food, friendship, happiness, writer

Step 341: The Simple Joy of Ramen

My friend, Michael, took me to Minca, a ramen restaurant on Friday night. Like so many wonderful traditions from other countries, we have twisted ramen into a cheap, nutritionless, freeze-dried meal encased in plastic on our grocery store shelves. It is the stuff of college student diets. In Japan and other parts of Asia, ramen is a sacred, beautiful, nutritious ritual. I could hardly believe how incredible I felt eating a piping hot bowl with a good friend. It was good for my soul.

Michael learned about Minca from Rameniac, a blogger who espouses his love for the delicious dish. Michael sent me a few links and closed out his email about it with such an elegant, thoughtful commentary: “Rameniac became so well-known after a few years that he started getting picked up by the LA Times. He works as a web developer by day, but because he can work essentially anywhere there is internet, he makes frequent excursions to Japan and a few other locations known for good noodles to gather field research. With cynicism and sensationalism selling so many books and magazines these days, it’s heartening to find someone who can derive so much joy from a bowl of soup.”

I couldn’t agree more. There’s so much beauty in simplicity. Give Rameniac a read, go grab a bowl, and enjoy!

Pictured above: a delicious bowl of ramen at Minca

5 thoughts on “Step 341: The Simple Joy of Ramen”

  1. Glad you liked it!! I also decry the unneeded localization/simplification of cuisine, though in the case of instant ramen I think we’re off the hook. It came to being in Osaka in 1958, invented by Momofuku Ando, the founder of the Nissin company. It’s even more widely eaten in Japan, though I think the difference is that it’s intended to tide you over while short on funds or time to get oneself to a ramen-ya for the real deal. In the US, say ramen and most people only think of “the brick”. Hopefully more folks like chef Kamada-san can come here and change that!

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