Categories:
Middle Eastern,
Mediterranean
Category:
American (New)
Categories:
Seafood,
American (New)
Neighborhood: Financial District
"Irregular Below My Hair Line"
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Review votes:
23 Useful, 1 Funny, and 11 Cool
San Jose, CA
Yelping SinceMay 2006
Find Me InCamera Cinema 12 or 7
My HometownSeoul, Korea
When I'm Not Yelping...Eating or Reading RSS Feeds
The Last Great Book I ReadFortune's Formula
My First ConcertNat-Seon Sa-Ram-Deul
My Favorite MovieSo many to choose from...
My Last Meal On EarthI probably wouldn't care...
Current CrushMSI Wind (6-cell, of course)
I will be missing a different ramen style that was pretty good, a clear regional pride in the food and the decor, and the very excellent "itame", stir-fry over rice dishes.
The ramen-ya that replaced it is this "Kahoo" ramen. I recognized the chef. He has been "helping" out the Do-Henkotsu owner for several months. I just thought he was a friend or a new "franchiser", but I guess I was wrong.
This is a more "standard" Kanto-style ramen-ya. Flavor-wise, I'd say it's somewhere between "Santa" (not as fatty) and "Halu" (not as salty).
Their ramen has three standard soup flavors: shio (salt), shoyu (soy sauce) and miso (miso :p, fermented bean paste). These basic ones are around $6~$7. Additionally they have "spicy vegetables" options on top of those which adds $2~$3 more. There are no size choices and very surprisingly there are no topping options!
These ramen dishes do not come with rice. Instead they have $2 "mini-don"s. I've seen 5~6 of them, but the only ones I remember are "sliced pork", "BBQ pork", "spicy chicken" and "curry". These are side dishes and not enough for a meal by itself.
They also have some fried chickens ("kara-age") and stuff, but I don't remember them all.
So, for the actual items we tried.
My wife had spicy vegetable miso ramen. I chose to try the most basic, shoyu ramen. I also got a curry mini don, just to try.
The spicy vegetable miso ramen came with thick noodles where as the basic shoyu came with thin noodles. From what I can remember they might be the same two types of noodles used at Ramen Halu.
My guess is that they use the thick noodles for the spice vegetable ramen to better absorb the flavor and they use the thin noodles for the basic ones.
Anyway, the spice vegetable miso ramen wasn't bad, but it wasn't really for me. I think it may appeal more to people with Chinese palate. Also the thick noodles seem to be too firm. They weren't undercooked, but it felt like the noodles were very dry to begin with.
I thought the shoyu ramen was pretty good. Not as fatty as the Santa's (although with floating pork fats) and not as salty as the Halu's. The noodles were quite thin, maybe too thin (I never liked the thin noodles at Halu). The toppings included spinach, bamboo shoot.
Besides the noodles, the pork was different between the two. The spice vegetable ramen had thinly sliced pork often seen with stir-fry. The shoyu ramen had more traditional chashu.
The curry mini don was okay. The curry is not liquid-y one. It's more of a thick paste. The flavor was good. But I thought it was a bit too small for $2.
As always, I am being conservative about the rating. We think that we will visit here again since we don't like the salty-ness of Halu and Santa is a bit too far away and a bit too heavy/fatty. As I get used to the place, I will be adjusting the rating.