Miso Ramen Sapporo Hokkaido Style
Japan (Sapporo Hokkaido, Aji no Sanpei restaurant 1955, Morishita Tomio invention)
Miso ramen (味噌ラーメン) was invented in Sapporo, Hokkaido in 1955 at Aji no Sanpei restaurant — the chef Morishita Tomio accidentally added miso to a customer's soup, creating a dish that would define Hokkaido's ramen identity. Sapporo miso ramen has a rich, complex, distinctly opaque broth produced by stir-frying aromatic vegetables (ninniku garlic, shoga ginger, negi) with lard before adding torigara stock and a miso tare blended from multiple miso varieties (typically combining akamiso and shiromiso). The key technique is the lard-and-vegetable stir-fry in the wok before adding stock — this creates a roux-like base that integrates the miso into the broth with a rounded, full-bodied character rather than the gritty, separated texture of miso dissolved directly into water. Toppings include corn, butter (melting on top to add richness), moyashi bean sprouts, and a char siu pork. Wavy thick noodles are traditional — they hold up to the heavy broth. Sapporo miso ramen spawned a national ramen category; every ramen shop in Japan now serves some miso variation.