Homemade Ramen

The friendliest place on the web for anyone that enjoys cooking.
If you have answers, please help by responding to the unanswered posts.

redfish_33

Assistant Cook
Joined
Jul 23, 2012
Messages
30
Location
Lafayette, LA, USA
Ramen has to be one of my favorite dishes in the world, I ate my share of the instant stuff while in college, but I am hooked on the real Ramen after a recent trip to New York. I read Momofuko by David Chang before my trip and I just had to eat at Momofuko noodle bar while I was there since the only reason that I went to New York was to eat at all the different chef's restraunts that I have read about. It had a very deep , rich, and smoky flavor to the broth and the noodles were perfect. Luckily his recipie is not too hard, I made a few adjustments and I actually cook it a little different every time. I have made the noodles from scratch a few times and although the process is easy, the dough is very tough to work. I have found a very good brand of dried alkaline noodle to use, so I actually use dried noodles now. I have fun with cooking the broth and I boil the bones for 2 days, there is so much leftover meat and veggies after the process of making broth that I made different recipies for all of the leftovers. 928.jpg

Here is a pic of the finished product.
 
That looks wonderful, can you share where you get the noodles and what they are called? I've been using fine udon noodles for ramen type.
 
That looks wonderful, can you share where you get the noodles and what they are called? I've been using fine udon noodles for ramen type.

I get the noodles at an asian food store in town or at Fresh Market, I actually forgot the brand name but I have used udon noodles before. They do not have it all the time, so when I find it, I usually but a lot of them.

They are really good when you make it by hand but the dough is very tough, if you have a good pasta machine it might be worth it to make the noodles from scratch.
 
Can you share the recipe for that? I have a good pasta machine and a cranky old feller to run the noodles through the machine.:)
 
I used the recipe out of David Chan's Lucky Peach magazine because it a very simple recipe, it calls for heating baking soda at 250F instead of using potassium carbonate which is hard to find. This is a link to the recipe that I used out of Lucky Peach magazine. The broth and Tare recipe is there also, you can subtitute and use your imagination on the broth but the noodles need to be exact. Make sure that you use 4 tea spoons of the soda and not table spoons , some recipes call for tablespoons but it was a mistake.David Chang
 
I used the recipe out of David Chan's Lucky Peach magazine because it a very simple recipe, it calls for heating baking soda at 250F instead of using potassium carbonate which is hard to find. This is a link to the recipe that I used out of Lucky Peach magazine. The broth and Tare recipe is there also, you can subtitute and use your imagination on the broth but the noodles need to be exact. Make sure that you use 4 tea spoons of the soda and not table spoons , some recipes call for tablespoons but it was a mistake.David Chang

Thank you! I'll be haunting that site for a bit!
 
Does this mean the cranky old feller isn't going to be making noodles any time soon? What brand of pasta maker do you have, btw?

The cranky old feller cranks out lots of pasta, he enjoys it. We have an Atlas Pasta machine. I clamp it to a 6 foot table and we pasta for hours...:rolleyes:
 
I used the recipe out of David Chan's Lucky Peach magazine because it a very simple recipe, it calls for heating baking soda at 250F instead of using potassium carbonate which is hard to find. This is a link to the recipe that I used out of Lucky Peach magazine. The broth and Tare recipe is there also, you can subtitute and use your imagination on the broth but the noodles need to be exact. Make sure that you use 4 tea spoons of the soda and not table spoons , some recipes call for tablespoons but it was a mistake.David Chang

Well...I nabbed the recipe and have subscribed to Lucky Peach Magazine...thanks!:) Waiting to hear if they are going to re-print issue #1 that the recipe is featured in.
 
momofukufor2.com/ this is a blog that I refer to when cooking David Changs recipes, they give alot of tips on actually making his recipes at home. Lucky Peach is a great magazine, also the momofuko book is awsome to read.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
image-1444980612.jpg



image-1897734228.jpg

These are some other pics of Ramen that I made. I like pork belly , pulled pork , and poached eggs in mine , I use boiled quail eggs sometimes and it comes out really good. Chicke is great also as a sustitue for pork. I make Momofuko shrimp and grits with the leftover ramen broth, and the leftover tare makes a great marinade or seasoning. It freezes well but stays in a slurry from all the alcohol in it so it is easy to scoop out just what you need instead of defrosting the entire container.
 
Back
Top Bottom