Sanuki Udon Kagawa Prefecture Noodle Culture
Kagawa Prefecture, Shikoku, Japan — historically one of Japan's leading wheat-producing regions
Sanuki udon from Kagawa Prefecture represents the apotheosis of wheat noodle culture in Japan, distinguished by its extraordinary koshi — a firm, elastic, almost springy bite achieved through high-protein flour, vigorous kneading, and careful resting. Kagawa's soft, low-mineral water and the prefecture's historical wheat cultivation tradition produced a noodle paradigm that differs fundamentally from the softer noodles of Tokyo or Osaka. Sanuki udon dough is typically kneaded by foot (fumifumi or ashi-fumi technique) to develop gluten uniformly, then rested under weighted cloths before cutting into thick, square-edged strands approximately 2.5–4mm wide. The prefecture boasts thousands of dedicated udon shops (udon-ya), many self-serve (serufu-shiki) where diners carry their own bowls down a cafeteria-style line adding topping after topping to plainly dashi-bathed noodles. Cold preparations like zaru udon showcase the noodle's texture without distraction; kake udon (hot broth) uses a delicate iriko (dried sardine) dashi base rather than the katsuobushi-dominant broths of other regions. Kagawa udon culture gave rise to the 'udon pilgrimage' tourism phenomenon, where visitors tour dozens of shops in a single day. The noodle's chewiness demands a careful balance: overworking creates excessive toughness; underworking yields lack of elasticity. Premium Kagawa udon flour brands (Haruyutaka, Superkirin) are prized by professionals nationwide.