Sunday, July 12, 2009

Green Tea Cake

Ingredients:

* 2 large eggs
* 1 cup flour
* 2/3 cup sugar
* 1/2 cup butter
* 1 tbsp maccha (green tea powder)
* 1/2 tsp baking powder

Preparation:
Cream butter in a bowl. Add sugar in the butter and mix well. Gradually add beaten eggs and stir well. Sift flour, baking powder, and green tea powder together and add the flour to the egg mixture. Pour the batter into a buttered loaf pan. Bake in preheated 340 degrees F oven for about 30-40 minutes.

Dorayaki


Dorayaki is a traditional Japanese cake with anko sweet beans filling. It's said that dorayaki is named after its shape which resembles dora (gong). It's good to make dorayaki on an electric pan so that cakes turn evenly brown.

Ingredients:
* 3 eggs
* 2/3 cup sugar
* 1/2 tsp baking soda
* 3 Tbsp water
* 1 cup flour, sifted
* 3/4 lb anko (sweet azuki beans)
* *vegetable oil for frying

Preparation:
Put eggs and sugar in a bowl and whisk very well. Dissolve baking soda in water. Add the water in the egg mixture. Add sifted flour in the egg mixture gradually. Heat a skillet or hot plate and lightly oil it. Pour a scoop of the batter into the skillet and make a small pancake. (*about 4 inches in diameter.) Turn over when bubbles appear on the surface. Repeat this process to make 8-10 pancakes. Cool the pancakes. Make pairs of pancakes and put a scoop of anko sweet beans between them.

Kushidango

Kushidango are Japanese sweet dumplings in skewers.

Ingredients:
* 1 1/3 cup joshinko (rice flour)
* 3/4 cup warm water
* For Sauce: 2/3 cup water
* 1/2 cup sugar
* 2 1/2 tbsps soy sauce
* 1 1/2 tbsp katakuriko (dogtooth violet starch) /cornstarch
* 1 1/2tbsp water
* *Bamboo skewers

Preparation:
Put rice flour in a bowl and add warm water. Knead the dough well. Make small round dumplings. Place the dumplings in a steamer and steam them on high heat for 10 min. Cool the dumplings and skewer them in bamboo sticks. (3-4 dumplings each stick.) Mix water, sugar, and soysauce in a pan and put it on medium heat. Mix the water and katakuriko starch in a cup and set aside. When the sauce boils, add the starch mixture and mix quickly. Slightly grill the skewered dumplings and brush the sauce over them.

Manju

Manju is a Japanese steamed cake, and it's a traditional Japanese sweet. A variety of fillings are used in manju. The most popular filling is anko (sweet azuki bean paste).

Ingredients:
* 2 1/2 cup all purpose flour
* 4 tsps. baking powder
* 1/4 cup sugar
* 2/3 cup water
* 3/4 lb. anko (sweet azuki bean paste)

Preparation:
Sift flour and baking powder. Put the four in a large bowl. Add sugar. Pour warm water in the bowl and knead the dough until smooth. Divide the dough into 12 pieces. Make round shapes and flatten them. Put a spoonful of anko filling in the center of the dough. Wrap the anko by stretching the dough and make it round. Place each manju on a small cooking sheet. Preheat a steamer on high heat. Place manju in the steamer, and steam for 15 minutes.

Yokan

Yokan is a tradional Japanese sweet, which is made of azuki beans, agar agar, and sugar. This is a type of yokan called mizu-yokan. Mizu means water in Japanese. Mizu-yokan includes more water than other kinds of yokan. This yokan makes a cool summertime dessert.

Ingredients:
* 1 stick kanten (agar agar), or 1/6 oz. kanten powder
* 1 1/4 cup water
* 1 cup brown sugar
* 3/4 lb. anko (1 1/2 cup)

Preparation:
Soak kanten in lots of water for about one hour. Squeeze the kanten and tear it into small pieces. Put the kanten in 1 and 1/4 cup of water in a deep pot. Heat it on low heat until the kanten dissolves. Add sugar and stir well. Next, add anko. Stir constantly and simmer until thickened. Stop the heat. Pour the mixture in a flat container. Cool it until harden. Cut the yokan into small blocks to serve.

Daigakuimo

Daigakuimo (college potatoes) is Japanese candied sweet potato.

Ingredients:
* 1 pound sweet potatoes
* 1/3 cup sugar
* 1 tsp soy sauce
* 2 tbsp water
* 1 tsp sesame seeds
* Vegetable oil for frying

Preparation:
Cut sweet potatoes into bite-sized pieces. Heat the oil and fry the sweet potatoes at 350F until brown. Mix water, sugar, and soy sauce in a pan. Put the pan on low heat. When the liquid turns sticky, remove from the heat and add fried sweet potatoes. Quickly mix the potatoes with the sticky sugar. Sprinkle sesame seeds over the coated sweet potatoes.

Matcha Ice Cream


Ingredients:
* 3/4 cup milk
* 2 egg yolks
* 5 tbsp sugar
* 3/4 cup heavy cream
* 1 tbsp maccha green tea powder
* 3 tbsps hot water

Preparation:
Mix hot water and green tea powder together in a bowl and set aside. Lightly whisk egg yolks in a pan. Add sugar in the pan and mix well. Gradually add milk in the pan and mix well. Put the pan on low heat and heat the mixture, stirring constantly. When the mixture is thickened, remove the pan from the heat. Soak the bottom of the pan in ice water and cool the mixture. Add green tea in the egg mixture and mix well, cooling in ice water. Add whipped heavy cream in the mixture and stir gently. Pour the mixture in an ice cream maker and freeze, following instructions of the ice cream maker. Or, pour the mixture in a container and freeze, stirring the ice cream a few times.

Anko

Anko is a sweet azuki bean paste which is often used to make various Japanese sweets. This is a type of anko called tsubu-an. Tsubu-an contains skins of azuki beans.



Ingredients:
* 1/2 lb. azuki beans (1 1/3 cup)
* 2 cup sugar
* 1 tsp. salt

Preparation:
Put lots of water in deep pot. Soak azuki beans in the water overnight. Heat the beans on high heat and bring to a boil. Turn down the heat to medium and simmer beans for about 10 minutes. Drain the beans. Put the azuki beans in the pot again and add about four cups of water. Heat the azuki and bring to a boil. Turn down the heat to low and simmer the azuki beans for about one hour, or until softened. Drain the liquid from the pot. Add sugar and salt in the beans. Stir and simmer beans until thickened. Stop the heat and cool the anko.

Daifuku

Daifuku is a kind of Japanese mochi cakes. Serve daifuku with hot green tea. You can make various daifuku, changing the filling. This is a recipe to make basic daifuku with anko filling.



Ingredients:
* 1 cup shiratama-ko (glutinous rice flour)
* 1/4 cup sugar
* 2/3 cup water
* *For filling
* 2/3 cup water & 1 cup sugar & 1/2 cup dried anko powder, or 1 1/4 cup premade anko
* *katakuriko (porato starch) for dusting

Preparation:
Heat 2/3 cup of water and 1/2 cup of sugar in a small pot. Add 1/4 cup of anko powder and stir well. Cool the anko filling. Make 12 small anko balls and set aside. Put water and sugar in a heat-resistant bowl and mix well. Add shiratama-ko flour in the bowl and mix well. Put the bowl in microwave and heat the dough for two minutes. Stir the dough. Heat the dough in microwave until the dough inflates. Stir the mochi quickly. Dust a flat pan with some katakuri-ko starch. Also, dust hands with some katakuri-ko. Remove the hot mochi from the bowl to the pan by hands. Dust hands with more katakuri-ko starch and divide the mochi into 12 pieces by hands. The mochi is hot and sticky, so be careful not to burn your hands. Make 12 flat and round mochi. Put a piece of anko filling on a mochi and wrap the anko by stretching mochi. Rounds the daifuku. Repeat the process to make daifuku cakes.

Matcha Cheese Cake


It's a variation of Japanese rare cheesecakes and is flavored with matcha (green tea powder). This is a delicious no-bake dessert.


Ingredients:

* 1 Tbsp gelatine powder & 1/4 cup water
* 6 oz cream cheese, softened
* 1/3 cup plain yogurt
* 1/4 cup sugar
* 1/4 cup heavy cream
* 1 Tbsp match green tea powder and 3 Tbsp warm water, mixed
* For Crust: 1 package graham crackers crushed into crumbs & 3 Tbsp butter & 1 Tbsp sugar

Preparation:
Mix gelatine powder and water in a small cup and set aside. Combine graham cracker crumbs, melted butter, and sugar in a bowl. Spread the crumbs in bottom of a 8 inch round cake pan. Flatten the crust, pressing with a spoon. Chill in refrigerator. Stir softened cream cheese and sugar in a large bowl. Add plain yogurt and heavy cream and mix until smooth. Further, add matcha green tea powder mixture into the filling. Heat gelatine mixture in the microwave until becomes liquid and add it to the filling. Stir well. Pour the filling on top of the crust and spread evenly. Refrigerate the cake for 3 hours, or until set.

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Wakame Kyuri Sunomono

Ingredients:
* 1 small cucumber
* 1 cup wakame seaweed (softened)
* 4 tbsp rice wine vinegar
* 2 tbsp sugar
* 1/2 tsp salt

Preparation:
Cut softened wakame seaweed into about 2inch-long pieces. Slice cucumber into thin rounds. Put salt over cucumber slices and set aside for 20 minutes. Squeeze cucumber slices to remove the liquid. Mix vinegar and sugar in a bowl. Add wakame seaweed and cucumber slices in the bowl and mix well.

Kyuri & Daikon Sunomono

This type of vinegary salad is called sunomono in Japan. Since it has a refreshing taste, it goes with many types of dishes.



Ingredients:
* 1 small daikon radish
* 1 small cucumber
* 5 tbsp rice vinegar
* 2 tbsp sugar
* 1 tsp salt

Preparation:
Peel daikon radish and slice it into thin slices. Slice the cucumber to the same thickness. Salt the cucumber and daikon slices and wait about 5-10 mins. Wash off the daikon and cucumber slices and drain the water through a strainer. Mix the vinegar and sugar in a cup. Pour the vinegar mixture over the cucumber and daikon slices. Set aside at least 15 min. before serving.

Sunomono

Vinegared dishes are called sunomono as su means vinegar in Japanese. Sunomono has a refreshing taste and goes with many types of dishes. It's a good side dish or an appetizer to serve in a Japanese-style meal. Sunomono also helps to enhance appetite.
There are mainly three types of vinegar dressings for sunomono:

Ama-zu (sweet vinegar mixture)
Vinegar / Sugar / Salt
Mix and heat 2 parts vinegar, 1 part sugar, and some salt.
Nibai-zu
Vinegar / Soy Sauce
Mix equal amounts of vinegar and soy sauce.
Sanbai-zu
Vinegar / Soy Sauce / Mirin or Sugar
Mix and heat equal amounts of seasonings. *The amount of sugar is about one third of mirin.

Dashi stock is often added in nibai-zu and sanbai-zu to soften the flavor. Adjust the amounts of seasonings, depending on your preference and ingredients.

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Potato Korokke

Korokke is Japanese croquette with vegetables and meat. This is a basic korokke recipe with potatoes.

Ingredients:
* 4 medium potatoes
* 1/4 lb ground beef
* 1/2 onion, finely chopped
* 1 egg
* 1/2 tsp salt
* salt pepper to season
* vegetable oil for frying
* flour and panko (breadcrumb) for coating

Preparation:
Peel and cut potatoes into medium chunks. Boil potatoes until soften. Drain and mash potatoes while they are hot. Saute onion and beef in a medium skillet. Mix mashed potatoes and onion and beef in a bowl. Season with salt and pepper and let it cool. Make flat and oval-shaped patties. Coat each piece with flour. Dip in beaten egg, and coat with panko at last. Fry in 350 F oil until brown.

Curry Potato Korokke

Korokke are Japanese croquettes.Curry powder adds a great flavor to the potato filling.





Ingredients:
* 4 medium potatoes, peeled and cut into chunks
* 1/4 lb ground pork
* 1/2 onion, finely chopped
* 1 egg
* 2 tsps curry powder
* salt and pepper to season
* *flour and panko (breadcrumb) for coating
* *vegetable oil for deep-frying

Preparation:
Boil potatoes until soften in a large pan. Drain and mash potatoes while they are hot. Saute onion and pork in a medium skillet until cooked. Mix mashed potatoes and onion and pork in a bowl. Season with salt and pepper and curry powder. Make flat and oval-shaped patties. Coat each piece with flour. Dip in beaten egg, and coat with panko at last. Fry in 350 F oil until brown.

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Hayashi Rice

It's one of Japanized Western dishes similar to beef stew. Hayashi rice is said to be named after "hashed beef". Using prepared demi-glace makes it easy to cook hayashi rice.

Ingredients:
* 3/4 lb thinly sliced beef, cut into bite-sized pieces
* 2 small onion, sliced into 1/4-inch-thick wedges
* 1 carrot, sliced into thin half-rounds
* 1 totato, peeled and cubed
* 2 Tbsp butter
* 2/3 cup red wine
* 1 1/4 cup prepared demi-glace
* 1 Tbsp Worceter sauce
* 2 Tbsp ketchup
* 4 cups steamed rice

Preparation:
Melt 1 Tbsp butter in a large skillet and saute beef on high heat until its color changes. Remove beef on a plate. Melt 1 Tbsp of butter in the skillet and saute onion on medium heat until softened. Add carrot slices and saute together until carrots are softened. Put sauteed beef and vegetables in a deep pot. Pour red wine over the ingredients and simmer until the liquid is almost gone on medium heat. Add demi-glace and 2 cups of water and bring to a boil. Turn down the heat to low. Add tomato and simmer for about 15 minutes, removing any foam rising on the surface. Season with Worceter sauce and ketchup. Serve hot steamed rice on plates and pour hayashi sauce over the rice.

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Miso Ramen


Ramen noodle in miso based soup is called miso ramen. It's one of popular flavors of ramen noodles in Japan. Lots of vegetables can be added in this miso ramen recipe.

Ingredients:
* 1 tsp vegetable oil
* 1 clove garlic, minced
* 1 tsp minced fresh ginger
* 2 oz. ground pork
* 5 oz. bean sprouts, rinsed
* 4 oz. cabbage, chopped
* 2 oz. carrot, cut into thin strips
* 4 cups warm water
* 2 tsp chicken bouillon powder
* 1 tsp sugar
* 2 tsp soy sauce
* 4 Tbsp miso paste
* 2 Chukamen (raw Chinese noodles)
* 1/2 tsp sesame oil

Preparation:
Heat vegetable oil in a large skillet or a wok. Add minced ginger and garlic in the skillet and saute pork on medium heat until done. Add carrot, bean sprouts, and cabbage in the skillet and saute together for a few minutes. Pour warm water in the skillet. Season with chicken bouillon powder, sugar, and soy sauce and bring the soup to a boil. Turn down the heat to low, and melt miso in the soup. Add sesame oil at last. Stop the heat. In the meantime, boil lots of water in a large pot. Put Chukamen noodles in the boiling water and cook for a few minutes, or boil noodles, following the package instruction. Drain the noodles and serve into two noodle bowls. Pour hot miso soup over the noodles with ingredients on top.

Shoyu Ramen

Making delicious ramen noodles isn't easy. Ramen chefs in Japan usually train hard to make good ramen. This is a quick recipe to make soy sauce flavored ramen at home.

Ingredients:
* 2 Chukamen (raw Chinese noodles)
* 1 clove finely chopped garlic
* 1 tsp finely chopped fresh ginger
* 1 tsp sesame oil
* 2 cup chicken soup stock
* 1 cup kombu dashi soup stock
* 1 tbsp sake
* 1 tsp salt
* 1 tsp sugar
* 3 tbsp soy sauce
* *For toppings:
* Chopped negi
* Nori (dried seaweed)
* Pepper

Preparation:
Heat sesami oil in a deep pan. Saute chopped ginger and garlic in the pan. Lower the heat. Add chicken soup stock and kombu dashi soup stock in the pan and bring to a boil. Add sugar, salt, sake, and soy sauce in the soup. Run the soup through a strainer. Serve hot soup into individual bowls. In the meantime, boil water in a large pan. Add chukamen noodles in the boiling water and cook for a few minutes. Drain the noodles and serve in the hot soup. Place toppings, such as chopped negi and nori seaweed. Sprinkle some pepper if you would like.

Ramen Noodles

Ramen noodles are very popular noodle dishes in Japan. Chukamen noodles which are made from wheat flour are boiled and put in various flavored soup. Although ramen originated in China, there are many regional seciality ramen available in Japan, and ramen shops are located all over Japan.
Making a delicious ramen isn't easy if you are making the soup from scratch. The taste of ramen mainly depends on the soup, and it requires skills to make delicious soup. Ramen chefs usually train for a long time to learn to make ramen soup. Each ramen shop has its own way to make soup, and there are so many different ways. Chicken bone, pork bone, dried sardines (niboshi), and/or kombu are used to make soup stock for ramen. Vegetables, such as ginger, negi, garlic, or/and mushrooms are also added.
Categorized by flavors, there are mainly four kinds of ramen: shio ramen (salt flavored soup), shoyu ramen (soy sauce flavored soup), tonkotsu ramen (pork bone soup), miso ramen (miso flavored soup). Tonkotsu ramen soup is creamy white, and miso ramen soup is brown.
Common ramen toppings are negi (leek), shinachiku (seasoned bamboo shoots), nori (dried seaweed), yakibuta (grilled pork), boiled egg, narutomaki, and so on.

HISTORY
While Tokugawa Mitsukuni reportedly ate ramen in the late 17th century, it was only during the Meiji period that the dish became well known (perhaps because for most of its history, the Japanese diet consisted mostly of vegetables and seafood). The introduction of American and European cuisine, which demanded increased production of meat products, played a large role in ramen's increased popularity.
Though of Chinese origin, it is unclear when ramen was introduced to Japan. Even the etymology of the term "ramen" is a topic of debate. One hypothesis and probably the most credible is that "ramen" is the Japanese pronunciation of the Chinese: 拉麺 (lamian), meaning "hand-pulled noodles" (a name that is still used in Chinese for these sort of noodles). A second hypothesis proposes 老麺 (laomian, "old noodles") as the original form, while yet another states that ramen was initially 鹵麺 (lúmiàn), noodles cooked in a thick, starchy sauce. A fourth hypothesis is 撈麵 (lāomiàn, "lo mein"): 撈 means to "dredge up" and refers to the method of cooking these noodles by immersing them in boiling water before dredging them up with a wire basket.
In the early Meiji period, ramen was called shina soba (支那そば, literally "Chinese soba") but today chūka soba (中華そば, also meaning "Chinese soba") is a more common and politically correct term. By 1900, restaurants serving Chinese cuisine from Canton and Shanghai offered a simple ramen dish of noodles (cut rather than hand pulled), a few toppings, and a broth flavored with salt and pork bones. Many Chinese also pulled portable food stalls, selling ramen and gyōza dumplings to workers. By the mid 1900s, these stalls used a type of a musical horn called a charumera (チャルメラ, from the Portuguese charamela) to advertise their presence, a practice some vendors still retain via a loudspeaker and a looped recording. By the early Shōwa period, ramen had become a popular dish when eating out.
After World War II, cheap flour imported from the U.S. swept the Japanese market. At the same time, millions of Japanese troops had returned from China and continental East Asia. Many of these returnees had become familiar with Chinese cuisine and subsequently set up Chinese restaurants across Japan. Eating ramen, while popular, was still a special occasion that required going out.
In 1958, instant noodles were invented by the late Momofuku Ando, the Taiwanese-Japanese founder and chairman of Nissin Foods. Named the greatest Japanese invention of the 20th century in a Japanese poll, instant ramen allowed anyone to make this dish simply by adding boiling water.
Beginning in the 1980s, ramen became a Japanese cultural icon and was studied from many perspectives. At the same time, local varieties of ramen were hitting the national market and could even be ordered by their regional names. A ramen museum opened in Yokohama in 1994.

TYPES
A wide variety of ramen exists in Japan, with geographical and vendor-specific differences even in varieties that share the same name. Ramen can be broadly categorized by its two main ingredients: noodles and soup.

NOODLES
Most noodles are made from four basic ingredients: wheat flour, salt, water, and kansui which is essentially a type of alkaline mineral water, containing sodium carbonate and usually potassium carbonate, as well as sometimes a small amount of phosphoric acid. Originally, kansui was named after the water from Inner Mongolia's Lake Kan which contained large amounts of these minerals and was said to be perfect for making these noodles. Making noodles with kansui lends them a yellowish hue as well as a firm texture. For a brief time after World War II, low-quality kansui that was tainted was sold, though kansui is now manufactured according to JAS standards. Eggs may also be substituted for kansui. Some ramen is made with neither eggs nor kansui and should only be used for yakisoba. The packages containing the noodles and the mixture are typically popular for children.
Ramen comes in various shapes and lengths. They may be fat, thin, or even ribbon-like, as well as straight or wrinkled.

SOUP
Ramen soup is generally made from stock based on chicken or pork, combined with a variety of ingredients such as kombu (kelp), katsuobushi (skipjack tuna flakes), niboshi (dried baby sardines), beef bones, shiitake, and onions, and then flavored with the likes of salt, miso, or soy sauce.

The resulting combination is generally divided into four categories (although new and original variations often make this categorisation less clear-cut):
* Shio ("salt") ramen is probably the oldest of the four and, like the Chinese maotang (毛湯). It is the lightest ramen, a pale, clear, yellowish broth made from plenty of salt and any combination of chicken, vegetables, fish, and seaweed. Occasionally pork bones are also used, but they are not boiled as long as they are for tonkotsu ramen, so the soup remains light and clear. Shio is generally the healthiest kind of ramen; fat content tends to be low, and fresh vegetables like cabbage, leeks, onions, and bamboo shoots typically adorn the simple soup and curly noodles. Chāshū is sometimes swapped out for lean chicken meatballs, and pickled plums and kamaboko are popular toppings as well. Noodle texture and thickness varies among shio ramen, but they are usually straight rather than curly.
* Tonkotsu ("pork bone") ramen has usually a cloudy white colored broth. It is similar to the Chinese baitang (白湯) and is a thick broth made by boiling pork bones, fat, and collagen over high heat for hours on end, suffusing the broth with a hearty pork flavor and a creamy consistency that rivals milk or melted butter or gravy (depending on the shop). Most shops, but not all, blend this pork broth with a small amount of chicken and vegetable stock and/or soy sauce. Currently the latest trend in tonkotsu toppings is māyu (マー油/麻油), a blackish, aromatic oil made from either charred crushed garlic or Sesame seeds. The noodles are thin and straight. It is a specialty of Kyūshū and is often served with beni shoga (pickled ginger).
* Shōyu ("soy sauce") ramen has typically a brown and clear color broth, based on a chicken and vegetable (or sometimes fish or beef) stock with plenty of soy sauce added for a soup that’s tangy, salty, and savory yet still fairly light on the palate. Shōyu ramen usually has curly noodles rather than straight ones, but this is not always the case. It is often adorned with marinated bamboo shoots or menma (麺媽), green onions, kamaboko (fish cakes), nori (seaweed), boiled eggs, bean sprouts and/or black pepper; occasionally the soup will also contain chili oil or Chinese spices, and some shops serve sliced beef instead of the usual chāshū.
* Miso ramen is a relative newcomer, having reached national prominence around 1965. This uniquely Japanese ramen, which was developed in Hokkaidō, features a broth that combines copious amounts of miso and blended with oily chicken or fish broth – and sometimes with tonkotsu or lard – to create a thick, nutty, slightly sweet and very hearty soup. Miso ramen broth tends to have a robust, tangy flavor, so it stands up to a variety flavorful toppings: spicy bean paste or tōbanjan (豆瓣醤), butter and corn, leeks, onions, bean sprouts, ground pork, cabbage, sesame seeds, white pepper, and chopped garlic are common. Noodles are typically thick, curly, and slightly chewy. It is often topped with sweetcorn and butter.[3]
Seasonings commonly added to ramen are black pepper, butter, chili pepper, sesame seeds, and crushed garlic. Soup recipes and methods of preparation tend to be closely guarded secrets.
Some restaurants also offer a system known as kae-dama (替え玉), where customers who have finished their noodles can request a "refill" (for a few hundred yen more) to be put into their remaining soup.

REGIONAL VARIATIONS
While standard versions of ramen are available throughout Japan since the Taisho era, the last few decades have shown a proliferation of regional variations. Some of these which have gone on to national prominence are:
Sapporo, from the capital of Hokkaidō, is especially famous for its ramen. Most people in Japan associate Sapporo with its rich miso ramen which was invented there and which is ideal for Hokkaidō's harsh, snowy winters. Sapporo miso ramen is typically topped with sweetcorn, butter, beansprouts, finely chopped pork, and garlic, and sometimes local seafood such as scallop, squid, and crab.
Kitakata in northern Honshū is known for its rather thick, flat, curly noodles served in a pork-and-niboshi broth. The area within its former city boundaries has the highest per-capita number of ramen establishments. Ramen has such prominence in the region that locally, the word soba usually refers to ramen, and not to actual soba which is referred to as nihon soba ("Japanese soba").
What is known as Tokyo style ramen consists of slightly thin, curly noodles served in a soy-flavoured chicken broth. The broth typically has a touch of dashi, as old ramen establishments in Tokyo often originate from soba eateries. Standard toppings on top of chopped scallion, menma, and sliced pork are kamaboko, egg, nori, and spinach. Ikebukuro, Ogikubo and Ebisu are three areas in Tokyo known for their ramen.
Ie-kei (家系) ramen is from Yokohama and consists of thick, straight-ish noodles served in a soy-pork broth.
Hakata ramen originates from Hakata district of Fukuoka city. It has a rich, milky, pork-bone tonkotsu broth and rather thin, non-curly and resilient noodles. Often, distinctive toppings such as beni shoga (pickled ginger), sesame seeds, and picked greens are left on tables for customers to serve themselves. Ramen stalls in Hakata and Tenjin are well-known within Japan. Recent ramen trends have made Hakata ramen one of the most popular types of ramen in Japan, and these days several chain restaurants specializing in Hakata ramen can be found all over the country. Chahan and Gyoza are popular side orders.