Asa Ramen (Gardena, CA)
Kotteri Shoyu (served with
menma,
negi,
chashu, and
tamago). The ramen chef called this a “Kyushu” style pork-based broth (tonkotsu). An
asseri shoyu (chicken-based broth) ramen is offered there as well.
This is a beefy, slightly milky, and notably salty soup. What separates this from other broths I tried, though, was this phantom beefy-like element. At first taste, I thought it was shallow and salty but as I worked through the bowl, its subtlety and complexity became more apparent. Not superior broth but definitely noteworthy. Beautiful bits of pork fat (
seabura) glisten on the broth’s surface.
The noodles (homemade?) here are the standout; being true to the Kyushu- style, they were square-ish and thin as well as beautifully toothsome. Not an egg noodle (whiter noodle with “mold”.) The noodle used in their
asseri ramen is a yellower noodle with no said mold.
Besides Shin Mama Ramen in Torrence (easily the best egg I tried), Asa’s
honjyuku (half-cooked)
tamago was the clear standout. The yoke lusciously oozed from the fully-set eggwhite. Clearly, they are prepared when the order is placed. Many
tamago I tried had the dreaded gray-ring around the outer yoke indicating that the egg was carelessly overcooked for expediency or cooked earlier and held.
The
chashu was luscious and boldly porky. The pieces were bite-sized, unlike the more common whole slices of pork.
Asa Ramen18202 S Western Avenue
Gardena, CA
(310) 769-1010
Other Los Angeles-area ramen noodle shops:
Hakata Shin Sen Gumi RamenUmemura Ramen & Shisen RamenShin Mama RamenGardena Ramen & Foo Foo Tei RamenDaikokuya RamenChin-ma-ya RamenSantouka Ramen
Last edited by
PIGMON on May 26th, 2009, 6:37 am, edited 2 times in total.