A small Bourke Street shopfront given over almost entirely to one thing: udon made by hand, on site, in the older manner. Two styles anchor the menu. Himokawa arrives as wide, flat ribbons, delicate and slippery, catching broth along their length; sanuki is the firmer, bouncier noodle, thick and springy with the satisfying resistance the style is prized for. Both are worked from scratch using techniques the kitchen traces back to Edo-period practice, then paired with clean, considered broths rather than dressed up with clutter. The daily run is deliberately limited, which fits the ethos of treating noodles as the point rather than a base for something else, and means the shop can sell through and close rather than let quality slide. The space is tiny and unadorned, counter seating and a short menu, the kind of single-minded noodle bar that trades on doing very little extremely well. There is no theatre beyond the bowl and the making of it. For anyone who thinks of udon as the quiet cousin of ramen, an afternoon here reframes it: chewy, fresh-cut, faintly sweet with wheat, and worth the small wait when the day's batch is running low. A precise, unhurried lunch in the middle of the city.
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