I’m in Sapporo!

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Like every city in Japan, Sapporo has many culinary specialties.  Because it’s so far north, Sapporo produces some of the world’s most delicious cold-water seafood – such as uni (sea urchin), ikura (salmon roe), and kani (crab).  And keep in mind that these are not your puny blue crabs – (Doug, they’re not that great).  No, these are more like Alaskan king crab (because Alaska and Hokkaido have similar climates), with legs sometimes reaching 6 feet in length.

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long legged lads

But one of Sapporo’s most delectable specialties has nothing to do with seafood –  RAMEN (ラーメン).  Let me clarify something for a minute – ramen is a soup, with broth made from natural products (usually salt, soy sauce, miso, or pork) with fresh Chinese-style noodles made from eggs.  A bowl of ramen is usually topped with any or all of the following; a slice of pork belly, menma (fermented bamboo shoots), scallions, a soft-boiled egg, kameboko (fishcake) and seaweed.  All these flavors sing together in a beautiful harmony that dazzles the taste buds.

(By the way, instant ramen is not real ramen – please keep them categorized by “instant ramen” and “ramen”.)

Each region in Japan has their own local ramen specialty.  For example, Fukuoka favors a pork-based broth while Tokyo prefers a broth crafted from soy sauce and chicken stock.  Sapporo’s ramen is a miso broth, often topped with butter and sweet corn.  And one of the most famous places to get this ramen is a place known as “Ramen Alley” or ラーメン路地 .

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The gateway to a magical utopia known as “Ramen Alley”

Although this is a tourist attraction, it still is (in every sense of the word) an alley.  Housing about a dozen tiny shops, the alley is crowded, dark, and dank.  And thankfully the delicious smell of ramen wafting out of the shops overpowers the disgusting smell of urine courtesy of the wasted late night patrons.

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Can’t you just smell the pish?
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Here’s where the delicious smell comes from

We easily selected our ramen place out of tiny dozen places that are crammed together in this little alley.  We decided on  味の華龍 (Aji No Karyu Ramen) because as discussed in my previous post Anthony Bourdain “came to the here” and so must I.

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What a wonderful phrase

The restaurant was packed with about fifteen seats in all, most of them bar stools clustered around the counter.  I did my best to stuff my long gangly gaijin legs under the counter.  Neither of the two chefs spoke a lick of English, so I ordered in Japanese – two bowls of miso ramen (one for me and one for Jo and Maya to split).

The ramen was some of the best I’ve ever had.  The broth was salty, but it didn’t overwhelm the other subtle flavors.  The slice of pork belly on top was fatty and delicious.  The fresh hand-made noodles were the perfect texture – not mushy at all.  Unfortunately, photos weren’t allowed in the tiny shop, so I didn’t get any pics.

As of right now, there are three of us – Jo, Maya and me.  But in a few days, two more will join our numbers – Doug and my cousin Leo.  When the rest of our party arrives, we will surely take a trip back to 味の華龍.  And when we do, we will feast upon what you see below:

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miso–corn-butter ramen!
Zev Green Avatar

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11 responses to “ラーメン路地 (Ramen Alley)”

  1. Stan Avatar
    Stan

    thanks for sharing – you are making me hungry

    Liked by 3 people

  2. STEPHANIE GREEN Avatar
    STEPHANIE GREEN

    LOVE THE BLOG. DOUG WILL BE SOOO HAPPY WITH ALL THAT RAMEN HIS FAVORITE!!!!
    MY FAVORITE PART ARE THE PICTURES OF YOU AND MAYA. WHERE’S JO????????????

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Poppa Mickey Avatar
    Poppa Mickey

    Keep sending these blogs. We love reading them

    Liked by 2 people

  4. gertrudesilberman Avatar
    gertrudesilberman

    Yum. Yum.

    Liked by 2 people

  5. ripcityramblers Avatar

    A good start – will we go to the same place or is there another place that grabbed your interest (on the same alley)? Find out where we go to get one of those huge friggin’ crabs to eat!

    Liked by 2 people

  6. Margie Green Avatar
    Margie Green

    Love the blog Zev, and love to your traveling companions too!

    Liked by 1 person

  7. Gr June and Papa Mickey Avatar

    Food, food, food… to torture us as we eat our simple Americana. The thing is 1) can we find it here or 2) can you make it when you return home.

    Liked by 1 person

  8. Gen Avatar
    Gen

    Wanna snake me a bowl?

    Liked by 1 person

  9. Zev’s Top 10: Sapporo – Eat It Avatar

    […] discussed Sapporo’s ramen at length when I visited Ramen Alley for the first time, and had a bowl of simple miso ramen which was yummy, but simple.  I vowed that […]

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