Tsukemen Dipping Ramen Technique
Japan (Higashi-Ikebukuro, Tokyo — Taishoken, 1961; nationwide expansion 2000s onwards)
Tsukemen (つけ麺, 'dipping noodles') inverts the standard ramen paradigm — thick, chilled or room-temperature noodles are served separately from an intensely concentrated dipping broth (tsukedashi), and the diner dunks portions of noodle into the broth before eating. Invented by Kazuo Yamagishi at Taishoken restaurant in Higashi-Ikebukuro, Tokyo in 1961, tsukemen has become a major ramen genre with its own dedicated rankings and specialist shops. The broth must be significantly more concentrated than regular ramen — typically double strength — because it coats only the briefly dunked noodle rather than surrounding it. Standard tsukemen broth is seafood-forward (usually thick tonkotsu-gyokai combining pork bone and dried fish/konbu), thick with emulsified fat, and deeply seasoned. The noodles themselves are often thicker (medium to flat broad gauge) and cooked firmer than ramen noodles to survive the dipping without becoming soggy. Toppings (chashu pork, ajitsuke tamago, nori, menma bamboo) arrive on the noodle plate. At the meal's end, staff offer 'soup wari' (スープ割り) — ladle of hot broth or dashi to dilute the remaining concentrated dipping sauce into a soup to drink.