Black Pig Noodle
The Story of
Black Pig Noodle
Black Pig Noodle is a deeply personal restaurant. Owner Yoshi was born and raised in Saga Prefecture, just a short drive from Kurume, the birthplace of tonkotsu ramen (a rich, opaque broth made by boiling pork bones for many hours). In Saga, ramen was not a special occasion. It was everyday life. As a child, Yoshi ate it constantly. As an adult, he traveled across Japan to eat even more. Eventually, one thought crystallized: he did not just want to eat ramen. He wanted to make it.
He apprenticed at a celebrated Saga ramen shop, learned the craft from the ground up, and opened his first restaurant in 2008. Unsatisfied with simply replicating his mentor's style, he rebranded completely in 2009 as Black Pig Noodle, built entirely on his own recipes and identity.
The broth is made exclusively from pork head bones and port spine, carefully stripped of all meat before simmering. This process yields a tonkotsu that is pure and potent without becoming heavy or muddy. The medium-thin noodles are chewy and substantial, built to hold the silky broth. Yoshi recommends beginning with the classic bowl to appreciate the broth's natural depth, then adding spicy miso mid-bowl to experience the dramatic flavor transformation.
Black Pig Noodle joins YUU Japanese Food Hall, bringing the tonkotsu soul of Saga to U.S. diners. This is the ramen Yoshi has spent a lifetime building, and it arrives in America with every bit of that dedication intact.
“I grew up eating tonkotsu ramen almost every day in Saga. Then I decided to make my own. Black Pig is everything I love about this culture, rich, honest, and deeply satisfying. I am excited to share it with America.”