Japanese Tanuki Soba and Kitsune Udon: Tempura Fritter Toppings
Japan — Kanto (tanuki soba) and Kansai (kitsune udon) traditions
Tanuki soba (狸そば, 'raccoon dog soba') and kitsune udon (きつねうどん, 'fox udon') are two of Japan's most culturally embedded everyday noodle dishes — both defined not by their broth or noodles but by their toppings. The mythological connection: the tanuki (raccoon dog) is a trickster figure in Japanese folklore associated with deception; the kitsune (fox) is an intelligent, sometimes mischievous, divine messenger. In noodle culture: tanuki soba uses tenkasu (天かす — the crispy fried tempura batter fragments that fall off during commercial tempura production) as a topping, scattered over the soba in a hot broth. The tenkasu absorbs broth, becoming slightly softened but retaining a degree of crispness; they add fat, crunch, and the subtle flavour of the frying oil. Kitsune udon uses a large piece of abura-age (deep-fried tofu skin, inari sushi age) simmered in sweet soy and mirin until glossy and caramelised, placed on top of the udon in a light, sweet Kansai broth. The name comes from the fox's supposed fondness for fried tofu in Japanese folklore. In a confusing regional switch, 'tanuki' refers to abura-age in Osaka and 'tenkasu udon' is the Kanto term — the naming is famously inconsistent between regions.