Ratings
5
out of 5
1,036
user ratings
Your rating
or to rate this recipe.
Have you cooked this?
or to mark this recipe as cooked.
Private Notes
Leave a Private Note on this recipe and see it here.
Cooking Notes
Jim Siler
The soba noodles need to be really cold. Prior to cooking the noodles have a large bowl of ice water handy, with plenty of ice. Once the noodles are to taste, quickly drain and plunge into the ice water. Work by hand until the noodles are ice cold, then drain thoroughly and serve immediately.
The Clean Plate Club
Thanks Mr. Bittman, these noodles were great with beautiful North Fork L. I . sliced radishes, cukes, scallions, and shredded carrots mixed in, topped with sliced poached chicken breast and sauce. A wonderful, light summer supper.
Jadyn
You are supposed to dip the soba into the sauce and eat, it’s not a soup. I hope this was helpful ( ◠‿◠ )
Cypridopsis
Wasabi instead of ginger is good. Also crumbled rt cut toasted nori sheet can be sprinkled on the soba noodles.
Solange
oh god I love cold soba noodles! They're so refreshing, but what Bittman omits here is that you need to save a little bit of the noodle water (just like when cooking other pastas) to mix into your dipping sauce. Diviiiiine!
Su
The star of this show is the noodles, not the sauce. Good soba (preferably 100% buckwheat, if you can find them) are gorgeous, richly but delicately flavored, and the goal here is to lightly season the noodles without obscuring or detracting from their flavor. Know what you're looking for here, and buy good soba!
Trish
I just returned from Japan and had soba and dipping sauce a number of times... The sauce was very Bland. There wasn't a crazy amount of flavor so it doesn't surprise me that this recipe is also very mild or bland...
Eve
Traditionally, the condiments would include thinly sliced green onion, wasabi, and grated Daikon radish. Mix into the cool broth before dipping the noodles. In Japan, they serve a little pot of the hot noodle water to mix with your leftover dipping sauce to drink at the end as you would tea.
cholyida
Soy sauce with sugar how can it be no flavor???
Jonathan
The sauce keeps in the fridge in a jar for a couple weeks. There's a special little dipping cup with a lid that's used in Japan to serve the sauce in. Just pour a small amount of sauce into a small bowl or cup to dip your noodles into and retain the rest for another hot day.
Ami Sioux
Truly enjoyed this homemade option to purchasing Tsuyu in the shops...which almost always has MSG. I loved the natural options...substituting mirin for honey...I used a bit of bone broth and then made the tradition Soba-Cha with the added benefits of the bone broth for the after tea! Thank you so much for your recipe. I loved it!
Chantal
Tossed the noodles in a little toasted sesame oil. A huge hit! This recipe tasted just like the cold soba I get in my favourite restaurant.
Alz
Used miso instead of dashi. Wouldn’t recommend it...
huh?
you probably didnt put enough.if it didnt taste like anything, then you could have adjusted it.
Alisha
Loved this recipe. I used chicken broth but still added a tiny bit of Hondashi powder for some extra umami. Enjoyed the dipping sauce a lot. In Japan they offer hot water (from what was used to cook the noodles in so it’s a little starchy), and you add it to your sauce to make a soup.
Jaden
Sobaaaaaaaaa forever
Sarah N.
Lovely, simple, refreshing. Soba has such a good flavor it doesn't need much sauce so this is perfect. We enjoyed it last week and will make it again, with scallions stirred in and fried ginger sprinkled on top, during this upcoming very hot week.
Rachel
Is the dipping sauce supposed to be served warm or cold?
Alex Steiner
Very easy, tasty summer supper. Only boil the noodles for about 3 minutes. I wasn't crazy about the chicken stock that we used, so I'll look for dashi next time.
Shelli
YUUUM! So simple, so amazing. I know traditionally you’re supposed to dip the noodles in the sauce, but I just ate it as a noodle soup. I’m vegan so I used kombu dashi instead. First time I made it according to the recipe, second time I subbed ginger for garlic chili oil. Both were winners!
bex
Wow this was an amazing and simple recipe. Perfect for summer days! Serve with green tea.
Bob Wandruff
Although the ingredient list calls for finely grated ginger, it is not mentioned anywhere in the cooking instructions. An unusual omission from one of Mr. Bittman’s carefully crafted recipes. I assumed it was to be added to the dipping sauce.
Kris
There's a comma (along with an extra line space and a cap at the next line) after the word ginger, so I think the last three lines are meant to read: "Finely grated or minced ginger, minced scallions or toasted sesame seeds for garnish"
Area
This was delish. I poured the sauce over the noodles. I wish I had dashi, but chicken broth was great. I had the noodles w some leftover ribs & caramelized veggies on the side
Kate
Used vegan chicken broth, and it turned out great! The key here is good soy sauce.
Gerard
These are great on a hot august day in Georgia, I made Eric Kim’s tofu, the one from the imitation chicken McNuggets recipe, just to add some protein. Worked with the dipping sauce as well.
Primary Dashi ala Shizuo Tsuji
Put 30 g konbu in 4 cups water uncovered to reach boiling point - (remove Konbu just before water boils.Insert thumbnail into fleshiest part of the kelp if soft - sufficient flavor. If tough, return to pot for 1 to 2 minutes.) Keep from boiling by adding a dash of cold water. After removing konbu bring stock to a full boil. Add 1/4 cup cold water to bring temp down and immediately add 30 g bonito flakes. No need to stir. Bring back to boil & remove at once! Let settle, strain w cheesecloth.
Erica
What do you do with the ginger?
Ursula
For a maximally authentic experience, be sure to have a little cone of grated daikon next to your little cone of grated (not minced!) ginger and pile of scallions (no sesame seeds!). Mix a little of each to taste into your dipping sauce. Perfection.
Rich
Hit 114 degrees in Portland today so this sounded perfect. Did not disappoint! Served with sliced cucumbers and Serrano. Did find it easier to just dump the sauce into the bowls with the noodles eventually.
Anna Siegel
As a vegetarian, I used vegetable broth, and added garlic and tomato paste to the sauce to make it heartier. I briefly cooked both of the pastes in toasted sesame oil to deepen their flavor. I enjoyed this dish but without the richness of dashi or chicken stock the soy sauce flavor was very strong.
Private notes are only visible to you.