Kagari

RESTAURANTS, TOKYO Updated : Mar 29, 2017, 03.02 PM IST

Derek Freal

Derek Freal abandoned the American Dream in 2009 to travel the world and eventually realized that Asia is the best part, which is why most of his writing covers India to Indonesia (and everywhere in between). However Derek"s specialty is in unique and offbeat travel guides -- not just for Asia but countries across the globe -- and in producing travel videos. All this and more as the nomadic journey continues on http://blog.theHoliDaze.com.

Photo courtesy: Derek Freal
Anytime you see people queued up on the sidewalk out front of a restaurant, you can guarantee that the food is good. When it comes to Kagari, you’ll be able to spot a rather long queue outside the restaurant.

Kagari is known for its noodles but these no ordinary ramen noodles. Above the entrance is a large sign reading Soba (Japanese buckwheat noodles) but neither are the noodles here made of buckwheat. Instead, you have only two options—the first is tori-paitan, a thick creamy soup with diced onion. The alternative is the dark and rich niboshi-shoyu, flavoured with soy sauce and sardines.

Recommended dish: Both are worth the wait, but tori-paitan is undoubtedly the better of the two.
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