Sanuki Udon Takamatsu Kagawa Hand Kneading Foot Kneading
Kagawa Prefecture (ancient Sanuki Province), Shikoku; highest udon consumption per capita in Japan
Sanuki udon from Kagawa Prefecture (historically Sanuki Province on Shikoku island) is Japan's most iconic and influential udon style, characterized by a firm, elastic, almost translucent noodle with square-ish cross-section and a texture described as 'koshi'—a resistant spring that distinguishes it from the softer udon of other regions. Kagawa's distinctive geography—limited rice production historically drove wheat cultivation; abundant salt from seto inland sea salt flats; dried sardines (iriko) from the inland sea for dashi—created the perfect conditions for an obsessive udon culture. The dough is made from strong bread-flour type wheat with high gluten content, mixed with salt water (the salt ratio is adjusted by season—more salt in summer to strengthen gluten), kneaded by hand then classically 'ashi-fumisoba' (foot-kneaded) by wrapping in plastic and treading the dough repeatedly with body weight. This extensive mechanical gluten development creates the characteristic snap-back elasticity. The noodles are cut to a consistent 3-4mm thickness. The simplest Kagawa service is kake udon (hot broth)—a bowl of noodles in iriko-kombu dashi, barely seasoned, with a raw egg and green onion. The prefecture has more udon shops per capita than anywhere in Japan.