tsukemen
{{Short description|Japanese noodle dish}}{{Infobox food
| name = Tsukemen
| image = Tsukemen at a Tokyo restaurant.jpg
| image_size = 240px
| caption = Tsukemen at a Tokyo restaurant
| alternate_name = Dipping ramen{{citation needed|date=August 2018}}
| type = Noodle soup
| country = Japan
| region = Tokyo
| creator = Kazuo Yamagishi
| year = 1961
| main_ingredient = Cold ramen noodles, broth
}}
File:Hiyashi chuka with sesami miso sauce of Hidakaya.jpg Tsukemen]]
Tsukemen ({{langx|ja|つけ麺}}, English: "dipping noodles") is a ramen dish in Japanese cuisine consisting of noodles that are eaten after being dipped in a separate bowl of soup or broth. The dish was invented in 1961 by Kazuo Yamagishi, a restaurateur in Tokyo, Japan. Since then, the dish has become popular throughout Japan, as well as overseas in the United States.
Tsukemen is a Japanese noodle ramen dish in Japanese cuisine consisting of separate servings of noodles and soup or broth, whereby the noodles are dipped in the soup. Soba and udon are some types of noodles used in the dish. The noodles are typically served cold, while the soup is typically served hot, which serves to season and moisten the noodles. The noodles can also be served at room temperature. Additional ingredients used in the dish are typically served atop or on the side within the dish of noodles. Some additional ingredients used include nori, chashu, menma, tamagoyaki and boiled eggs.
The soup serves as a dipping sauce, and is typically much stronger and intense in flavor compared to standard ramen broth. Dashi, a soup in Japanese cuisine, can be used, which is prepared using a soup base or stock that is also named "dashi." Some restaurants add hot water to dilute the soup at the conclusion of the meal, decreasing its strength and making it more palatable as a soup to finish the meal.
History
File:大勝軒(Taishouken).jpgTsukemen was invented in 1961 by Kazuo Yamagishi (1935–2015), who owned Taishoken restaurant, a well-known ramen restaurant in Tokyo, Japan. In 1961, Yamagishi added the dish to his restaurant's fare using the name "special morisoba", which consisted of "cold soba noodles with soup for dipping." At the time, it was priced at 40 yen, and the dish soon became very popular at Taishoken restaurants. As of 2015, over 100 Taishoken restaurants exist in Japan.
In recent years (circa 2000–present), tsukemen has become a very popular dish in Tokyo and throughout Japan, and several restaurants now exist in the country that purvey it exclusively.
Tsukemen is also served in restaurants in the United States and in other countries. In recent years (circa 2013–present), Tsukemen has become a popular dish in some ramen shops in Los Angeles. Conversely, in other areas of the U.S., such as Chicago, the dish is uncommon and rarely served in restaurants.
Gallery
File:Tsukemen, noodles topped with sliced nori.jpg|Tsukemen with nori-topped noodles
File:Tsukemen bowls.jpg|Tsukemen with a sheet of nori atop the noodles
File:Tsukemen1.jpg|Close-up view of a soup for tsukemen
File:Tsukemen by banej in Singapore.jpg|Tsukemen topped with fried pork cutlet, half of a soft-boiled egg and greens, in Singapore
File:Tsukemen with additional foods on the side.jpg|Tsukemen with additional foods on the side
File:Tsukemen noodles being dipped.jpg|Tsukemen noodles being dipped
See also
{{portal|Food|Japan|Tokyo}}
References
External links
{{Commons category|Tsukemen}}
- [https://triplelights.com/blog/ramen-vs-tsukemen-whatsdi-395 Ramen vs. Tsukemen: What's the Difference?]
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{{Noodle}}
Category:Japanese cuisine terms