Tajima Archives - San Diego Magazine https://staging.sandiegomagazine.com/tag/tajima/ Fri, 05 Apr 2024 00:10:16 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://staging.sandiegomagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/cropped-SDM_favicon-32x32.png Tajima Archives - San Diego Magazine https://staging.sandiegomagazine.com/tag/tajima/ 32 32 The Great Ramen Hunt: Tajima https://staging.sandiegomagazine.com/food-drink/the-great-ramen-hunt-tajima/ Fri, 23 Oct 2020 04:00:00 +0000 http://staging.sdmag-courtavenuelatam.com/uncategorized/the-great-ramen-hunt-tajima/ How Sam Morikizono unintentionally built one of San Diego’s original ramen shops

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Sometimes the canary makes it out. Goes into the coal mine, coughs a touch, pulls it together, darts for the light, lives a long and prosperous life. Tajima was the canary in San Diego’s ramen mine. Restaurant ramen was a completely unproven crapshoot in 1994 when Sam Morikizono took over an existing restaurant on Convoy. He surely didn’t plan on serving it. Ramen was huge in Japan, but few serious restaurateurs stateside gave it a second thought. Ramen was just the beloved plastic package in the bulk-food aisle (thanks to the legend, Momofuku Ando).

“Before I took over Tajima, the place was a Japanese home-food restaurant. Tempura, sushi, noodles,” Morikizono says. “I had a lot of Japanese regulars and they’d always ask me to make this or that. I cooked everything. One day regulars asked me to make ramen. It wasn’t popular in the US at the time, but I made it, and it was a hit.”

Born and raised near Osaka, Japan, Morikizono came to the US after high school at age 19 and cooked in restaurants to make it. Restaurant kitchens have always been key harbors in the making-it process. “I wanted to see a different country,” he says. “In the beginning I didn’t plan to stay forever. I didn’t like it much.”

He was working at Shogun restaurant in LA (he didn’t like LA much, either) when they opened a location in San Diego, and he moved here to be the cook. A year later, Tajima restaurant down the street came up for sale.

Ramen / Tajima Tajima Ramen

Tajima Ramen at Tajima

“I always wanted to be a restaurant owner,” he says. “It was in very bad condition, but that’s why I could afford the opportunity. In the beginning, I tried everything to make the best ramen, but it was too greasy, it was too salty. Eventually, I just tried to make it balanced. I didn’t want to make it too authentic. I wanted to make it for Asian people, Caucasian people, with flavor and umami.”

That may have been the key. Part of the allure of Convoy is the collection of first- and second-generation Asian cooks, adhering to recipes straight from the source. But Morikizono cooked for both palates—where he’s from and where he is. That’s why their spicy sesame ramen—essentially a riff on the classic tantanmen ramen, which itself is a riff on Sichuan dan dan noodles—is an eminently enjoyable bowl of soup.

Twenty years later, Morizikono is still here, and Tajima is revered as one of the region’s best ramen restaurants. The day they opened their sixth San Diego location in College Heights (there are also two in Tijuana) had the bad luck to be the same day the city first shuttered indoor dining.

Morikizono says they’re doing okay. They’ve figured it out as well they can—outdoor dining, to-go orders, Tajima’s long-earned name.

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First Look: Cloak & Petal https://staging.sandiegomagazine.com/archive/first-look-cloak-petal/ Sat, 23 Dec 2017 10:51:00 +0000 http://staging.sdmag-courtavenuelatam.com/uncategorized/first-look-cloak-petal/ The owners of Tajima bring Japanese small plates to Little Italy

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That’s a hell of a tree. That’s the first thing you notice about Cloak & Petal, the new Japanese small-plates restaurant opened in Little Italy (1953 India Street, formerly home to Entrada). The project is a collaboration between Isamu Morikizono (owner/chef of the hugely successful Tajima ramen joints) and Cesar Vallin (Prospect Bar, The Rooftop La Jolla). With open windows to the street revealing the center bar that boasts two huge, flowering cherry blossom trees inspired by hanami (the welcoming of spring in Japan), it’s going to be hard for passersby to pass by. The 7,500 square-foot space includes glass brick and subway tiles, graffiti art, and Japanese etiquette posters to cement the underground (with a tree) vibe.

In the kitchen is exec chef TJ, who spent time in Japan during his 21 years cooking. Designed to be a “social dining experience,” which is the de facto restaurant model these days, the collection of small-plates is impressive. There are 30 small plates (that’s a ton) on the opening menu, including yuzu salad, jidori chicken karaage (fried chicken) with togarashi (spicy chili) aioli, pork belly kakuni (braised meat), spicy salmon battera (Osaka style sashimi), elk sashini, surf and turf pate (ankimo and foie gras), wagyu rolls, spicy tuna baguette, and abalone bata yaki (butter sauce).

They’ll also be doing sushi, sashimi, and nigiri, plus craft cocktails like the “Japananah” (sansho spice-infused gin, violets, clove, Caribbean spice, citrus, coconut, banana, and cardamom) and “Japanese to English” (a Japanese Manhattan with sesame-infused Iwai Japanese whiskey, amaro, and Italian Torino). Craft beers , wine , and sake are also part of the menu.

It’s a beautiful space. Opens this weekend. Please enjoy a first look at Cloak & Petal in the gallery below.

First Look: Cloak & Petal

First Look: Cloak & Petal

First Look: Cloak & Petal

First Look: Cloak & Petal

First Look: Cloak & Petal

First Look: Cloak & Petal

First Look: Cloak & Petal

First Look: Cloak & Petal

First Look: Cloak & Petal

First Look: Cloak & Petal

First Look: Cloak & Petal

First Look: Cloak & Petal

First Look: Cloak & Petal

First Look: Cloak & Petal

First Look: Cloak & Petal

First Look: Cloak & Petal

First Look: Cloak & Petal

First Look: Cloak & Petal

First Look: Cloak & Petal

First Look: Cloak & Petal

First Look: Cloak & Petal

First Look: Cloak & Petal

First Look: Cloak & Petal

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