Home Food A Ramen That Merges Japan and the South

A Ramen That Merges Japan and the South

by белый

Once thought of as a byproduct of collard greens, brothy, complex potlikker takes on new life as a wonderful base for a Japanese staple.

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During a recent lunch service at Ramen by Ra, a five-seat stall on the Lower East Side of Manhattan, the chef Rasheeda Purdie hummed along to jazz streaming out of a small speaker as she moved through the restaurant’s tiny kitchen.

Behind her, shoyu-flavored broth simmered away alongside a less common sight at a ramen shop: a pot of long-cooked collard greens, its liquid used as the base for her potlikker ramen.

Recipe: Potlikker Ramen

Potlikker ramen, also called “collard green ramen” or “soul food ramen,” isn’t a new dish — the chef Todd Richards features a version in his 2018 cookbook “Soul.” But it’s now garnering a following on TikTok and at Ramen by Ra, where reservations book up months in advance.

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Ms. Purdie’s version is made with Hawaiian Sun Noodles, her favorite brand, and topped with chopped greens and shredded, smoked turkey meat, all delicately placed into the bowl with the precision of a surgeon. It also includes a soy-marinated halved egg, with the soft, bright-yellow yolk adding richness to the broth.

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