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Homemade Shoyu Ramen

Homemade Shoyu Ramen

Homemade Shoyu Ramen

Ingredients

For chicken dashi (stock)
8 c. low-sodium chicken broth
16 dried shiitake mushrooms
30 g kombu (kelp), about a 10″ square piece
20 g dried bonito flakes (about 2 c. loosely packed)
For tare and chashu (marinade and pork)
1 1/4 c. low-sodium soy sauce
1 1/4 c. mirin
1/2 c. sake
1 1/2 c. water
1/4 c. granulated sugar
2 tbsp. packed brown sugar
1 2″ piece fresh ginger, sliced
3 cloves garlic, peeled and smashed
3 green onions, halved
1 lb. pork belly, skin on, cut into 2″-wide strips
For nitamago (marinated eggs)
4 cold large eggs
2 1/2 c. reserved chashu-tare liquid
For garlic la-yu (chili oil)
8 cloves garlic, sliced
1/2 c. canola oil
1 tbsp ground chili or 1 1/2 tbsp. crushed red pepper flakes
2 tsp. sesame seeds
For each serving
4 oz. fresh ramen noodles
1 1/2 c. chicken dashi
2 reserved shiitake mushrooms, sliced
3 tbsp. or more tare, to taste
2 slices chashu
1 nitamago, halved
1 green onion, white and light green parts only, very thinly sliced
2 tsp. la-yu
Nori (optional)

Instructions

Make dashi (stock)
  1. In a medium saucepan over medium heat, bring chicken broth to a bare simmer. Remove from heat and let cool 2 minutes. Add in mushrooms and kombu (kelp) and let steep 5 minutes. Then, add in bonito and let steep 5 more minutes. Strain and save solids for nitamago process and serving.
  2. Store dashi chilled, up to 1 week.
Make tare and chashu (marinade and pork)
  1. In a medium saucepan over medium heat, bring all ingredients except pork to a low simmer and reduce heat to low.
  2. Meanwhile, in another medium pot over medium heat, bring pork and 6 cups water to a low simmer. Drain immediately and gently rinse pork.
  3. Place pork in tare pot and bring to a simmer. Cover and continue to cook on low until tender, turning pork occasionally, about 1 hour 20 minutes.
  4. Let cool for 20 minutes, then strain and reserve liquid for serving. Refrigerate pork and remaining liquid separately. Slice pork before serving, lightly torched, if desired.
Make nitamago (marinated eggs)
  1. In a medium saucepan over high heat, bring 6 cups water to a rolling boil. Carefully prick rounded bottoms of each egg with a pin. Gently lower eggs into pot with a slotted spoon, then reduce heat to medium-low and simmer eggs for 6 minutes. Drain.
  2. Transfer eggs to an ice bath and let rest for 5 minutes. Thoroughly crack eggshells very gently, knocking one egg against another, then return to ice bath for 10 more minutes. Peel carefully.
  3. Place eggs in a medium bowl and pour reserved pork-marinade liquid over. Weigh down eggs with reserved spent kombu (kelp) to fully immerse in liquid. Let marinate in the refrigerator for at least 4 hours, up to 12 hours.
Make garlic la-yu (chili oil)
  1. In a small saucepan over the lowest possible heat, simmer garlic in oil until tender and translucent, stirring occasionally, about 15 minutes. Keep the heat level low enough to avoid frying the garlic.
  2. Remove from heat and immediately stir in chili. Let rest 2 minutes, then stir in sesame.
  3. Once completely cool, store refrigerated in a closed container for up to 2 weeks.
To serve
  1. In a pot of salted boiling water, cook ramen, stirring with tongs or chopsticks until al dente, about 1 minute. (If using instant ramen, discard seasoning packet and follow packet instructions to cook until al dente.) Drain well.
  2. In a small saucepan over medium heat, warm dashi and shiitake until barely simmering. Cook for 1 minute and remove from heat. Set shiitake aside.
  3. Add dashi, tare, and noodles to serving bowl. Top with chashu, nitamago, shiitake, green onion, a drizzle of la-yu, and nori, if using.