- 2 min read

Yuzu Ramen at Afuri

Vibrant, cool ramen chain around Tokyo

For anyone familiar with ramen in Japan, Afuri offers something a little different. It remixes everything that makes ramen great and presents something new and trendy, arguably geared towards a younger, chic, health-conscious generation.

Forget your typical cramped, greasy, inebriated-salaryman-counter setting, Afuri is spacious, clean and cool. Youthful staff in black quickly seat and serve customers along 2 long counters at the Naka-Meguro branch, seating about 15 people. The monochrome decor with exposed concrete walls and pipes reveal a post-industrial cafe style complete with contemporary music and a buzz of energy from the chefs at work.

Afuri's trademark signature is its yuzu shio ramen. Think light, thin noodles in a chicken-based broth augmented with yuzu peel, alongside a serving of delicately charcoal-grilled char siu pork, a perfectly soft-boiled ajitama egg, chopped mizuna greens and sliced bamboo shoots, finished off with a crisp sheet of nori seaweed. If that sounds healthy and not very oily, you'd be correct. It's also fairly tasty.

Exploring the menu

Regular shio/shōyu ramen options are available (¥880) alongside their yuzu counterparts (¥980), with several customisations to your noodles available (temomi and konjac noodles). The chilled tsukemen is also a standout item from the menu and no doubt a favourite in the summer months. Extra toppings and several donburi side bowls are also available to accompany your selection.

You'll guess from the logo the 'Afuri' name is a mountain reference. Located towards the eastern part of Tanzawa, in Kanagawa prefecture, this mountain is where they source their spring water for the soup (and, I guess, cooking the noodles). It helps draw out the flavours of the chicken, fish, seaweed and yuzu ingredients that go into the golden-hued broth.

Once seated, you'll be prompted to choose between 2 styles of soup. Tanrei is a well-balanced chicken-based broth infused with various seafood, seaweed and vegetables. Maroaji is similar to Tanrei with extra chicken broth making for a thicker, richer soup.

Afuri can be proud of a lot of things, not just how well their yuzu shio ramen comes together. Everything is served in their distinctive, signature blue and white porcelain bowls – I can't really recall the ramen bowl of any other place to be honest, so it is certainly novel. They even serve a unique Asahi limited edition amber-coloured dunkel brew. Again, another first for me which beats the standard lagers usually provided.

Getting there

Afuri has been plying its trade across multiple Tokyo-based outlets since 2005. Alongside the original honten in Ebisu, you can find other branches at Harajuku, Azabu-Juban, Roppongi Hills, Roppongi Crossing, as well as this location in Naka-Meguro.

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Peter Lin 9 years ago
A truly unique style of light ramen
Tom Roseveare Author 10 years ago
Their chilled tsukemen is perfect for the hot summer
Gyujin Kim 10 years ago
Ahuri is so unique and delicious:) I love chashu!
Sherilyn Siy 10 years ago
I love everything yuzu. Putting this on my ramen bucket list!

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