Tasty Japanese Sandwiches at Imanishi Sando Bar

Imanishi Sando Bar
Location
: 179 Brock Avenue (inside McCormick Park)
Website: https://imanishisandobar.square.site/

Imanishi Sando Bar is a bit of an odd one — located in an unlabeled shipping container next to a community centre, in an area where you’d absolutely never be able to see it if you were driving by, it’s pretty much the dictionary definition of a hidden gem.

Imanishi Sando Bar

They mostly serve a variety of Japanese sandwiches (or “sandos”), though they do have a few other things on the menu.

I tried the pork tenderloin sando, the aji (mackerel) sando, and the fries; everything was quite good.

Imanishi Sando Bar

Both the pork and the fish are freshly fried, with a delightfully crispy exterior and a perfectly cooked interior.  They’re served on sweet, fluffy Japanese milk bread, which complements them both perfectly.

The aji, with its tartar sauce and slice of cheese, is basically like an upscale Filet-O-Fish.  Both sandwiches are saucy as hell (the pork has what tastes like the same tartar sauce, along with tangy tonkatsu sauce); they’re a bit of a mess to eat, but they’re extremely tasty.

Imanishi Sando Bar

The fries are quite good too — particularly once you dip them in the sweet honey mustard sauce on the side — though they are fairly standard battered fries.

Delicious and Unique Ramen at Afuri Ramen + Dumpling

Afuri Ramen + Dumpling
Location
: 411 Church Street, Toronto
Website: https://www.afuriramen.com/

There are many, many ramen shops in the GTA, but I can say with a good amount of certainty that what they’re serving at Afuri Ramen is delightfully unique.

Their specialty seems to be the yuzu shio, which the menu describes as “shio tare, chicken broth, bamboo shoot, frisee, chashu, egg, nori, yuzu, thin noodles.”

Afuri Ramen + Dumpling

It’s the yuzu (a clementine-esque fruit from Asia) that sets this apart; the light, chicken-infused broth has a distinctive citrus-zest brightness that really makes it sing (there’s also a tasty browned garlic flavour that rounds things out).   It’s leagues apart from the typically heavy tonkotsu ramen that’s so common in Toronto, but no less delicious.

Afuri Ramen + Dumpling

The toppings are (mostly) quite tasty, with the perfectly cooked egg having a delightfully savoury kick, and with the light bitterness of the frisee contrasting nicely with the slightly sweet broth.  That’s not to mention the thin, chewy noodles, which complement the bowl perfectly.

Afuri Ramen + Dumpling

The chasu is the one weak point; it’s fine, but it’s a bit tough, and nothing about the flavour particularly stands out.  Still, everything else is so good that this barely even matters.

Lots of Flavour at Crafty Ramen

Crafty Ramen
Location
: 217 Ossington Avenue, Toronto
Website: https://craftyramen.com/

I love ramen.  If you browse through this blog a bit, that much should be apparent.  I think it’s one of the world’s few perfect foods; I could live off the stuff (it would be a short but happy life).

Crafty Ramen

Crafty Ramen — a lauded ramen joint from Guelph — recently opened their first location in Toronto, on the Ossington strip, and yeah, it’s good.  It’s not the best bowl of ramen I’ve ever had, but there was a lot I appreciated about it.

Crafty Ramen

I ordered the Northern Warmer with pork, which the menu describes like this: “A hearty miso ramen inspired by the Hokkaido region of Japan, featuring our very own Miso Robot! Pork chashu, chili miso butter, roasted corn, cabbage, carrot, and menma in our chicken broth.”

Crafty Ramen

There are a lot of neat touches here — there’s the “miso robot,” which I guess is just miso-infused butter shaped like a robot, and the corn is nicely charred, giving it a bit of a smoky flavour.

The broth is very, very salty, however, which does somewhat drown out the would-be complexity from the miso.  I certainly didn’t dislike eating it, but it’s a bit one-note and in-your-face.

Crafty Ramen

I added on an egg, and it was perfectly cooked, with a great, jammy yolk.  But like the soup, it’s a bit salty — it basically tastes like eating soy sauce with the texture of an egg.

Still!  It’s ramen.  It is inherently great, even if it’s not the best bowl I’ve ever had.  The noodles were maybe a touch overdone, but were otherwise chewy and satisfying.

Tasty Noodle Soup at Ikkousha Chicken Ramen

Ikkousha Chicken Ramen
Location
: 249 Queen Street West, Toronto
Website: https://www.ikkousha.ca/ikkousharamenchicken

Ikkousha Chicken Ramen shocked me.  It’s a spin-off of Ikkousha Ramen, which specializes in porky tonkotsu ramen.  I like that place a lot, but I find the flavour of the soup to be a bit one-note porky.  It’s delicious, but not exactly my favourite ramen in the city.

Ikkousha Chicken Ramen, as you’d probably expect, serves a similar style of ramen, but made with chicken instead of pork.

Ikkousha Chicken Ramen

I ordered the tori paitan ramen with an egg added on (a must).  They have lighter choices on the menu, but the tori paitan is basically the chicken version of the signature tonkotsu at the original restaurant.

Ikkousha Chicken Ramen

It’s very, very good.  It has really delightful roast chicken flavour; it’s like a soup version of a great roast chicken, with such a rounded chicken flavour that it never feels one-note like the ramen at the original location.

Ikkousha Chicken Ramen

The slices of ultra-tender chicken on top are great, and the egg was perfectly cooked, with a great flavour and a perfectly jammy yolk.  The noodles were maybe a touch too soft, but that’s a minor complaint for what is otherwise one of the best bowls of ramen I’ve had in a while.

Tasty Japanese Noodles at Raku

Raku
Location
: 456 Queen Street West, Toronto
Website: https://rakunyc.com/

If you’re looking for a Japanese noodle fix and you want something a bit different from the now-ubiquitous ramen shops throughout the GTA, Raku is worth a shot.

Raku specializes in udon noodles — which are thicker and chewier than ramen noodles — that they serve either hot or cold.  I went with one of the cold choices, though I started with the yaki nasu: “deep fried eggplant, spicy miso pork, quail egg.”

Raku

The waitress explained that you should mix this one up so that the egg combines with the eggplant and the pork.  The eggplant is soft, but still has some texture, and works very well with the meaty ground pork.  The miso gives it an addictively savoury flavour, and the egg cranks up its silky richness.  It’s a tasty dish.

Raku

As for the star of the show, I went with the zaru: “chilled noodles, dipping sauce.”

Raku

It’s a really simple dish; the dipping sauce basically tastes like a milder soy sauce.  It really comes alive once you jazz it up with the accompanying green onions, mushrooms, wasabi, and the quail egg (not to mention the little dish of shichimi togarashi — a zippy Japanese spice blend — on the table).

Raku

The noodles are really the star of the show here, and they’re great, with a hearty chewiness that stands up nicely to the flavourful sauce.