Recall your halcyon college days, wandering the brick-laid corridors of knowledge. By bricks, I'm referring to crinkly packages of Top Ramen, diet of the Precambrian, pre-kitchen culinarian. Ramen's Japanese-noodle-house origins are frequently eclipsed by its reputation as a freeze-dried convenience food, but for years, you could taste the real thing at the now-closed Ken's Ramen. Luckily, Pikaichi continues the tradition in the same space, tucked behind the food court of Allston's Super 88 Market. Pikaichi's menu of ramen, donburi, and curry is brief; tables are stark and simple; service quick and capable.Miso ramen ($8.49) features a broth whose sweet, milky brine is the richest of three options. Garnishes include sliced pork medallions, which ranged between visits from a trifle too thick and slightly tough to fall-apart tender. In case you're counting, Pikaichi specifies they serve seven ounces of noodles in their soup rather than what they say is a conventional five. Noodles retain a chewy bite; their curls scoop corn kernels and scallions on the way up. Hokkai shio ramen ($7.99) — salt-flavored — delivers chicken, pork, and vegetable stock in its most elementary state. Expect thinner broth compared to thicker collagenated cousins. A pat of butter (50 cents) melts to a salty glimmer across the broth's surface. Donburi ($6.99) are rice bowls, here topped with sweet, spiced beef and crimson shreds of pickled ginger. Hearty eaters in my company remarked that the "extra beef" is probably worth ordering. Tatsuta curry ($7.99) is an attractive arrangement: a bed of rice, a pile of fried-chicken chunks, a scoop of curry all in a row. The mild, fruity gravy tastes of pineapple.
Sides include a tangle of crunchy, sesame-specked seaweed, and a cool cube of tofu in a pool of soy, chili, and scallion ($2.99). Tako balls ($5.49) resemble doughnut holes, whose creamy batter encloses tips of chewy octopus tentacles, drizzled with tangy chilied mayonnaise. Tonkatsu ($3.99), a pork fritter, is a juicy cutlet in a thick panko crust. Dab the sliced cutlet into dark, plummy tonkatsu sauce, its bowl smeared with hot mustard. Beverages range from canned soda to canned green tea. I wish they served hot tea, as I tend to enjoy turning my dates with ramen into a trip to a steam bath. Vegetarians should seek solace elsewhere.
Pikaichi, located at One Brighton Avenue in Allston, is open Monday–Sunday, 11:30 am–4 pm and 5 pm–8:45 pm. Call 617.789.4818.
Related:
Indian Dhaba, Azama Grill, Photos: One Night in Boston 2010, More
- Indian Dhaba
The phrase “fusion cuisine” inspires dread in me — I’ve been served too many misconceived culinary mash-ups over the years, usually European sauces awkwardly force-fit onto Asian foundations, or vice-versa.
- Azama Grill
As someone who dines out nearly nightly in Boston at every level — from highfalutin snob joints to decrepit diners — I'm often amazed at the lack of correlation between prices and love.
- Photos: One Night in Boston 2010
STUFF Magazine presents photos taken in Boston's streets over nine hours on the night of August 22, 2010; here are a few of our favorites
- Review: Kelly's Roast Beef
In a city with hundreds of unreviewed independent restaurants, I generally avoid chains. But the new Kelly's in the former home of Marty's Liquors in Allston felt different.
- Photos: DIYfest at the Haunted Casino in Allston
Salvador Jolly, The Pajama People, Sonnymoon, Rodeo Church, and more, live at the Haunted Casino
- Young Adults emerge from Allston apartments
Last month, when scraggly local trio Young Adults wandered out on stage at the Middle East downstairs to open for hyped lo-fi darlings Best Coast, college indie brats were already thronging the room.
- Love in Stockholm | A King's Ransom
If your judgment on Love in Stockholm were based solely on their penchant for matching suits and shades, their humble origins as BU undergrads who formed a band in order to obtain "free beer and girls," and their parody video of the Lonely Island's "I'm on a Boat," you'd conclude that they're tools.
- Review: W.B. Cody's
There aren't any theme parks close by, but a drive down to Westerly will get you to a close approximation with bells on. Well, with chaps and spurs on. W.B. Cody's is a barbecue specialist — local, not a chain — with a Western theme clearly inspired by the showmanship of its namesake.
- Must Flee TV?
If Jersey Shore and Last Comic Standing had a threesome with Curb Your Enthusiasm in the men’s room of Great Scott, the bastard issue might look a little something like Quiet Desperation .
- The new Brighton Music Hall is ready to roll
The paint is barely dry on the loud red exterior of the Brighton Music Hall, but before the first band take the stage at the free “soft” opening Friday night, let me make one thing clear: the operators are aware the club is in Allston and not neighboring Brighton.
- Garlic 'n Lemons
My allium appreciation knows no limits; lacking consequence, you'd find me dabbing garlic on my pulse points.
- Less
Topics:
On The Cheap
, pork, Allston, Japanese, More
, pork, Allston, Japanese, Noodle, Super 88 Market, rice bowls, ramen, Less