Handmade Ramen Noodles Part 2
- 500 grams All-purpose flour
- 8 grams Bicarbonate of soda (baking soda)
- 5 grams Salt
- 50 grams Boiling water
- 175 grams Water (cold)
- 1 to dust Cornstarch
- Put the baking soda and salt in a small bowl, add boiling water and dissolve (This de-gasses the baking soda.)
- Add cold water and cool down until it's a bit cooler than body temperature.
- Put the all purpose flour in a large bowl, make a well in the center and add the water with salt and soda in it from Step 1.
- Mix with your hands until crumbly.
- It will be very dry and hard to mix to start, but keep kneading patiently and try not to add more water.
- When the dough comes together, put it in a large plastic or Ziplock bag, seal and step on it with your feet to develop the dough.
- (When the dough becomes flat, take it out, fold it into quarters and step on it again.)
- Repeat the stepping and folding process 3 times, and leave the dough to rest for 2 to 5 hours.
- If you have a pasta machine, set the dial to 4 or 5, and cut the dough into thin noodles.
- If you don't have a pasta machine, roll the dough out with a rolling pin to about 2 mm thick, and cut into 2mm noodles.
- Dust the noodles evenly with cornstarch (or katakuriko) to prevent the noodles from sticking to each other.
- If you divide the noodles into 150 to 160g portions, you'll have 5 servings exactly.
- If you prefer ripply noodles, squeeze the noodles well.
- Boil the noodles in plenty of boiling water, taking care not to let it boil over, for 1 and a half minutes.
- To use the noodles as tsukemen (dipped ramen), rinse well in cold water to remove surface stickiness.
- If you're serving the noodles hot in soup, eat right away to prevent them from becoming soggy.
bicarbonate, salt, boiling water, water, cornstarch
Taken from cookpad.com/us/recipes/150450-handmade-ramen-noodles-part-2 (may not work)