There are places you return to not because you’re chasing something new, but because you already know it’ll be good. Smaak Ramen, located in Amsterdam, has become that kind of place for me.
This visit, I tried their seasonal tsukemen — a limited-time offering, so catch it while you can.

Dipping Broth: Bold, Oily, Shoyu-Forward

The tsuyu is intensely shoyu-forward: rich, oily, and finished with a dusting of shichimi togarashi that gives it a pleasant lingering heat. The soy sauce presence is so dominant that it’s hard to read much of what’s underneath — but if you’re a shoyu lover, that intensity is exactly the point. It coats the noodles well and keeps its depth right to the last dip.
The Noodles: Whole Wheat, Cold, and Perfectly Chewy

The noodles are the same ones used in Smaak Ramen’s shoyu ramen — a selling point in itself. Slightly flat, medium-thick, made with whole wheat flour, served cold and well-tightened. The texture is that satisfying chewy-firm that makes tsukemen worth eating in the first place. They hold up beautifully against the heavy broth without getting lost in it.
Sashimi Starter: Clean and Understated
Before the tsukemen arrived, a plate of delicate white fish sashimi — garnished with fine green onion and grated daikon — set a quietly refined tone. Fresh, clean, and a nice contrast to the bold flavors that followed.
Verdict: Worth Visiting for Tsukemen Fans in Amsterdam
Smaak Ramen doesn’t try too hard. The food is consistent, the craft is real, and there’s a quiet confidence in every bowl. If you’re looking for tsukemen in Amsterdam, this seasonal version is worth making time for before it disappears.
Smaak Ramen // Amsterdam Seasonal tsukemen: limited time only

