An Halal udon restaurant and an Halal tempura restaurant opened this June at Narita Airport in terminal 1 and terminal 2 respectively. I now report from the Halal udon restaurant in response to the many requests to “introduce the Halal udon” I received after I introduced Halal tempura in my previous field report.

 

Location of Halal Udon at Narita Airport
Location of Halal Udon at Narita Airport

       The restaurant serving the Halal udon, KINEYAMUGIMARU, is located in the food court in VIEW SQUARE on the 5th floor of the international terminal 2 main building. Take the escalator from the departure lounge to the 5th floor and head towards the Observation Deck; you will end up at the Sky Food Court.

 

Prayer room in Narita Airport
Prayer room in Narita Airport
Prayer room in Narita Airport
Prayer room in Narita Airport

       You will know you’re on the right track when you see the Prayer Room located on the same floor.

 

Outward of Halal Udon restaurant at Narita Airport
Outward of Halal Udon restaurant at Narita Airport

       In the food court you will see a lot of half-open type restaurants.

 

Menu of Halal Udon
Menu of Halal Udon

       You can see the menu and a “Certified by Malaysia Halal Consultancy & Training Agency” sign displayed near the entrance.

 

How to order of Udon
How to order of Udon

       They are kind enough to provide a display in Japanese, English, Chinese, and Korean.

 

How to order of Udon
How to order of Udon

       It’s not difficult to order at all; first order your udon either hot or cold. If you tell them the menu number, hot or cold, and big or regular, it shouldn’t be a problem.

 

       Next, fill your plate with some onigiri (a rice ball), tempura, and a side dish and head to the cash register. It’s up to you whether to take these items. You will then receive the udon you ordered earlier before you get to the cash register, please pay then.

 

How to order of Udon
How to order of Udon

       Basically, you should enter the restaurant and proceed from left to right.

 

Dishes
Dishes

       I ordered the Kama-tama udon – warm noodles with no soup mixed with egg. This, along with my tempura chikuwa (fish sausage) and salmon onigiri, came to 720 yen. The time of manufacture was displayed on the onigiri, it was indeed made in Japan.

 

Dashi-shoyu
Dashi-shoyu

       You can add dashi-shoyu (soy sauce broth) to udon without soup such as Kama-tama udon to give it some extra flavor. The dashi-shoyu here is unique to this restaurant. The trick is not to use too much; just add it little-by-little while gauging the flavor.

 

Halal Udon
Halal Udon

       The sticky texture is something that can only be found in specialty homemade udon restaurants. It was delicious!

 

The view from restaurant
The view from restaurant

       There is a deck right in front of you, so you can sit at the counter and enjoy Halal udon while watching the airplanes take off and land.

 

At last, return your dishes
At last, return your dishes

       After you’ve finished eating, place your dishes on the tray and return it to the corner where you see “返却口” (return trays here). In Japanese food courts, its good manners to return your own tray when you have finished eating. If you say “gochisosama” (meaning, “thanks for the meal”) in Japanese when returning your tray, you are sure receive a smiling “thank you!” in return. This may be the final episode of your trip to Japan.

Links

 

Homemade Udon Noodles KINEYAMUGIMARU, Narita International Airport
Homemade Udon Noodles KINEYAMUGIMARU, Narita International Airport @JAPAL TRIP

 

 

HALAL GOURMET JAPAN

メルマガ会員募集中

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