Ramen in Dallas

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  • Hanabi Ramen

    2540 Old Denton Rd. Carrollton/Farmers Branch

    972-245-0100

    1 article
  • Ichigoh Ramen

    2724 Commerce St. Downtown/Deep Ellum

    972-707-0732

    New Yorkers George Itoh (by way of Wisconsin) and Andy Tam moved to Dallas after falling in love with the Deep Ellum neighborhood, eventually opening their restaurant in late 2018 in the spot previously occupied by Tanoshii.

    Start with the age mochi for an appetizer: a deep-fried mochi rice cake with dhoyutare sauce and ao nori. These light and extremely flavorful balls of goodness were brought about six to an order, but we could eat … 20?

    Next came the pork buns, which can be vegetarian (eggplant and eringi oyster mushroom batter), chicken (fried thigh), or pork. We settled on pork, two to an order, with nicely steamed buns, lettuce, hirata spicy barbecue sauce, and mayo. Not bad. Not bad at all, and one each was just enough.

    For ramen, try the spicy soboro shoyu ramen. All of the ramens have a chicken-based broth as opposed to the perhaps more traditional pork-based variety. The soboro shoyu ramen has chicken broth, sesame oil, scallion, and spicy ground pork. Since the pork was ground, they helpfully provided us with a giant spoon so we didn’t have to embarrass ourselves trying to catch all the stray bits of goodies with chopsticks. A special spicy miso ramen includes chicken paitan blend broth, corn, menma, scallion, fresh ginger, butter, a Japanese pepper spice blend, and probably the best pork belly we’ve ever had in a ramen dish: Two healthy pieces, each thick and meaty and obviously grilled prior to their introduction to the broth, with visually appealing grill marks and taste-appealing outdoor grilled flavor.
    2 articles
  • Ichiro Ramen

    4906 Maple Ave. Uptown/Oak Lawn

    3 articles
  • Kizuki Ramen & Izakaya

    5760 Legacy Dr. B4 Plano

    877--839-2549

    Kizuki Ramen is known for many things, one of which is the “authentic ramen experience” that is promised to customers. From start to finish, the goal is to craft for their customers the “traditional Japanese dining experience.” Kizuki’s roasting the pork bones before boiling for the broth, which comes in dozen of different flavors along with a dozen more options for toppings. House pulled noodles are included every bowl.
    2 articles
  • Kurobuta Ramen and Tonkatsu

    2625 Old Denton Rd. #612 Carrollton/Farmers Branch

    972-446-8282

    At Kurobuta Ramen and Tonkatsu, “super spicy” ramen and cheese katsu — yes, that’s big chunks of fried cheese — share a menu with more traditional tavern snacks.
    1 article
  • Oni Ramen

    2801 W. 7th St. Fort Worth

    4 articles
  • Ramen Izakaya Akira

    2540 King Arthur Blvd Lewisville

    972-410-0294

    1 article
  • TEN Ramen

    1888 Sylvan Ave. West Dallas

    972-803-4400

    This small ramen bar in West Dallas, an offshoot of Teiichi Sakurai's Tei An, has gathered a cult-like following for silky broth and succulent noodles. Ten Ramen's menu is compact: two ramens, two rice bowls, a broth-less mazemen and a lobster miso, along with a rotating weekly special. Yes, there's only standing room for a dozen or so patrons inside, where you'll rub elbows with your fellow ramen fans. But the snug, no-frills interior and intricate flavors in each bowl of ramen are both steeped in Tokyo traditions, just as Sakurai intended.

    Top Pick: The lobster miso may have its own legion of fans, but keep an eye on the weekly special, where flavor influences stretch from the ramen norms. A bold kimchi stew and a decadent brisket curry are just two of the brilliantly executed examples we've seen move through the specials.
    16 articles
  • Wabi House

    1802 Greenville Ave. East Dallas & Lakewood

    469-949-5121

    Just inside the brick wall of this Lowest Greenville Avenue address the smells of simmering tonkatsu broth await you. The pork bone soup is the most commonly served and ordered soup at most ramen restaurants, but visitors to Wabi House would do well to explore the rest of the menu. Tsukemen ramen boasts no broth at all, and instead offers a small bowl of thick and savory dipping sauce. It’s messy eating, but worth every penny of that dry-cleaning bill. Don’t forget some small plates to get you warmed up as well. The sashimi is great here (the owners got their start in sushi restaurants) and the pork croquettes are good enough to warrant a second order.
    10 articles