Japanese Sanuki Udon Kagawa Prefecture Noodle Culture and Toshikoshi Tradition
Japan (Kagawa/Shikoku Prefecture; established as regional tradition by 18th century)
Sanuki udon (讃岐うどん) from Kagawa Prefecture (formerly Sanuki Province) is Japan's most technically precise and regionally proud noodle tradition, producing udon that differs fundamentally from standard commercial versions in texture, bite, and preparation philosophy. Kagawa's unique conditions — the Setouchi climate, soft local water, and Asan's high-quality wheat — enable a noodle with the distinctive sanuki-boshi: strong, elastic, slightly firm bite with a smooth surface and high transparency when held to light. Kagawa produces roughly 25 million portions of udon annually for a prefecture of 950,000 people, with approximately 600 udon restaurants. Self-service udon (serufu udon) shops operate at near-cost prices — a bowl of plain udon with raw egg costs 100–150 yen. The toshikoshi udon tradition (年越しうどん) on New Year's Eve is specifically a Kagawa practice: where most of Japan eats toshikoshi soba, Kagawa eats udon — a regional identity statement. The dashi used in Kagawa udon broth (kake dashi) is lighter than Kanto dashi, with higher konbu proportion and less katsuobushi, producing a pale golden soup that contrasts with the brown Kanto-style.