Showing posts with label miso. Show all posts
Showing posts with label miso. Show all posts

Monday, November 12, 2012

Toki Underground

Toki's Classic Ramen with pork loin.  Minus the egg for me

The first thing I observantly noticed is that Toki Underground is actually above ground.  Wow, I thought, when I walked in.  How clever of them :)  

DC is an area of burgeoning Asian food influences.  While there have been some trendy sushi places and even a couple of good Japanese restaurants (Sushi Taro and Makoto), there are many other types of Japanese food that have not been well represented in DC.  Toki Underground is an attempt to fill in that gap.

I've heard of some noodle bars popping up in DC but this is my first time making it out to one.  Until now, my noodle adventures have been primarily surrounding finding the best Pho restaurants in the area.  Toki has a decent following so far and with a quick check on yelp before going, it is clear that you will be waiting in line for a table if you go during peak hours.  We decided to go at around 11 PM on a Saturday night to avoid dealing with the rush.

Toki's ambience is slightly sexy, dark and fun. We were seated at the bar right in front of the noodle chef.  My first impression was ohhh, he's not even asian!  Let alone Japanese.  That's a bit racist to notice but in an area that has almost ZERO Japanese owned/run Japanese restaurants, I was hopeful to see a smiling Japanese noodle cook, preferably one that is 82 years old and looks like Jiro.  But behind him, I did notice a couple of asian-looking fellows cooking and I proceeded to order.

Their menu is pretty simple although their website didn't seem to list the noodle soups when I checked.  The main section of the menu is a list of different noodle soups available.  They also offer a few different add-ons like pork cheeks or extra egg.  I really wanted to try their dumplings but I was so focused on the ramen soup that it didn't happen.

The ramen soup was amazing.  Here is the problem that you'll have by trusting reviewers.  You have some people who grew up eating Ramen for 25 cents a bag and they can't understand paying 10 dollars for a bowl of it nor do they have the palette to taste the subtle differences in some cases.  Then you also have people who have had great ramen in Asia and that's also a difficult comparison.  What you get at Toki is an influenced version of Ramen that should be evaluated on its own merit.  For me (recently visited Japan AND grew up on bags of cheap Ramen), the broth was excellent with a rich and buttery flavor.  The pulled pork was tender and I was able to get a little bit into each bite of noodles I picked up.  The noodles were noodles.  For me, Ramen noodles are either good or they are overcooked.  People try to get very descriptive and critical of ramen noodles and with Soba or Udon, I can understand that.  Not with Ramen.  To top off the above listed ingredients were a piece of Nori (dried Seaweed), a soft-boiled egg (I held this back), some sesame, scallions and their seasonal vegetable... mustard greens.  The mustard greens were actually a perfect addition.  You could peel away a little piece off the cooked roll floating in my delicious broth offering each bite a little contrast in texture and some bitterness. One of my friends got the pork cheeks and devoured them.




We finished our meal with some chocolate chip cookies and milk.  For 7 bucks for 3 cookies, this is the only thing that seemed a bit pricey since my world famous bag-of-cookies costs half that and yields me about two dozen cookies.

I can't wait to return to Toki Underground.  I'm even looking forward to bringing my kids when I come back.  It was worth the hype and the wait.  Hopefully they will quickly expand to another location now that they've proven that DC is ready for high quality ramen!  Avoid coming in big groups as they only have bar seating and don't take reservations.  Great place to bring a date and it won't break the bank if you are on a budget.


Rating - 5 Stars.

Sunday, April 1, 2012

Photo stream of food and drink from Japan

Here are some foodie highlights from my trip to Japan.  It was a daily culinary adventure that I will always remember.  The Japanese eat extremely healthy starting with breakfast.  I've always believed that eating a healthy breakfast is key.  The Japanese seem to have lean proteins and vegetables as a part of their breakfast which could explain why they are all so lean!  How ironic is it that even though they live off seafood that they may secretly be one of the world's leaders in pastries and exotic desserts, as well. 

Enjoy the photos :)  For easier loading, they are all small but you can click on each one to get a closer look.

Raw lobster, raw prawns and a crunchy raw clam are some of the crazier things I've eaten.

The live-cooked abalone at the bottom was pretty cool.

Lobster flavored Miso soup with a glass of Sapporo

You can't get whale blubber in the US but you can in Tsikiji Fish Market.

My packaged bento box on the bullet train leaving Tokyo.

A look inside!

My first homemade udon with onion, beef and some sour plum.

I will say that the US has mastered the Asian Froyo store.  However, this place had some cool toppings.


When I think of a meal at home in Japan, this will forever be what I imagine.

Miso soup with clams and green tea.  Beautiful serving-ware.

Hot Soba with seaweed and bamboo shoots.

Udon with meat.  They have little bottles of stuff that resembles red pepper as pepper shakers at every restaurant.

My family's restaurant definitely qualifies for 5-star presentation. 

For people that prefer cooked stuff, this tray has got it all.



A piece of bbq'd eggplant.  This was a big hit.

Ahhhh, the desserts.  Impossible to choose just one :)

One of the more american specialties.  A breaded pork cutlet with curry sauce over rice.

Words cannot describe how much I like their flan.

I could live off this snack.  Every Japanese bakery seemed to have some version of this cheesy-bread.

What a healthy breakfast.  Lean, green stuff and some protein.

This is called Monja and features Mochi, cabbage and sour plum.  Great late night food.

Monja, done cooking.
My third serving of fois gras at an amazing buffet restaurant in Tokyo.

More desserts.  Stunning presentation.

Dry soba at a village restaurant near Tokyo. 

Plum wine and sake with a green plum in the bottom.  This was semi-sweet and surprisingly delicious.