The waiter delivered two small bowls of ramen to Mr. and Mrs. A’s table.
The kitchen had split their order to two half portions upon their
request. In each bowl, the noodle was
covered by a generous portion of tontoro
(pork cheek) and deboned pork trotter slices.
The bowl was garnished with thinly sliced green onion, radish sprouts, a
sheet of nori (seaweed) and half a
marinated soft boiled egg. Missing were menma (marinated bamboo shoot) and kamaboko (fish cake), both of which Mrs.
A did not care for.
Tokyo style ramen |
Mr. A started with eating a little bit of the ramen noodle, then a piece of tontoro,
before taking a sip of the soup. The
noodle had the proper texture. The pork
cheek was incredibly soft and tender, with just the right amount of fat to make
it sinfully delicious. The soy-sauce
seasoned Tokyo-style ramen soup was gentle
and rich in pork and chicken flavor with no hint of MSG. Mr. A finished his ramen with relish, drinking up every drop of the soup. It was the best bowl he had in many months.
That the ramen was so good came
as a complete surprise because Mr. and Mrs. A were not eating at a ramen shop,
or a Japanese restaurant for that matter.
They were having dinner in a
casual bar/restaurant in a small town called Saint Helena. It was curious to them that ramen was one of
the main courses on the menu. So they ordered
it as their “pasta” dish following small plates of potato and salted cod
fritters, roasted marrow bones with crispy sweetbreads, fried shrimp, and a
spicy tripe stew.
Baccala fritters |
Tripe stew |
Dessert was ultra-light Malasada doughnuts and Meyer lemon fool (note: a fruit fool is whipped cream or custard with fruit puree folded into it; in this case it was cream).
Donuts and Meyer lemon fool |
Mr. and Mrs. A enjoyed their dinner very much. They have planned to return for more ramen. They won’t share it the next time; each will
have an order.
No comments:
Post a Comment