This museum in Tokyo is dedicated entirely to ramen noodles
Shin-Yokohama Rāmen Museum is your dream come true
If you love delving into culture and cuisine when travelling you would love to visit Shin-Yokohama Rāmen Museum. This museum in Tokyo is entirely dedicated to ramen.
It is common knowledge that the Japanese love ramen. You can find it everywhere, from street vendors to swanky restaurants. Not only in Japan, ramen has fans everywhere in the world. If you’re one of them, the Shin-Yokohama Rāmen Museum is your dream come true.
https://www.instagram.com/p/BRFYzqnFi9g/?taken-by=raekoneko
The museum has everything a ramen devotee wishes for – history, souvenirs, and of course ramen. Yes you can eat there too. At the entrance you are met with an enormous animated bowl of noodles and a store inside sells everything you need to make the noodles at home – bowls, hotpots, noodles.
https://www.instagram.com/p/BQ2FUKQDnfH/?taken-by=tomoyoshi.h38
The walls of the museum tell the history of the dish and how it evolved. Visitors can also take pictures wearing chef’s clothes with a ramen bowl in the back ground. The museum’s interior recreates a historic neighbourhood in Tokyo from 1958, which was the year ramen was introduced in Japan and became a national favourite.
https://www.instagram.com/p/BQ1oPWDhOI7/?taken-by=k.ess.elle
Further, there are nine restaurants to pick from, each one offering local varieties reflecting every part of Japan and the various ways to prepare the noodles.
It is common knowledge that the Japanese love ramen. You can find it everywhere, from street vendors to swanky restaurants. Not only in Japan, ramen has fans everywhere in the world. If you’re one of them, the Shin-Yokohama Rāmen Museum is your dream come true.
https://www.instagram.com/p/BRFYzqnFi9g/?taken-by=raekoneko
The museum has everything a ramen devotee wishes for – history, souvenirs, and of course ramen. Yes you can eat there too. At the entrance you are met with an enormous animated bowl of noodles and a store inside sells everything you need to make the noodles at home – bowls, hotpots, noodles.
https://www.instagram.com/p/BQ2FUKQDnfH/?taken-by=tomoyoshi.h38
The walls of the museum tell the history of the dish and how it evolved. Visitors can also take pictures wearing chef’s clothes with a ramen bowl in the back ground. The museum’s interior recreates a historic neighbourhood in Tokyo from 1958, which was the year ramen was introduced in Japan and became a national favourite.
https://www.instagram.com/p/BQ1oPWDhOI7/?taken-by=k.ess.elle
Further, there are nine restaurants to pick from, each one offering local varieties reflecting every part of Japan and the various ways to prepare the noodles.