🍽️ Savor the Tradition, Share the Love!
The Twin Pack Hime Dried Buckwheat Soba Noodles offers a generous 25.40 ounces in each bag, made from premium buckwheat sourced from Japan. This family-sized pack is perfect for those who appreciate authentic flavors and healthy eating, making it a versatile addition to any kitchen.
J**
Best brain. I've tasted definitely 5 stars.
These are some of the best buckwheat noodles I have tasted.They have great flavor and cook up nicely.They're a great dry food product
W**D
Tasty and convenient
Maybe buckwheat is an acquired taste - well, I've acquired it. These versatile noodle show up on my table in a range of different ways. They're perfect in noodle soups, in place of ramen or udon. Served cold with soy, sesame oil, and scallion, they're a flavorful side dish. When they star in a dish of sesame noodles served warm (I like mine spicy), they add a deep note that other noodles can't equal. The fact that their protein is more complete than that of wheat or rice doesn't hurt either.Years ago, a Japanese grocer I favored had a wide range of soba noodles available. They're pretty much always a mix of wheat flour and buckwheat, and they pretty much always gave percentages. More buckwheat give more flavor, but also more tendency to crumble. I found that 60-70% buckwheat gave the balance I preferred of flavor and mechanical strength.But that was back when they printed the percentages on the packages. Alas for the days of my youth. BTW, I make no claims about authenticity of my cooking outside the WASP/Euro cuisines, and even not them a lot. I use the world's flavors as my imagination and palate direct me.It's not "cultural appropriation." I'm just coloring with every crayon in the box, and in every box I can lay hands on - sometimes to the surprise of of people whose crayons I took home to play with.-- wiredweird
A**E
Top flavor of Amazon sobas, heavy on the salt, not from China.
I have sampled every soba offered on Amazon. This was the last and for flavor and eating pleasure, it is by far the best. Much thinner that the others, cooks cleaner(nothing left in the pan but water), does not stick together, and it is a product of Japan. King Soba and Organic Planet are manufactured in China, and Habubahu is from Australia. The latter two list wheat as the main ingredient, buckwheat second. In my opinion that makes them more spaghetti than soba. Both are equal in flavor and texture.I add a tablespoon of olive oil and 1/4 tsp of smoked peprika. Tasting the first bundle of Hime, I thought ‘Wow’! For flavor nothing else was close. Thinking the oil and paprika may have created the flavor, I cooked another bundle. Same great flavor. After more label reading I discovered why. Hime has 1490 mg of salt, Organic Planet 160mg, King Soba has 5mg, and Habubaku has “0”. If salt is not your friend, Hime is probably not for you. If salt were not my friend, Habubaku would be my choice, Even though it’s more spaghetti than soba, it cooks in six minutes and tastes fine.
L**S
Very good noodles at excellent price
I only gave these 4 stars instead of 5 because they are not 100% buckwheat. However, you can tell by the color and flavor that they are a high percentage of buckwheat over other flour wheat. You can actually taste the buckwheat in these. On the other hand, 100% buckwheat may be too strong a flavor for some people. My family loves these noodles. One of our favorite meals is these noodles topped with a little meat, veggies, and a flavorful meat broth seasoned with sesame oil and soy sauce. This value pack is a real bargain.
R**L
Better than regular pasta
We enjoy using Hime brand Soba noodles.I use them mostly for making spaghetti for me and my wife or for making Yakisoba.But I do cook other dishes with these noodles.There are many great pasta dishes you can make using these easy to cook noodles. Given a choice between japan noodles and your typical store bought pasta, I'll always choose the Japanese pasta because it's better and it's just that good.
H**O
I will recommend it.
We love it.
P**L
I eat these 3-4 times a week
Delicious. No issues with the sodium content, just boil them, strain them well, then put them in a bath of cold water. Then strain again.
I**R
Good flavor...
....but a little coarse. Soba are not an easy food for some Westerners. Buckwheat is associated with hard times, like buckwheat pancakes. But buckwheat is very nutritious. It isn't a grain so it is gluten-free, and it hs a low glycemic index, allowing diabetics to enjoy it with less worry. In Brittany, buckwheat flour is made into crepes both sweet and savory, while Russian blini are the perfect pillow for caviar. Soba might be an aquired taste, but one you might want to aquire not only for health reasons but because the Japanese have the best way to serve soba: cold with dipping sauce. Japanese summers are blisteringly hot with high humidity. In days before cooling devices, one way to dissapate body heat was by eating soba dipped in cold tsuyu, a soup base made from preserved bonito flakes, kombu seaweed, soy sauce and other flavorings. The mode is this: soba noodles are cooked to al dente, shocked with and then washed in cold water (sometimes containing ice), drained and served on a bamboo tray alongside cold tsuyu and little bowls of finely sliced green onion, shredded nori seaweed, flaked sea salt, and freshly grated wasabi and daikon radish. The flavor combinations are very refreshing, and the dish doesn't uncomfortably fill one up during hot weather. These particular soba are a little more coarse than I usually like, but that makes them perfectly rustic. They are chewy and hearty and best of all, not stale like some soba can be if they were made too long ago. This is cheap, nutritious, cultural food at its best.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
2 days ago