Nissin UK – The Ramen Masters Cup Noodle

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I picked up the Nissin x Shoryu Cup Noodle on the Japan Centre grocery store in London on Leicester Sq..  Japan Centre payments themselves as a Japanese Meals Corridor since 1976 and I might say they dwell as much as the billing.  They’re within the basement of the constructing with a ramen restaurant above and the pretty massive retailer has many freshly made meals and imported meals/snack gadgets from Japan.

Whereas Nissin EU has had a line of Cup Noodles accessible many a few years, they not too long ago began The Ramen Masters collection of flavours.  The Nissin x Shoryu is the primary one, and so they have now added Takumi Particular Miso Ramen from one other well-known European ramen restaurant.  Shoryu is well-known UK ramen restaurant and so they teamed up with Nissin to create a Hakata Tonkotsu flavour based mostly on their signature Ganso ramen.  The Ramen Masters model has a pork and hen broth, inexperienced onion, pink ginger, kikurage
mushrooms, and a plant-based meat topping.

Ramen Masters Nissin x Shoryu

The Ramen Grasp line is highlighted with a giant pink field with white
print.  This beautiful a lot pops towards the black background with the uninteresting
gold, round, Shoryu brand beneath it.  A bowl of ramen with the
toppings included is proven beneath that.  The graphic design of the cup
makes it look very elegant and complex.
The steel foil lid of the cup reveals photographs of Shoryu and even Large Ben to let you recognize it is coping with the UK. Very cool design with the picture montage and there’s even a tiny image of the ramen.

Again of the cup.  Present dietary data and preparation instructions.  The cup is manufactured from plastic with a skinny cardboard exterior liner.

Elements in English, German, and French.  How cool is that!  In Canada it’s English and French.

Once you pull the lid again it reveals an entire lot of soup base powder and toppings.

I added boiling water to the fill line, closed the lid, and let the noodles rehydrate for 4 minutes.

The soup had a pleasant savory aroma of a superb tonkotsu. The odor and style of Tonkotsu is tough to explain because it is not meaty and even essentially salty or spicy.  A very good tonkotsu broth is simply wealthy, clean, has a lightweight creamy-ish texture, and is savoury.  It’s fairly good, not offensive to the style buds in any approach, but it surely is not like most meat based mostly broths.  The noodles had been of a barely thicker, common dimension and may need had a firmer break and snap than the common noodles from Japan when bitten into.

The soup powder had a lot of mushrooms, smelled barely buttery, with a lot of garlic bits and inexperienced onions together with vegetable protein of some kind.   The style was fairly good with a little bit of a meaty undertone.  I believed there was a barely thicker texture to the soup than your regular broth (which works for this) too.  There was a lot of umami with a touch of garlic to it.  There have been a variety of little bits of texture vegetable (soy?) protein and tree ear mushroom, and I believe these may need thrown the flavour profile off a bit even when they added umami to it.  Nonetheless, it was a tasty cup of tonkotsu flavoured cup noodle. 

The noodles after mixing all the pieces effectively and having a couple of fork-fulls.

Closeup of the ramen.

 

Comply with me on Twitter or Instagram at @Tostzilla or my feedburner
Extra snacks, ramen and Japanese popular culture.



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