Noodle Soup Tsuyu — The Perfect Dipping Broth
Japan — Kanto/Tokyo tradition for soba tsuyu; kaeshi technique developed in Edo period
Tsuyu (つゆ) is the seasoned soy-based broth used both as a hot soup base (kaketsuyu) and as a cold dipping sauce (tsukejiru) for soba and udon. Premium tsuyu is made from kaeshi (a concentrated sauce of soy, mirin, and sugar, rested to mature) combined with dashi (typically katsuobushi + kombu dashi). The ratio of kaeshi to dashi determines the tsuyu's strength: for kaketsuyu (hot soup noodles) approximately 1:7–1:9 (1 part kaeshi to 7–9 parts dashi); for tsukejiru (cold dipping) approximately 1:2–1:3 (more concentrated, accounting for dilution from wet noodles). The distinction between kaeshi and fresh tsuyu is significant — kaeshi (the concentrated soy-mirin-sugar base) must be rested for minimum 3 days before use, during which time the flavours integrate and the alcohol from the soy fermentation mellows. The best soba restaurants make their own kaeshi and rest it for 2–3 weeks.