All the ramen celebrity eaters have been here.
And heaps of congratulation letters cover the wall.
This is what happens when you land your newly opened shop on the cover of the annual TRY magazine. Tokyo Ramen of the Year.
I like this magazine. It's not so great as a guidebook, but it gives a nice insight into which shops are making waves. Matador sits on the podium for both their shoyu and their originality.
The 贅沢焼牛らぁ麺 (luxirious roast beef ramen) is as good as it looks. Giant slabs of roast beef, local green onion, extremely high grade shoyu and mirin; I usually feel that 1000 yen for a bowl is too high, but in this case it's almost too low.
Since the soup is made from nontraditional beef bones, expect a much sweeter bowl here than your average.
5 comments:
shancnSince I usually wind up at Kita-Senju Station to take train photographs, Matador goes on the short list of ramen shops to visit next time.
I wonder why it took so long for ramen preparers to try beef in their offerings.
Beef is nothing new, but good beef ramen is tough to find. Beef bones tend to be too sweet for most people.
Went there today. And, I have to say it is a solid recommendation. stood in line for quite a bit, but the weather was nice. Wish I had time to hit all the places on your short list.
Went today - brill. Shoyu not usually my preference, but this has definitely swayed me. Went at 1.30pm. No queue. Nice atmosphere and staff. Get your ticket, help yourself to water and oshibori, and off you go!
again awesome stuff! your blog kept me busy during my two weeks in tokyo last month! cheers!
Post a Comment