In Japan, we love adding raw egg to hot soba noodles. Would you try this, or is it a pass for you?

by dbeeautyx

42 Comments

  1. dbeeautyx

    This is Tsukimi Soba (Moon-viewing Soba). In Japan, we eat fresh raw eggs safely by mixing them into hot soup or coating the noodles. It makes the broth so creamy and delicious!

  2. _rotary_pilot

    I’m not a fan. Tsukimi ‘whatever’ was never a thing for me growing up in Japan. We would scramble a raw egg for sukiyaki, but I think it was more of a Shikoku / Kansai practice?

  3. Egg production in Japan has a whole different system than most places providing safety so you can eat raw eggs. The US doesn’t.

  4. Niftydog1163

    Pass. I am well aware of how Japan treats its eggs however, I have issues with raw eggs as straight eating. Scrambled to death is the ONLY way I enjoy eggs.

  5. Klutzy_Celebration80

    Just had a raw yolk in Sukiyaki in Japan. Was great!

  6. HappyGoLucky244

    Pass for me, but only because it’s a texture thing.

  7. Why is this post and the answers so AI? Stop this.

  8. No_Culture_867

    I grew up with a mother who was terrified of salmonella. Our eggs were practically burnt every time. I’ve tried so many times to do raw eggs, hell even eggs that aren’t cooked to death, but it gets me every time.

    I’ll just enjoy my charcoal and stare wistfully at the other side of the fence.

  9. I ate tsukimi soba on multiple occasions in Japan. Delicious!

  10. TheOneMary

    I love raw egg in rice, so why not? 😀 (I live in a country where fresh raw egg is safe)

  11. Espresso_Bunny

    If you have the chance to add an egg to it, add the egg.

  12. Sylvonara

    I ordered some udon and didn’t realize it would come with raw egg. I was very nervous but I really love udon so I gobbled it up lol

  13. Expensive-View-8586

    What don’t you add raw egg to in Japan? 

  14. Japanese add a raw egg to all kinds of things. I love it.

  15. Unique_Wheel_2834

    Pass and eating Natto and raw chicken. Most everything else in Japan all good including Horse sashimi

  16. 1000% would try this. Didn’t give myself the chance to try soba during my visit. Next time!

  17. NativeCry808

    I don’t know. If it was made in my country definitely no. But I heard in Japan eggs have better quality. And also if it’s in hot bowl it becomes a little bit cooked, right? And I would mix it in. The dish looks delicious 😊

  18. solesoulshard

    So I was hesitant at first—salmonella and all—but when I had a chance to try it with my son’s noodles (which were served hot enough that the egg yolk cooked just fine and jammy over the noodles, I liked it.

  19. yankiigurl

    In all 9 years of being in Japan I never seen raw egg in soba. I’m sure I must have sent tsukimi soba on a menu though 🤔 so weird as soba is my favorite noodle. Also love raw eggs. Raw yolk makes a great dipping sauce for so many things. Never ate raw eggs in the US though, can’t trust it. Lol

  20. Eliana-Selzer

    I add them all the time. I like them. I like them on top of my natto. I think I have acquired a taste for anything slimy. Okra even sounds good to me. I wish that US had better rules for eggs.

  21. ShieldPilot

    A soft, but warm/hot yolk is a wonderful thing. Raw white is way, way too much like snot for me though.

  22. OudSmoothie

    Pass for me. I prefer my eggs reasonably cooked. 🎃

  23. ozziewithanie

    Would absolutely eat. I also eat raw eggs in the US, have for years, usually in the form of tamago kake gohan.

  24. lemeneurdeloups

    Fresh nice Japanese eggs are delicious raw in a variety of dishes. I have raw egg like this all the time, at least once a week. It makes a savory sauce.

  25. Technical_Anteater45

    I’d be too upset at having my crispy tempura rendered wet limp and soggy by being dunked in the broth.

  26. Former_Recording_998

    Pass. I like my eggs cooked hard and scrambled

  27. Zwordsman

    In Japan I have, in my country I do not-Unless I go out of my way to buy the properly treated types for semi-raw consumption. In Japan I was less worried about it, given their industry is partly set towards that style of consumption and all.

    In Japan (And here) If I make it, I tend to put some soup base in the btottom, toss the egg on it, then put the rest on it. So it sort of soft sets, but soft sets not stuck to the bottom

  28. RICHUNCLEPENNYBAGS

    Seems fine. I don’t like getting oyakodon outside Japan because they always overcook the eggs and ruin it.

  29. Witch_of_the_Cats

    11/10 would try. That looks just amazing. I miss living close to a good Japanese restaurant.

  30. i add raw eggs to everything, even in the US! the probability of having an egg contaminated with salmonella is like 1 in 20,000. and i like those odds!

  31. GeneralZojirushi

    I’m a huge fan of raw yolk. But I absolutely can’t stand raw egg white.

    In the US, if you have a sous vide machine or instant pot with sous vide mode, you can pasteurize your own grocery eggs and they will remain raw in texture.