Hikari Shokudou (ひかり食堂), Ehime, March 2013.
I'm currently staying with my friend in Shikoku, in a small city that's kind of in the middle of nowhere - though it still rocks some pretty mean looking industrial chimneys and landscapes.
He offered to take me to this local spot they'd recently discovered. He said it was a little out of the way. Turns out he meant a 30 minute plus drive along the coast amid dilapidated industrial estates and sleepy villages. At the end of it is a small cabin, with a sign saying chuka soba, and the shop name not even visible until you actually go to the side of the cabin and clock it written in a small font. Who needs publicity or access when you have word of mouth? It was a saturday and there was a queue. People driving from all over the area for a bowl. Clearly this was serious business.
The inside resembled a mini izakaya of sorts, with some counter spots around the kitchen, on another wall and a very small set of tables on a tatami. Think this might have been my first ramen on a tatami actually. The menu is kept simple, as with most chuka soba spots. Three shio bowls (including a tsukemen), and three koteri bowls. The latter holds their speciality, the hikari ramen. Couple of sides, including a chashu gohan bowl and that's about it.
Despite the heat and feeling like a thick broth would be overkill I went for the hikarai ramen (the brown soup in the pictures above). The soup reminded me of Ippudo, so thick that it resembles a consome almost. Flavour wise it's a mix of pork broth, shio / umami and fish, which the chef pulls off by thickening the soup to the point where the flavours make sense. Couldn't quite figure out how he'd thickened it but I'll admit he pulls it off. The chashu was pretty fatty and the pickles a good touch while the men was standard for a chuka soba place. Only problem being it was so piping hot I burnt my tongue. The chashu gohan side is ideal, you can just pour soup on it for a double whammy of porky goodness.
My friends had the standary shio and the tsukemen, which seemed to have some thicker noodles which looked amazing but I forgot to try them. Definitely worth hunting down is for some reason you happen to be near the area.














