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Yakiniku reimagined into ramen, buns

MANILA, Philippines — Originally simply “grilled meat” in Japan, Yakiniku has been given a new life by a famous Japanese restaurant chain – exclusively for the Filipino palate.

For a limited time only, or only until April 30, Ippudo is offering the limited-edition Yakiniku Ramen and Yakiniku Bun. These new dishes, said the Japanese franchise, mark the start of a series of releases highlighting the theme “Great Ramen, Great Sides,” through which the brand will be introducing new limited-edition ramen quarterly, and complementing side dishes throughout the year.

Seraiah del Rosario, Ippudo Philippines Brand Manager, told Philstar.com that although more and more people are preferring specialty restaurants or single-dish concepts focused on one dishes the restaurant specializes in, their brand aims to offer variety and novelties quarterly to continue to excite diners.

Thus, there is the Yakiniku Ramen, which the chain believes to be the first ever ramen to have Yakiniku. It fuses the restaurant franchise’s original creamy 15-hour pork bone broth and Hakata-style noodles, but this time, topped with thinly-sliced pork tossed in a mix of teriyaki and spicy miso sauce, koyu oil for a burst of umami flavors, nori, and shio tamago.

Technical Manager Mheldz Alvarez shared to Philstar.com that the Yakiniku Ramen is an original concept from their global headquarters, but tweaked to be made sweet and spicy exclusive only in the Philippines to suit the Filipino taste. 

According to her, they used aka (red) miso for spice, teriyaki sauce for sweetness, and open-flame grilling for the pork. They changed only the flavors, she said, but use the same Japanese techniques.

Maxine Ramolete, brand assistant, told Philstar.com that they aim to introduce ramen varieties on top of their core ramen dishes to show that “not only do we make great sides, but we make really good ramen and we can make more great ramens.”

“The consistency sets it apart. The level of quality is the same for all stores because the broth comes from the same source in Japan,” Del Rosario added.

Although Ippudo is best-known for its ramen, what sets it apart from other ramen houses is that side dishes complete the

Read more on philstar.com