Japanese Buckwheat Noodles — Traditional Soba from Joshu, Japan (720g)

Japanese Buckwheat Noodles — Traditional Soba from Joshu, Japan (720g)

$9.99
Sale price  $9.99 Regular price 
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Japanese Buckwheat Noodles — Traditional Soba from Joshu, Japan (720g)

Japanese Buckwheat Noodles — Traditional Soba from Joshu, Japan (720g)

$9.99
Sale price  $9.99 Regular price 

The everyday noodle of Japan. Not fancy. Not fusion. Just what a Japanese home cook reaches for on a Tuesday night when they want dinner in ten minutes and don't feel like thinking about it.

These are Joshu soba — buckwheat noodles from the mountains northwest of Tokyo, a region that's been milling buckwheat since long before Japan had a name for its cuisine. Cool, nutty, slightly earthy. The kind of noodle you slurp cold in August with a cup of dashi on the side, or drop into hot broth in February when the wind won't quit.

J-Basket makes these the traditional way: wheat flour, buckwheat flour, water, salt. That's the whole ingredient list. No stabilizers, no gums, no shortcuts. Eight 90-gram bundles in a resealable bag — perfectly portioned so you can pull out exactly what you need and reseal the rest.

Cooks in 5 minutes. Serve them cold with dipping sauce (zaru soba), hot in broth (kake soba), or the way our chef prefers — chilled with a whisper of dashi and a snowfall of furikake on top.

Chef Dunand's Recipe: Cold Joshu Soba with Charred Scallion Dashi & Furikake Snow

"When a soba this good lands on the pass — nutty, silky, threaded together in those elegant Joshu bundles — you don't drown it. You build a broth that whispers, char a scallion until it smells like a bonfire, and let J-Basket's buckwheat do the talking. The furikake goes on last, like a dusting of snow over a black lacquer roof. This is the dish I make on Tuesday nights when I want to feel like I earned dinner." — Chef Dunand

Serves 2 · 20 minutes

Ingredients

  • 2 bundles Global Spice Joshu Soba (~180g)
  • 4 scallions, roots trimmed
  • 1½ cups (360ml) cold water
  • 3 Tbsp soy sauce (shoyu)
  • 2 Tbsp mirin
  • 1 Tbsp rice vinegar
  • 1 tsp sugar
  • 1 tsp instant dashi granules (or 1 small piece kombu + a pinch of bonito flakes)
  • 2 tsp toasted sesame oil
  • 2 Tbsp Global Spice Nori-Sesame Furikake
  • 1 soft-boiled egg, halved (optional)
  • Fresh wasabi or grated ginger, to serve

Method

  1. Bring a large pot of unsalted water to a rolling boil. In a small saucepan, warm soy, mirin, vinegar, sugar, dashi, and cold water — do not boil. Pull off heat and let cool while you cook.
  2. Dry-char 3 scallions whole in a hot skillet, no oil, 2 minutes per side until blistered and smoky. Slice on a bias. Thinly slice the remaining raw scallion for garnish.
  3. Drop the soba bundles into the boiling water, stir once to separate, and cook exactly 4½ minutes — al dente, with a spine.
  4. Drain and shock immediately under cold running water. Rub the noodles gently between your palms to strip surface starch until they feel cool and glassy. Drain hard.
  5. Whisk sesame oil into the cooled dashi broth. Nest the noodles into two chilled shallow bowls, pour broth around (not over) so the noodles stay proud.
  6. Crown with charred scallions, raw scallion, egg if using, and a generous flurry of Furikake. Wasabi on the side. Slurp — loudly, respectfully.

Chef's variation: Also try with a light dusting of Global Spice Smoked Chili-Lime for a Tokyo-meets-Oaxaca twist.

The Details

  • Weight: 720g / 25.4 oz
  • Bundles per bag: 8 (~90g each)
  • Servings per bag: 8
  • Cook time: 5 minutes
  • Ingredients: Wheat flour, buckwheat flour, water, salt
  • Contains: Wheat
  • Origin: Joshu region, Japan
  • Importer: JFC International, Los Angeles
  • Vegan: Yes
  • Gluten-free: No (contains wheat)

Storage

Store in a cool, dry pantry. The bag is resealable — press the seal closed after opening. For peak texture, use within 12 months of opening.

Global Spice hand-selects specialty pantry staples from around the world. Some things travel far. Some things are made the same way they've been made for centuries. This one is both.

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