A premium ramen restaurant committed to quality, built on a Farm to Bowl concept. This is the Los Angeles flagship of the award-winning Mensho Group, recognized both in Japan and internationally. MENSHO TOKYO is located only in San Francisco and Culver City. Contact: [email protected]
Hours
| Saturday | 12–2 PM, 4–10 PM |
| Sunday | 12–2 PM, 4–9 PM |
| Monday | Closed |
| Tuesday | 12–2 PM, 5–9 PM |
| Wednesday | 12–2 PM, 5–9 PM |
| Thursday | 12–2 PM, 5–9 PM |
| Friday | 12–2 PM, 5–10 PM |
Menu Photos
Related Web Results
mensho
Mensho Tokyo – Review – Culver City – Los Angeles – The Infatuation
One of Tokyo’s Best Ramen Spots Is Opening in Culver City – Eater LA
Reviews
We also tried the Chashu Trio Plate. The duck and chicken were light, clean, and enjoyable, but the A5 wagyu was sliced so thin that all you could taste was fat – no flavor. At $17 for seven very thin slices, that part felt a bit overpriced compared to the rest of the meal.
The restaurant itself is nice and thoughtfully laid out, with a mix of bar seating, individual tables, and a community table (personally not my favorite, but some people may enjoy it). Service was attentive and relaxed – we ended up sitting for 30–40 minutes after finishing our food and never felt rushed, which I really appreciated.
Overall, great ramen, comfortable space, and friendly service. I’d definitely come back, though I’d probably skip the wagyu next time and focus on the ramen instead.
Corn wings (3/5): Decent, but nothing particularly new or memorable. Not bad, just average.
Enoki chips (4/5): Surprisingly good. You’d barely guess it’s mushroom, super crispy and addictive.
Overall, the garlic broth completely stole the show. Definitely an underrated spot, especially if you’re vegetarian/ Vegan or looking for great Ramen spot.
That being said, I have a message for management: hire more severs. There was only one guy responsible for the entire restaurant. Definitely need at least one more person in there to help out. Amazing ramen though!
Rather unassuming ramen shop exterior along a little strip mall, but wow, I was surprised by the presentation of the dishes and the flavor! My family visitors were suitably impressed.
I really liked the enoki chips, and the Old School Toripaitan.
Located in downtown Culver City, walkable to other shops and dessert spots. We saw a commercial filming while there.
Toripaitan is like tonkotsu but made with chicken bones instead of pork bones. Despite generally preferring chicken over pork, I find that the chicken flavor is a little overpoweringly strong — but that might just be my general indifference to the taste of meat.
The soup wasn’t hot enough on the top so it felt heavy, contrary to a lot of other reviews who felt this was light. It definitely tasted better when it was hot at the bottom (which was probably hotter from the noodles). I was expecting the noodles to be more chewy given their “mochi” name, but they weren’t particularly memorable. I was also a little taken aback by the spinach, which conflicted a little with the soup.
I liked how the different types of chashu were distinctive in taste and texture, reminiscent of the original kind of meat they came from. Chicken was lighter in color and tasted … chicken-y, for lack of a better term; duck was a little darker and slightly drier; pork was fattier and the most traditional. I also liked the mushrooms in the soup, which replaced the typical bamboo shoots.
The wagyu nigiri was fantastic, though. I’d characterize it as halfway between toro and salmon in terms of butteriness.
Overall, the price point was quite high and the food was quite heavy, so I’m not sure I’ll be back.
Unfortunately, this location is also packed and requires patience to get seated. Finding parking in the garage is also challenging as it is in a very popular district called Culver Steps right next to Amazon Studios which used to be the historic MGM, RKO and Cecil B. Demille studio lot. We almost left when we saw the line of about 16 people outside but decided to give it a try. I got very lucky someone was leaving just as I arrived, although I had to box out someone who was trying to steal the spot I was waiting for, in typical LA fashion. It took awhile to get from the garage and walk up to Mensho. The line looked hopeless at first with six parties ahead of us. But then a lot of people left around 8pm, so we were seated inside at the bar counter in about 30 minutes.
I wanted to try the Kani Miso or Spiced Lamb but my throat was sore from working at a convention all day so I went with the Mensho Signature ramen. We also ordered fried Hinoki mushrooms, A5 Wagyu Nigiri with Hokkaido Uni and Kani (shredded crab). The nigiri was tender, perfectly seared and not overly seasoned, with some thinly sliced gari and a dab of wasabi.
The Signature ramen is Chef Shono’s own unique recipe that features a thick chicken broth rather than the much more common pork tonkotsu at US ramen restaurants. From there, you’ve got Mochi noodles, fermented pork chashu, duck chashu, smoked custard-like Ajitama (marinated egg), fried Gobo chips, green onion. What really sets Mensho apart from many ramen shops in the US is the attention to detail down to the visual presentation within the bowl. You can really taste the extra preparation that goes into the ingredients such as the smoked and marinated eggs and chashu. There’s also a hint of truffle and mushroom flavor. The chicken broth is really thick and gravy-like. If I had one bone to pick, I wish the broth had been served a bit hotter than it was.
Service was difficult to obtain at the counter, since we had our backs turned and the servers were rushing to get to the many people seated at tables and on the heated patio. There are definitely a lot more seats at this larger location, similar to the Oakland shop. I really enjoyed the ramen and Wagyu nigiri and felt a lot more comfortable in the safer area of the Culver Steps. I’d definitely return when I’m back in LA.