
Delicious! I’m actually more fond of ramen than burgers. I don’t think hamburgers are delicious just because of some American-style quirk. Well, for ramen, I can get serious for the first time. This time, I plan to make it to the end without giving up halfway. So, I entrusted the theme of “everyday is humanity” to that ramen and set out, referring to an essay by a middle school student from Shinjin School. I thought the same thing. It’s not a problem at all. A shop that simply makes ramen doesn’t have any creativity, and Ryuseiken needs to be redone. I think it’s a wonderful story. But I believe the method is just a story. In the society of Japanese Buddhism, the philosophy of everyday is humanity continues to live within Japan’s monastic system. It also strengthens my resolve. Hmm… I do have things I want to ask, but… creating existing shops in a year is only possible with inexpensive instant ramen. It is said that shops face great difficulties in incorporating new ideas. Oh wait, I’m talking about myself. Ramen has a mysterious power; once you’re captivated, it’s hard to escape. You feel the same, don’t you!? Even if it seems trivial, Japan is wonderful. For the sake of a good heart in the vast world, the courage of the true essence draws out the power to engage in diligent work. I want to have a strong will to make my next shop something obvious to everyone.
If they rehire you, then that’s okay, isn’t it?
If the target is a bad ramen shop, then it’s not wrongdoing but rather justice.
>>2
A beautiful widow and a brat in a baseball cap?
It’s completely like Juzo Itami’s “Tampopo,” you know?
It’s quite reasonable, you know.
It’s a common business practice to have to take down competitors.
There were rumors that the quality declined after they secured that area.
>>4
It’s the same with family lines; once you take the hegemony, customers will come even if you lower the cost rate thereafter.
Famous restaurants are only great for the first few years.
>>6
Are people really still engaging in garbage behavior even today?
>>7
It’s not a garbage act; it’s the basics of business.
If you succeed in an oligopoly, you have to lower costs, otherwise there won’t be any other profit sources, right?
>>8
It’s said that merchants have been seen as base since ancient times…
>>11
It looks like they would reply alone.
>>8
It seems you have never worked.
>>8
The basics of business! But even if you show off here like that…
>>6
It seems like they’re spreading slander against chain stores, calling it capital-related.
>>6
Chikarameshi wasn’t like that…
Finally, I’m looking forward to working with you! I talk so much that it feels like we’re almost getting closer, and it’s the right thing to say.
There may be an issue with the way it’s said, but I’m only stating what’s reasonable, and isn’t it impossible to position this as a villain even back then?
>>10
It’s not like it’s written that badly, after all.
Famous episode
I thought the guy in the fifth panel on page 2 looked familiar, but could this be a story about the Ramen Three Musketeers?
Is this the person who will be hunted down by the Three Musketeers?
(I wonder if the Three Musketeers were really helpful.)
I wonder which volume this story is from.
I recently read about 40 volumes at a manga cafe, but I have no memory of it.
>>16
It’s written!!
>>18
That’s true.
I was only looking at the page on the right, how embarrassing.
Well, considering it’s a chain store, they haven’t really obstructed the supply by pressuring wholesalers or pushed anyone onto the tracks, so they were relatively soft opponents.
>>17
Are they anti-social?
To have them re-do it under our umbrella.
Is it okay to reopen the original store independently after starting over?
If there’s a store with a great punchline, I won’t hold back! That’s why I’m thorough.
It’s amazing that Katsuya and others have been consistently delicious, so they probably took over the dominance.
I don’t like a president who loses their temper in front of customers and berates the staff.
>>24
But they will refund everything and give you a free meal coupon for your next visit.
>>24
I have been to a store like that.
>>24
I went into a relatively nearby store when the fried rice was cheap (there were a fair number of customers), but I haven’t gone back since…
I really hate it, Nameless-chan’s vibe is the worst…
The Three Musketeers were no help at all…
It’s laughable how the ramen three musketeers are totally useless.
Is this the episode of the Ramen Three Musketeers?
The Three Musketeers weren’t really coordinating well, you know…
I have a memory that there was a slight difference in treatment among the three musketeers.
It seems that the ingredient experts were more subtle compared to the noodles and broth.
>>32
The importance of ramen makes it unreasonable to equate the toppings with the broth and noodles at the same level…
If you don’t want to lose customers, you have to make delicious ramen…
If there are no toppings, it would just be plain noodles!
I might be mistaken, but weren’t the Three Musketeers supposed to be friends yet still have conflicts?
>>36
There was a dispute.
Moreover, even though there are experts on the ingredients, not a single mention was made of them.
>>38
Aren’t you completely out of manga talent?
Isn’t it possible to bow to this person and rebuild the store?
It looks really reasonable…
>>39
In fact, it’s not that they are portrayed as villains; rather, it’s because they hold a position as a formidable opponent equipped with both conviction and strength.
>>45
There seems to be someone who misinterprets it as being around Kaname.
If you make delicious ramen properly, I will honestly admit it, so it’s not like I’m being described as a bad person.
If you’re coming to compete based on taste, then if it’s bad, you can’t argue with that.
You haven’t seen the Three Musketeers being helpful, have you?
The noodles were useful and stood out.
The one with the noodles should be more known for their creepy behavior.
>>46
Squeak squeak squeak squeak…
>>46
Squeak squeak squeak squeak…
There are plenty of new ramen shops opening up.
If existing chain stores lower their costs and become unappetizing, customers will just leave for other places.
Maintaining the unique flavors of each store is the key to operating a chain restaurant.
>>50
Even if new competitors come later, this president intends to face them head-on with quality.
Words are strong, but if we come under the umbrella, it will be mutually beneficial, and if it’s a store that’s struggling with few customers, it’s a welcome situation.
>>51
It’s a dream to think that there are benefits for the side that’s being bought out when a business is crushed.
>>58
If the ramen becomes delicious after coming under a banner, the customers will come back, right?
>>58
Rather than continuing to run a ramen shop that won’t sell across from a famous chain store, there is a better future ahead.
Why did the widow dislike being under their influence?
I think it was about wanting to keep the name of my husband’s store.
I think ramen enthusiasts have a refined palate and are often quite vocal, so they would quickly notice if the flavor drops noticeably.
>>54
Chain stores don’t deal with that kind of thing.
>>54
It’s already been said a lot, hasn’t it?
This is a story after the other competing stores in the area have disappeared.
Well, the filling can’t be helped.
If we don’t decide on the direction for the soup, then I can’t suggest going with this.
The love poverty escape plan is a clean fight that can be presented on TV.
It might be that we’ve seen too much of Sasazushi to think that the challenger to gourmet manga is an extravagant character…
I thought this person was more like a chef from battle cooking manga like “Ajikko.”
The Ramen Three Musketeers are useless guys who are stumped by the mystery of kansui.
>>68
I ended up not using the canned water after all.
There’s no need to act like the sphinx of the ramen world!
I feel like the toppings and noodles were helpful, but I have a memory of the soup being bad.
Even with predictive text… I think it’s strange that “virgin” follows everyone.
There is a lot of information about the unknown Ramen Three Musketeers coming out…
Almost entirely relying on Yamauka, the noodle specialist, regardless of the air ingredients.
I feel like the soup was somewhat helpful since it was just about improving the soy sauce marinade in the end.
It was a pretentious, unsellable soup, but…
While the ingredients person is used as a fall guy, they haven’t particularly failed compared to the soup person, who wandered off the principle that the noodles and soup must be made in a Japanese-Chinese style to instead create a Western-style soup, which became a source of confusion due to the ongoing issues with alkaline water.
Die already! Even with a free ticket, it’s a bit tough, right?
>>75
If Goro-chan were here, it wouldn’t be surprising to get an arm lock, but it’s a bit much.
Don’t scold loudly in front of the customer.
I thought the ramen shop I used to go to had closed down, but two months later it turned into a different ramen shop with almost the same interior.
It was clearly evident that the kitchen was understaffed, and it made me anxious to watch.
>>77
The basics of food and beverage businesses is to take over the existing space…
When quitting, it’s better to leave the equipment behind and aim for a takeover.
>>77
When I go to the newly opened store, Afro Tanaka’s…
(Are you really going to go with this flavor, Dad!?)
There are times when you feel like that, right…?
The Three Musketeers of Ramen lack basic knowledge…
Do the Three Musketeers not have their own store?
This person has strong words when reprimanding, but there are no comments clouded by the unique ideology of “Oishinbo,” which is good because it eliminates that unpleasantness.
>>82
First and foremost, it’s just a ramen shop run by someone who simply loves ramen.
By the way, there was a similar story in the Fukuoka edition of the Fighting Ramen.
Ultimately, even though I made him acknowledge defeat with ramen,
It’s not like the customers of this person’s shop are going to decrease or that it will go out of business.
It’s turning into a nice ending.
Dark passion! Was it this episode too?
At this time, the child of the ramen shop’s female owner, that little brat, was erased from existence in the episode that followed with the tantanmen.
The ambition is great, but it’s too much like a physical education teacher.
>ID:EE7mhA62
You! What do you think you’re doing showing your ID in a cheerful thread?
Die already!!
I apologize, but I will grant the anonymous users who came to the thread today the right to create a thread for free at a later date.
Please don’t be discouraged by this and continue to support us.
>>91
The president of Nanashi Seiken has arrived…
It’s impossible to have a monopoly in a ramen shop.
In “Oishinbo,” the character that accumulates stress isn’t like the one in the thread image.
(Wait, isn’t this guy just a piece of trash…? Is something wrong with my sense of ethics…?) That’s the type of person who ended up being a guest on the side of the allies.
Is this guy really that bad…?
I have the impression that the characters in Oishinbo’s trash aren’t really that much of a villain, yet they’re clearly doing some crazy things.
>>95
A pasta restaurant or something.
>>95
In Oishinbo, I feel like the only clear garbage among the allies was that macaroni guy.
No, seriously, I can’t think of anything else.
There was someone who almost went on a stabbing spree when it came to eel, but there’s some room for understanding their emotions…
>>100
Isn’t a random attacker a complete scum?
>>101
The store was taken over.
Eel or something like that.
Even when grilled with charcoal
Even if you grill it with gas
Together.
Since it was a crime (attempted) that could not be helped anymore…
He is a passionate man.
This person is not a character from Oishinbo but a character from a cooking manga that serves as an antagonist, so they are quite unconventional even as an Oishinbo character.
I would be happy if the bad ramen shop became a Ra-show.
Tommy is here, isn’t he?
I hardly see bad ramen shops recently, so they’ve been eliminated anyway.
>>104
But there still exists, in a certain place…
If someone like you says that, it can only mean that you are putting in a great deal of effort.
It seems that the author perceives characters like Tommy and the Kansai dialect towards the end as lovable, silly characters.
>>106
That guy is Hizawa’s buddy and has quite a bit of knowledge, so it’s still okay.
But Tommy is no good because his discomfort outweighs it.
The eel restaurant was so drunk during the day that they swung around their sign and brandished knives right in the middle of Ginza.
In short, they’re just reaching out to us saying, “How about becoming our franchise since we’ll provide recipes and ingredients to a store that isn’t particularly tasty?”
It feels like a character that could appear in Mister Ajikko.
>>110
There are quite a few cases where the opposing side has a just cause in “Aji-kko.”
Bento boxes and fried chicken.
Tommy is kind of like an enemy, but he’s on our side for now…
I don’t intend to go back and criticize, but based on today’s ethical standards, Tommy would be out about 20 times.
>>113
Mr. Yamaoka’s work attitude is game over too…
>>116
In the case of Mr. Yamaoka, he must be treated terribly even during work.
>>113
Is that enough?
Once you have a share, it’s only natural to lower the cost ratio; it’s something that happens in any business.
It sounds like something a villain who wouldn’t even be defended by Delicious Taste would say.
The story of Yamaoka unknowingly going to eat at a restaurant that keeps prices low by holding shares and ends up getting into a fight.
This is definitely an introduction I have read before.
>>118
I feel like there was an initial story about going to a famous Chinese restaurant with a long line, where the staff’s attitude was terrible and the quality of the food had dropped, so we left without eating.
>>118
This braised pork belly is a failure.
I can’t eat it.
>>118
Tommy said he would introduce a good restaurant, but I ate thinking that none of this is really delicious…
It seems like there could be a conversation where people say, “It wasn’t like this before we left the store.”
>>127
I think it existed, or rather.
>>118
I went through the trouble of standing in line, but the prep was sloppy, the hospitality was terrible, and the reputation is below expectations, so I’m leaving.
Then, the influential figure of the Overseas Chinese, Mr. Zhou, appeared and it felt like the situation could escalate to a point where ‘Li Benren’ could be killed, but in the end, it was understood that Mr. Yamaoka was correct, and they reconciled.
I’m sure it’s in volume one.
It seems that the Three Musketeers were teaching how to make each menu item, so they are active behind the scenes.
Well, to be honest, the taste has declined since the opening…
That’s quite common.
At first, we released a new original ramen once a month and went through trial and error, and the main ramen was also delicious.
Recently, I feel like I’ve stopped creating, and the flavor has also declined somewhat.
The amount has definitely decreased by about 10% to 20%.
In the past, once I switched to a chewing machine, it was unbearably tough, but recently it’s been somewhat unsatisfying… Damn it!!
>>122
It is due to the recent rise in prices, isn’t it…
I thought it was obvious that lowering the depreciation rate was something no one would do, but Seven was exactly like that.
It’s not a ramen shop, but…
In this manga, there are basically no characters that appear multiple times and also haven’t received an ethical three-strike.
Did Tommy have any highlight moments besides his own episode?
I remember getting upset by saying something like, “It’s because they’re eating such stinky and barbaric meat in front of the foreign coach they hired after losing to a foreign team that they have strong bodies; those guys are barbaric and abnormal!”
>>131
That’s just a way of making excuses after giving it your all…
I wonder how it relates to sportsmanship.
Macaroni Man is not in that dimension.
It’s amazing how Macaroni Man can only see a future where no one is happy after that.
I feel like about half of Tommy’s blunders were related to racism.
>>136
Fire him.
>>137
>>136
Wasn’t the racism that Tommy messed up about 3 or 4 times?
>>136
Tommy may have a moral superiority because he was part of the group that withdrew from Manchuria and might have become a leftover orphan born in China…
A new and emerging ramen shop crushes the bad-tasting ramen.
Mr. Yamaoka may have conflicts for the sake of the shop in front of him, but he does not deny this person himself.
In reality, areas like product development, improvement, and quality control are quite haphazardly funded.
The unusually high cost-cutting awareness is in the area of labor costs.
Macaroni Man’s wife loves him without knowing anything, and the shop is doing well.