THREE CHEESE MAZEMEN

THREE CHEESE MAZEMEN

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  MIGHT AS WELL CALL IT, A-MAZEMEN

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SOMETHING truly unexpected happened this morning.

Something that, as far as I can remember, has never before happened to this under-exercised but nonetheless, well-conditioned casing of white-meat.  In the wee hours of this morning as a standard procedure, I rolled over in a complex twist and tango with my blanket and pillows as how it’s been professionally done in the past three decades, and in a turn of event, inexplicably…

… pulled my neck.

How the hell did that happen I have no idea, but I’m now muscularly decapitated.  Not only speaking to you with the non-photogenic side of my face in a zombie-like tilt, but perhaps it’s worth mentioning as well, feeling… understatedly uncomfortable.

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This is very untimely indeed.  Because I have something that’s worth my every bit of literary effort to advertise, but somehow, sitting stiffly in front of a computer screen sounds and feels like a very bad idea right now.  So if I seem… out of words about this absurd, three cheese mazemen, inspired by Ivan ramen no doubt, don’t think of it as I’m slacking off.  Instead, think of this recipe as – and it truly is – beyond the reach of mortal vocabularies.

This recipe is actually a symptom of a condition that I’ve been suffering since I left New York, called cultural separation anxiety.  Compared to a relatively chilled attitude towards culinary fads and hypes while I was still in New York, I’m now constantly obsessed about what’s happening in a food-scene that I’m no long a part of.

And recently, it sounds like this Ivan guy is creating a lot of ruckus.

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Aside from the more familiarized styles of ramen that’s served in soup, or tsukemen as cooked noodles served with a dipping “soup-sauce” on the side, he seems to be popularizing a new style-hype called, mazemen.  What the hell is mazemen, and why is it legit?  Not only legit, but ingenious actually.  It snugs comfortably between a soup-ramen, and dry ramen (noodles dressed with just enough sauce to coat), making it kind of like a one-bowl tsukemen, where noodles are sitting in a generous amount of intensely flavoured “soup-sauce”, plus toppings.  It solves the eternal struggle of ramen-chefs and customers alike, to witness a good portion of the precious broth – the liquid soul of a chef who might have spent days forging out of his cradle of passion – being left wasted in the serving bowl… like a puddle of dead water, after everything else that took much less effort was otherwise consumed.

That shit hurts.

But with mazemen, just the right amount of highly flavoured soup is spared with each portion of noodles.  Highly flavoured as in, things that would otherwise make a “soup” too intense to drink, is being unleashed in an all-out ramen-extravaganza.  Like say, a soup infused with a three cheese combo?  Seriously, ingenious!  Might as well call it, a-mazemen!

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But of course I understand that for most of you out there, the cradle of passion may not rock as violently as a ramen-chef.  There’s no shame in that, right, speaking from a person who published a completely pirated version of the sacred spicy miso ramen, and this time, without even consulting Ivan’s cookbook,  I’m not sorry to do it again.

Although this recipe may seem labour-intensive, believe me when I say that it’s already simplified and streamlined in 10-folds compared to a full-blown ramen operation (trust me, I have a book on that, and if you’ve read it, too, you’d appreciatively lick every single drop of soup from your ramen-bowl from now on).  A relatively easy and cheater-base stock is created in a speedy 4-hours time (hey, compared to say… 2 full days?).  Then every cheating soup-flavouring protocols known to noodle-pirates are implemented to bring this bowl as close to the real deal as I possibly can.  Is it at least, inarguably awesome, as far as noodle-pirates are concerned?

You bet it is.  I’m putting my neck on the line…

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The stock-technique of Japanese pork-based soup ramen will conflict everything you think you know about making stocks, that’s if you were French at least.  Forget what you know about low-and-slow of a bare simmer aiming at a clear stock.  It’s all about boiling the mixture into submission and get it to a milky and opaque state.  Then of course, lots of other steps and flavour-layering come after that (adding bonitos, konbu, dried anchovies and whatnots) but, we’re gonna cheat by using Japanese soup base.

It’s important to note that I start the base stock with homemade, unsalted chicken stock (flavoured with onions only) because I almost always have it in my freezer.  If you are going to use store-bought, it’s paramount that you buy chicken stock without salt, AND without the flavourings of thyme, rosemary, parsley, bay leaf or any other western herbs.  When in doubt, buy canned stock from an Asian brand.  But then again, it’s quite difficult to purchase stock that’s completely salt-free.  So if you want to just use water for the base stock, then add to the recipe of base stock: scrap-bones from 1 whole chicken, or 8 chicken wings.

The recipe for base stock will make for 8 servings, and can be made up to 3 days ahead and kept in the fridge in an air-tight container, as well as most of the toppings.  However, the final preparation for the actual three-cheese-broth has to be done right before serving, so I only documented the amount for 2 servings.  If you’re making for 4 people, double the three-cheese-broth recipe, and so on and so forth.

Most ramen restaurants like to serve ramen with sliced chashu (roasted/braised pork), but I beg to differ.  I like minced pork.  It’s kind of an accidental epiphany after my spicy miso ramen-express experiment, and I think it just incorporates better into the overall dish.  But if you like large slices of pork, I also included a quick recipe for that.


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For three cheese mazemen: Inspired by Ivan Ramen

  • For base stock: (will make 8 cups, enough for 8 servings)
    • 3 pieces of pork back-gone + 3 pieces of pork shank-bone (total weight = 815 grams/29 oz)
    • 3 large scallions, cut into segments
    • 3″ of ginger, cut into chunks
    • 12 cups (3 litres) of unsalted chicken stock
    • 6 ~ 7 small Asian shallots, peeled and cut in half
    • 1/2 of a medium carrot, cut into chunks
    • 1/2 tsp of black peppercorn
  • For three cheese broth: (for 2 servings only)
    • 2 cups (500 ml/approx 500 grams) of base stock
    • 1/4 cup (15 grams) of dried porcini mushrooms, rinsed and cleaned
    • 2 ~ 3 small Asian shallots, grated
    • 3 cloves of garlic, grated
    • 2 tbsp of Japanese hon tsuyu (soup base)
    • 3/4 tsp of sea salt, plus more to adjust
    • 1/2 tsp of freshly ground black pepper, plus more to adjust
    • 2 tbsp (35 grams) of cream cheese
    • 2/3 cup (80 grams) of soft white cheddar cheese, grated
    • 1/2 cup (30 grams) of Parmigiano cheese, grated
    • 1/8 tsp of freshly grated nutmeg, plus more for topping
  • 2 servings of fresh ramen noodles
  • Toppings recipe follows

To make the base stock (can be done up to 3 days ahead):  Combine pork back-bones, pork shank-bones (and chicken bones or wings if you are using), scallions and ginger in a large pot.  Cover with cold water and set on high heat to bring to a boil.  Cook for 4 ~ 5 minutes after boiling, then careful pour everything into the kitchen sink with cold water running.  Wash/scrub off any scums and impurity from the bones (and chicken bones/wings if you’re using), as well as thoroughly clean the pot.

Return the cleaned bones to the cleaned pot, then add 12 cups of chicken stock (or water if you’re adding chicken bones/wings), shallots, carrot and black peppercorns.  Return to high heat to bring to a boil, then lower the heat down to medium to maintain a constant (but not splattering) boil.  Cook the stock for at least 3 hours, to 4 hours (depending on what you can manage.  the longer it cooks the milkier it gets).  Shred and break up any bones/meats during cooking once they have soften (to release more flavour), and every time the liquid is reduced below 2/3 (meaning less than 8 cups left), add 2 cups of water to bring it back.  When you’re done, the base stock should be milky and opaque with bits of marrows and fat floating on top.

Strain the base stock through a sieve, and press on the scrap-meats and vegetables to extract as much liquid as you can.  You should have 8 cups of base stock.

To make the three cheese broth (for 2 servings only):  This has to be prepared right before serving.

Heat 2 cups of base stock with dried porcini mushrooms over medium heat.  Cook for 5 min until the mushrooms have completely soften and released the flavours into the soup.  Meanwhile, cook the fresh ramen noodle in another pot in boiling water.  Add the grated shallots, grated garlic, Japanese soba sauce base, sea salt and black pepper to the broth and cook for another min.  Then add cream cheese, grated white cheddar, grated Parmigiano cheese and fresh nutmeg, and whisk until the cheese has evenly melted (there may be stringy cheese that doesn’t fully melt, it’s ok).  Taste and re-season with sea salt if need be (note that this is more of a “sauce” than “soup”, so it has to be boldly seasoned).

To take the sharp edge off raw scallions, soak the thinly sliced scallion in water for 1 min then drain.

Transfer the broth evenly between 2 bowls.  Add the cooked ramen noodles, then top with pickled bean sprouts, thinly sliced scallions, parmesan and sesame pork, and a hot spring egg or poached egg (I’m using poached egg).  Grate more fresh nutmegs on top and drizzle with togarashi oil.

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To prepare the toppings:

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PARMIGIANO AND SESAME MINCED PORK: (enough for 4 servings)(can be made up to 3 days ahead)

  • 10.6 oz (300 grams) of ground pork-shoulder
  • 2 tsp of cornstarch
  • 1 tsp of black sesame seeds
  • 1 tsp of white sesame seeds
  • 1/2 tsp of salt
  • 1 tbsp of toasted sesame oil
  • 1/2 cup (30 grams) of grated Parmigiano cheese

Mix ground pork-shoulder, cornstarch, black and white sesame seeds, and salts together until even.  Heat the toasted sesame oil in a non-stick skillet over medium-high heat.  Cook the ground pork until no-longer pink, and break it up as finely as you can with a wooden spoon.  Add the grated Parmigiano and keep cooking until the cheese is caramelized and browned.  Set aside until needed.


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SOY SAUCE GRILLED PORK NECK: (enough for 8 servings)(can be made up to 3 days ahead)

  • 2 pcs (13 oz/370 grams) of pork neck meat
  • 2 tbsp of soy sauce
  • 2 tsp of brown sugar
  • 3 cloves of garlic, smashed

Pork neck is an Asian-specialty cut.  There’s only one small piece from every pig near the jaw, that’s perfectly marbled between fat and muscle.  It’s the short rib of pig.  But it can be hard to find, so if unavailable, you can substitute with pork belly (but trim most of the top slab of fat off).

Marinate everything together for at least 2 hours.  Preheat the top-broiler on high.  Remove the mashed garlic, then skewer the pork neck length-wise to prevent curling-up during cooking.  Place 3″ under the broiler and cook until charred and caramelized on one side, then flip and repeat on the other side.  Let the meat rest until completely cooled before removing the skewer.  Slice before serving.


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PICKLED BEAN SPROUTS: (for 2 servings)(has to be prepared right before serving)

  • 1 1/2 cup (150 grams) of bean sprouts
  • 1 tsp of salt
  • 1 tsp of sugar
  • 3/4 tsp of rice vinegar

Gently mix bean sprouts with salt, sugar and rice vinegar.  Let sit for 10 min, then squeeze out as much liquid as you can from the bean sprouts.  Set aside.


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FOR HOT SPRING EGGS:  Recipes on here, here and a final comprehensive guide.

FOR TOGARASHI OIL:  Recipes on SPICY MISO RAMEN-EXPRESS.

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30 Comments
  • Belinda@themoonblushbaker

    June 24, 2014 at 10:40 PM Reply

    Oh thank you for this Mandy. Even when you are great pain you manage to deliver a dish that challenges the limits of what I would put into my ramen bowl. Spicy, savory and gorgeous!

  • Kari

    June 24, 2014 at 11:00 PM Reply

    I really just want to live with you so you can cook this for me.

  • Abbe@This is How I Cook

    June 24, 2014 at 11:28 PM Reply

    My son is moving to China. May I send him over for a good meal? This looks killer-each and every component. Thank you for risking your neck. Now go have some needles put in it!

  • DAVID

    June 25, 2014 at 12:27 AM Reply

    This sounds like nothing short of an opus. // Assorted thoughts: the use of a pressure cooker could expedite the broth making process; browning off the bones could even further push the Maillard-y goodness of the broth; it is generally accepted by ramen chefs (even Ivan Orkin) that the broth is always just a conveyer for the noodles. You might take a couple sips to lubricate your mastication, but finishing all the broth is rare; when making the minced pork, using the Parmigiano rind like a bay leaf will further enhance the umami quality of the dish (because you will have a rind to use, right?); even further push the umami boundaries by poaching another idea from, this time, Adam Fleischman’s Umami Burger, make some “umami dust” for the final gustatory flourish, I have been experimenting with the following being pulverized in a spice grinder: kombu, katsuobushi, dried shitaki mushrooms, sesame seeds, dehydrated Parmigiano Reggiano (plane thin strips, them dry in warm oven on a cooling rack or make a crisp), bit of dried chile pepper, and dried small, baby anchovy (the white ones); a-mazemen(!).

    • mandy@ladyandpups

      June 25, 2014 at 1:47 AM Reply

      DAVID, thanks for the amazing tips!!! I will totally implement that into my next ramen project!!

  • Crystal | Apples & Sparkle

    June 25, 2014 at 12:51 AM Reply

    I always love what you do here. Awesome recipe!

  • Todd

    June 25, 2014 at 1:06 AM Reply

    You’re killing me Mandy..I wish I could cook like you. SO good!!

  • ami@naivecookcooks

    June 25, 2014 at 12:23 PM Reply

    This weekend i made us a quick ramen soup but girl, it was no where even close to what I see here!! This is genius and I want this in my life!

  • Yized | Prose & Chocolate

    June 25, 2014 at 2:29 PM Reply

    Your food always makes me salivate! I could do with a bowl right now. :)

  • Rosanne

    June 25, 2014 at 5:29 PM Reply

    Hi Mandy Lee,
    I cannot wait to try this. If it is anything as good as your spicy ramen express, we will love it.
    Now to find that soup base.
    Before I order online – Asian supplies in my neck of the woods are meagre – would this do – http://www.sp-sauce.com/?pid=65029811. If it does, great – I already have that in my cupboard :)
    Thanks
    Rosanne from Malta

    • mandy@ladyandpups

      June 25, 2014 at 5:38 PM Reply

      ROSANNE: yes I believe that bottle would do!!

      • Rosanne Z

        June 25, 2014 at 7:18 PM Reply

        Great. Thanks.

  • Bibs @ Tasteometer

    June 25, 2014 at 7:19 PM Reply

    This dish sounds so fucked up (excuse my language – I could think of no other words!) and off the chart, I just gotta try it LOL.

  • Brianne

    June 25, 2014 at 9:31 PM Reply

    This is beautiful. There’s no way I could pull this off in my kitchen–I’d die, or someone else would–but thanks for putting your neck out there and showing the world how it’s done. Pulling your neck? Ugh. I do hope it’s healed!

  • Pang

    June 25, 2014 at 10:04 PM Reply

    I could eat noodle everyday for the rest of my life, and that is not understatement. So to see this recipe, I am determined to try it soon.. very soon. I am so intrigued by the broth technique, your recipe and your GORGEOUS photos.

    Thanks so much for sharing :)

    Btw, hope you feel better soon

  • Sofia // Papaya Pieces

    June 26, 2014 at 11:00 PM Reply

    Indeed, just enough sauce to coat is ingenious. And then what, infuse with cheese? Thats really good! Making unflavoured stock with no salt is a great idea, I do that, because I never know when I unfreeze it if I’ll make something European or something Asian with it. I’m still stuffed from my lunch but your photos are already making me crave this for dinner…

  • Jessica

    June 27, 2014 at 4:01 AM Reply

    I feel like I want to hire you to cook me food all the time. I can pay you in crocheted goods?

  • Michelle @ Healthy Recipe Ecstasy

    July 4, 2014 at 2:19 AM Reply

    I think I love you. That’s all.

  • Jeannie

    July 16, 2014 at 9:26 PM Reply

    as if the last ramen post wasn’t giving me enough super good feels.. you do this!! <3

  • Rosanne Z

    August 8, 2014 at 2:25 AM Reply

    Had this for dinner today. AMAZING! Love, love, love.

  • DK

    February 25, 2016 at 7:21 AM Reply

    Who are these *demons* who do not drink the soup the ramen came in?

  • Hasti

    September 25, 2018 at 1:57 AM Reply

    For the broth, do you use the golden foundation broth or buy unsalted chicken broth from the store and cook it with the additional bones for the base broth?

    • mandy@ladyandpups

      September 25, 2018 at 2:40 PM Reply

      Hasti,you can use store-bought low sodium chicken stock. But if you have the Golden broth, it’s even richer :)

      • Hasti

        September 27, 2018 at 11:25 AM Reply

        Thank you Mandy

  • Adam Carpenter

    December 8, 2018 at 10:50 PM Reply

    Mandy, I have already made several of your noodle recipes and have incorporated a weekly “Noodles at Night” for me and my wife after our baby goes down for the night. Every single one has been amazing. So thank you.

    Two questions:

    1) after blanching do you return the scallions and ginger back to the pot with the bones?

    2) how large are Asian shallots? If I have standard shallots, approx how many grams should cook with the base broth and then get grated into the final soup?

    Thanks so much.

    • mandy@ladyandpups

      December 9, 2018 at 1:12 AM Reply

      Adam, no discard the scallions and ginger after blanching. Asian shallots are smaller in size, about 1 inch diameter at the most. You can see them in the photo in relation to the garlic. It doesn’t have to be so specific to the grams :)

      • Adam

        December 10, 2018 at 1:01 PM Reply

        Thank you! Made it for dinner this evening and it was our best #NoodlesAtNight yet! Hard to choose between this and your gochujang pasta… Or the spicy miso ramen… Or the… Etc.

  • mabel goodrich

    November 22, 2020 at 1:17 AM Reply

    I like this recipe

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