Tales From The Tummy

food + travel + lifestyle

  • Blogs I Love
  • Travel
  • Restaurant List
  • Contact Us
  • About
  • Home
  • Home
  • Restaurants
    • Alabang
    • Antipolo
    • Fort
    • Makati
    • Mandaluyong
    • Manila
    • Ortigas and Pasig
    • Paranaque
    • Pasay
    • Quezon City
    • San Juan
  • Food Finds
  • Travel (Local)
    • Alabang
    • Bacolod
    • Baguio
    • Batangas
    • Bohol
    • Boracay
    • Cebu
    • Davao
    • Manila
    • Palawan
    • Pampanga
    • Tagaytay
  • Travel (Int’l)
    • Hong Kong
    • Korea
    • Macau
    • Osaka
    • Richmond
    • Singapore
    • Taiwan
    • Vancouver
  • Recipes
  • Tech
  • Others
  • Travel
  • Search Results

Butamaru Ramen in Westgate Center, Alabang

November 10, 2014 by Richard 2 Comments

Share this:

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window)
  • More
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window)
  • Click to email this to a friend (Opens in new window)
  • Click to print (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window)

Butamaru Ramen Westgate Alabang

Butamaru Ramen is the newest home grown ramen chain to join the ramen wars in Manila. They quietly opened last September in Westgate Center, Alabang under Chef Jerome Lim who trained under Sugimura-san of Menko noodle company in Oita, Japan. The ramen shop is a bit hidden from the main road inside Westgate but just look for Zong and you’ll find Butamaru behind it.

Butamaru Westgate Alabang Ramen Bar

The restaurant is situated in a bi-level structure with the ground floor dominated by a large photo wall with the kitchen behind it. There is a ramen bar for the quick, solitary diners to do an eat, slurp and run.

I’ve visited the place 3 times already and the ramen gets better after each visit until I was satisfied to write about it after the 3rd one.

They have a small menu with 5 kinds of ramen (shio, shoyu, miso, tantanmen, curry tantanmen) and a couple of side dishes. I’ve so far tried 4 of them, skipping the shio which I only eat at Santouka. All their ramen use a proprietary 16 hour tonkotsu broth inspired by their many meals throughout the Kyushu region.

Butamaru Ramen Westgate Alabang Miso Ramen

Miso Ramen (P350). First thing I noticed was the heftier and curly noodles they use, I dislike those stick thin noodles used by Ramen Nagi and Ippudo. They topped the ramen with two pieces of their special aburi (seared) chasyu, egg is an extra P50 while extra noodles cost P80.  You’ll also notice lots of sesame seeds in their broth, they add this to give it a nutty flavor dimension.

The noodles are firm and have a good bite while the broth is not heavy so you can readily slurp it all away. You can request for a richer broth if you so desire but the regular is perfect for me already.  The chashu was a nice surprise as I was expecting it to have a little bite but it just literally melts in your mouth with the nice charred and smoky flavor.

I also sneaked a try of the shoyu from Irene’s bowl but I still prefer the shoyu from Ramen Yushoken.

Butamaru Ramen Westgate Alabang Tantanmen

TanTanMen (P350).  I’ve had this in a few places already, some are too spicy that you’d be sweating buckets finishing off the bowl. Butamaru’s spice level is something I can handle with a bit of help from cold tea and water. The broth is rich and spicy with a nutty peanut flavor evident throughout. I’d like for a little bit more minced pork but as is, this is one of the best bowls of tantanmen in the city.

Butamaru Ramen Westgate Alabang Curry Tantanmen

Curry Tantanmen (P350). This is my favorite bowl at Butamaru, it’s tantanmen on curry steroids. This is so much better than the tantanmen, the spiciness is enhanced with the creamy and earthy flavors of the curry powder.

Curry Gyoza Plate
Curry Gyoza Plate
Curry Gyoza filling
Curry Gyoza filling

I’m not too impressed with their regular gyoza but you will regret it if you miss ordering the Curry Gyoza (P150). Aburi chasyu and curry paste is added to cabbage and encased in a thin flour wrapper. The gyoza leak a bit of yellowish sauce onto the plate so you know it’s juicy. The flavors burst out and envelop your taste buds but be careful though as the filling is quite hot.

Butamaru Ramen Westgate Alabang Cheese Hana Gyoza

Cheese Hane Gyoza (P150). This was on the menu in my earlier visits but they’ve since made it off menu and secret since it’s a bit harder to do especially when there’s a crowd. It’s called hane because of the wing like tips and each of the five pieces are all connected together. The wings are crispy and where the cheese flavor is, so don’t forget to attack them first. Though good, I’d still order the curry gyoza over this one.

Butamaru Ramen Westgate Alabang Chashu Don

Chashu Don (P280). If you don’t like noodles and prefer the taste and company of rice then you should get this rice topping. Plain Japanese rice with chashu, soft boiled egg, takana, sesame seeds and spring onion. This will definitely satiate your rice craving while still enjoying their excellent chashu.

Butamaru Ramen Westgate Alabang Takana Chahan 01

Takana Chahan (P200). Not your usual ramen joint fried rice, they’ve added takana (pickled mustard greens) and their chopped chasyu. I had thought this was nothing special but the takana add a nice texture and contrast in flavors that complements the fried rice quite well.

Butamaru Ramen Westgate Alabang Chasyu

I suggest adding an extra order of Chasyu (P150/3 pieces) to your chahan to make it a more filling meal.

The ambiance is enjoyable especially if you sit across that mesmerizing black and white photowall in front of the kitchen. Butamaru is still new and the food they serve will get better as evidenced by my three progressively enjoyable visits.  Butamaru gives southern people another ramen option that is flavor packed but not cloying.

Butamaru Ramen

CE405 Westgate Center
Commerce Avenue cor. Filinvest Avenue
Alabang, Muntinlupa City
Contact No.: (632) 887-4255
Operating Hours: 11:30 am to 10 pm daily
 

Facebook Page: ButaMaruPH

Instagram : @ButaMaruPH

Twitter: @ButaMaruPH

Website: Butamaru PH

Like this post? Subscribe to Tales From The Tummy by Email
Follow Tales From the Tummy on Google+

Filed Under: Alabang, Restaurants Tagged With: Best ramen restaurants in manila, Butamaru ramen, Japanese restaurants in Alabang, Ramen shops in Manila, restaurants in alabang reviews ph, restaurants in westgate

Comments

  1. GourmetGetaways says

    November 10, 2014 at 3:51 PM

    Oh WOW!!! This Ramen looks amazing!! YUM! I particularly liked the last picture!! I could almost taste it DELICIOUS!!

    I noticed you have also visited Ippudo. I love ours Sydney Ippudo.
    Thanks for popping over to our site.
    Alesah & I will be stopping by more often to see what you are up to :)
    Julie
    Gourmet Getaways

    Reply
    • Richard says

      November 10, 2014 at 4:24 PM

      thanks for dropping by again. Are you based in Manila or Australia?

      Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Let’s Connect

facebooktwitterinstagrampinterestsubscribeImage Map

Search

Recent Posts

  • The New Meralco Appliance Calculator (M.A.C.)
  • Fireside Launches 2020 Menu
  • Nanka Japanese Steakhouse and Catering
  • Good Fortune with Brotzeit’s 2020 Prosperity Menu
  • Tokyo Milk Cheese Factory Cafe Opens in Estancia

What’s Popular!

  • The New Meralco Appliance Calculator (M.A.C.)
  • Wing Zone, All About Flavor
  • Hanamaruken Ramen, Serving Happiness in Trinoma
  • Checking Out Yabu's New Tori Menchi Katsu
  • Shellane becomes Solane LPG

© 2021 · Blog Design by Fancy Girl Designs · Built on the Genesis Framework · Return to top of page

»
«
loading Cancel
Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
Email check failed, please try again
Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.