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Soba shops (or buckwheat noodle bars) are as popular as ramen shops in Japan. One of a few apparent differences between them is that soba shops often take the form of ‘tachigui soba(立ち食いそば)’ which means ‘standing soba bar’. A tachigui soba shop packed with middle-aged Japanese men in suits is a stereotype in Japan, but not at Suba.
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The storefront of Suba.
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Unlike stereotypical tachigui soba shops, Suba occupies an ordinary Japanese house ‘kominka (古民家)’. No signs, no neons, no waiters. It’s just a house or an avant-garde eatery. It’s inevitable to stop and look at two eye-catching tables made by Shiga-based ceramic artist Tomonari Hashimoto (橋本知成). At that point, Suba looks like an art gallery. But menus on the wall confirm its true identity.
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Suba’s menus.
Check the bilingual menus and order at the counter/kitchen. My soba bowl was conjured up a few minutes later: I hadn’t even picked my table. It was tachigui soba shop-fast.
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“Jumbo nameko mushroom (飛騨ジャンボなめこ)” with a soft-boiled egg (温泉卵). 1000 yen ($7.70).
The nameko mushrooms form Hida (飛騨) in Gifu prefecture were larger than ordinary nameko mushrooms. They tasted like truffle jelly. I felt sorry for mislabeling other tiny nameko mushrooms as nasty slimy food. I was such a pig. Now I’m a truffle hog.
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The soba noodles (2:8 / flour:soba) were thin and perfectly balanced in harmony with the Kansai-style light dashi (kombu seaweed-magnified, katsuobushi dried bonito flakes-flavored soy sauce-based soup).
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My dining companion’s ‘Bell pepper tempura (丸ごとピーマン天)’ was also good. 800 yen ($6.20).
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With a side of the artistic ceramic table.
Suba (すば) | 182-10 Minoyacho, Shimogyo Ward, Kyoto, 〒600-8015, Japan