recipes:homemade_tonkatsu_ramen
Table of Contents
Ingredients
Dashi
- 5 (7 inch pieces) kombu kelp
- 8 cups (1.9 L) water
Tare
- ½ cup (118 mL) low-sodium chicken broth
- ¼ cup (59 mL) mirin
- ½ cup (118 mL) soy sauce
- 2 Tbsp (30 mL) sake
- 1 tsp (5 g) brown sugar
- 1 tsp (5 mL) rice wine vinegar
- 1 inch piece ginger, peeled and sliced
- 2 cloves garlic, smashed
- 1 scallion, chopped
Tonkotsu Ramen Broth
- 4 lb pig trotters, ask the butcher to cut into horizontal slices
- 2 lb chicken backs, cut into small pieces
- 1 lb chicken feet
- 1 lb pork belly scraps, chopped up
- 1 large onion, peeled and slit around
- 1 whole garlic head, sliced in half horizontally
- 2 inches ginger, sliced
- 1 leek, cleaned and roughly chopped
- 15 green onions, white parts only, cut them in half across
- 1 cup mushrooms
- 1/4 lb (4-5 oz) pork fatback
Chashu Pork
- 1 cup (137 mL) water
- 2 cloves garlic
- 1 inch ginger, peeled and sliced
- 2 green onions, roughly chopped
- ½ cup (118 mL) soy sauce
- ½ cup (118 mL) mirin
- ¼ cup (118 mL) fish sauce
- ½ cup of plain white sugar
- 1 (1 1/2 lb) slab of pork belly
Serving (all toppings optional)
- Fresh ramen noodles
- Soft boiled eggs (one per serving)
- Nori (sushi seaweed)
- Enoki mushrooms
- Naruto slices
- Thinly sliced scallions
- Chili oil
- Toasted sesame oil
Instructions
Dashi
- In a large pot, soak kombu in the water for at least 30 minutes, up to 3 hours.
- Then bring to a lively simmer over medium low heat. This will take about 20-30 minutes.
- Before the dashi begins boiling, take the kombu out (boiled kombu will cause your dashi to become bitter and slimy) and strain dashi into a large bowl lined with cheesecloth.
Tare
- Bring all the ingredients to simmer in a saucepan.
- Simmer the tare until it reduces to ½ cup, about 25 minutes.
- Strain the solids and let the tare cool. Store in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to two weeks.
Tonkotsu Ramen Broth
- Place the chicken backs and pork bones in a heavy bottomed stock pot. Add enough water to fully cover them.
- Cover with a lid. Over high heat, bring the water to a boil.
- Once boiled, drain the bones and wash any dark marrow or coagulated blood off from the pork with cold water and a chopstick or fork. The bones should have no dark
- Rinse the pot, put the bones back in along with the rest of the ingredients for the broth except the fatback.
- Add water to just cover the ingredients. Over high heat, bring the water to a rolling boil, then turn down temperature to a low boil/very lively simmer.
- Let boil for 12-18 hours, adding water to keep the ingredients submerged.
- The last 30 minutes to 1 hour before it’s done, place the fatback on a sieve or strainer, shallowly put it into the broth, cover the pot and let the fat cook. Remove and finely mince the fat.
- Keep in an airtight container in the fridge until ready to serve.
- Pour the broth through a fine mesh sieve into a large bowl (or multiple containers) to remove solids.
- Let chill in the fridge until solid, then spoon the fat off the top.
Chashu Pork Belly
- Lay pork belly on cutting board and roll up lengthwise, with skin facing out.
- Using butcher’s twine, tightly secure pork belly at 3/4-inch intervals.
- Preheat oven to 275°F. Heat water, garlic, ginger, sliced green onions, soy sauce, mirin, fish sauce, white sugar in a medium saucepan, big enough to hold the pork belly, over high heat until boiling.
- Add pork belly, it won't be submerged. Cover with a lid left slightly ajar. Transfer to oven and cook, turning pork occasionally, until pork is fully tender and a cake tester or thin knife inserted into its center meets little resistance, 3 to 4 hours.
- Transfer contents to a sealed container and refrigerate until completely cool.
- Reheat pork belly slices in soup broth with noodles and other garnishes.
Serve
- In a large pot, bring the tonkotsu broth to a simmer. Add 5-6 cups of dashi.
- Finely chop the fatback and add the fatback to the broth, simmering until it’s barely visible in the broth.
- Ladle the broth into deep, wide bowls, adding about 2-3 tablespoons of tare, leaving room for the noodles and toppings. (Freeze any leftover broth to use later.)
- Cook the noodles according to the package instructions and divide among bowls.
- Top each with 2 slices of pork belly, one soft boiled egg sliced in half, 3 slices of naruto, 1 sheet of nori, the enoki mushrooms, oils, and scallions.
- Serve immediately.
Notes
The tonkotsu broth can be frozen in a freezer-safe container for up to 4-6 months.
Source
recipes/homemade_tonkatsu_ramen.txt · Last modified: 2020/03/26 22:23 by 127.0.0.1
