
Kitakata Ramen Town
A small rice-farming city with one of the highest densities of ramen shops per person in Japan — approximately 100 shops for around 47,000 residents. Kitakata ramen uses wide, flat, curly noodles in a light soy-pork broth, and locals eat it for breakfast.
2–3 hours
Free; ramen ¥700–¥900/bowl
Most ramen shops: 7:00–15:00 (many open for breakfast); shops close early when sold out — arrive by 11:00
Year-round
Kitakata Station (JR Banetsu West Line, 20 min from Aizu-Wakamatsu)
Location
Why Visit
- 1
Asahi-ka is the original Kitakata ramen restaurant — opened 1938 and still using the same recipe
- 2
The flat curly noodles are made with well water from beneath the city — mineral content gives them their unique chew
- 3
"Asa-ra" (morning ramen) — eating ramen before 9am — is a genuine local tradition
- 4
The kura (storehouse) architecture in the old town reflects the city's sake and soy sauce merchant history
Local Tips
Kitakata ramen is one of Japan's big three ramen styles — thick, flat, curly noodles in a light soy broth. The city has more ramen shops per capita than anywhere in Japan, and locals eat it for breakfast. Minokichi-ya and Bannai Shokudo are the most respected traditional shops. Combine with a sake brewery tour (Kitakata is also famous for its fresh spring water and sake).
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