Provenance Technique Library

Japan — ramen codified in 20th century, originally from Chinese wheat noodle soups Techniques

1 technique from Japan — ramen codified in 20th century, originally from Chinese wheat noodle soups cuisine

Clear filters
1 result
Japan — ramen codified in 20th century, originally from Chinese wheat noodle soups
Ramen Broth Philosophy — Tare, Abura, and Stock
Japan — ramen codified in 20th century, originally from Chinese wheat noodle soups
Professional ramen construction is built on three separate components that are combined at service: (1) Soup/Stock (the base — tonkotsu pork bone, chicken paitan, niboshi/dried fish, or clear chintan broth); (2) Tare (concentrated seasoning sauce — shio/salt, shoyu/soy, or miso — added in small amounts to the bowl before broth); (3) Abura (flavour oil — chicken fat, aromatic oils infused with garlic/scallion/shrimp — floated on the surface). Each component is optimised separately and combined moments before service. This three-component system allows enormous flexibility: the same tonkotsu base can become shio-tonkotsu, shoyu-tonkotsu, or miso-tonkotsu by changing only the tare. The tare is where the ramen chef's signature lives — it contains the greatest concentration of identity.
stock technique