logo
It's the Ramen Burger's World

It's the Ramen Burger's World

Eatera day ago
is a senior reporter at Eater.com, covering restaurant trends, home cooking advice, and all the food you can't escape on your TikTok FYP. Previously, she worked for Bon Appétit and VICE's Munchies.
Keizo Shimamoto's ramen burger made the news before he sold a single one. In 2013, Shimamoto had become fixated on burgers with fried pucks of ramen for buns, which he encountered while studying ramen in Tokyo. After tinkering with the dish, he announced on his popular ramen review site Go Ramen (which he styles Go Ramen!) that he'd briefly bring it to Smorgasburg, New York's then two-year-old food festival. It blew up online, earning Shimamoto an invite to appear on Good Morning America. By the time he made it to Smorgasburg later that day, the ramen burger was primed to become an icon.
'In my mind, I was just going to do this one-time event — that's it,' he says.
He was wrong. Even though Shimamoto didn't have the right grills or the proper setup, and it was raining that first day, the burger was a hit. It was a sight to behold with layers of scallions and arugula, and its secret shoyu glaze, packed between Sun Noodle ramen. Over 200 people lined up for just 150 burgers.
The next time he showed up at Smorgasburg, he sold 360 burgers in three hours, leading to a residency for the whole summer. From there, it just kept going. In 2014, Shimamoto leveraged the burger's success into a New York City ramen shop, Ramen Co. By 2015, he was selling 1,200 to 1,500 burgers at each Smorgasburg appearance. In 2016 — the same year Red Robin launched its own rendition on the burger — Shimamoto opened Ramen Shack, where he served the ramen burger and much more.
'I wasn't creating it to have it go viral. The ramen burger is kind of a mash up of me.'
'I wasn't creating it to have it go viral,' Shimamoto says. He just wanted to put his own spin on a concept he enjoyed. The ramen burgers he ate in Japan were usually made with pork, but having grown up eating In-N-Out in Los Angeles, Shimamoto saw burgers as synonymous with beef. As a Japanese American, he adds, 'The ramen burger is kind of a mash up of me.' The first time he nailed the sauce, he recalls, he jumped with joy in his living room.
When the ramen burger hit Smorgasburg that first rainy Saturday, he couldn't have predicted the lines, let alone the rise of social media or the very idea of viral hype food. Instagram was still mostly a venue for collating and sharing experiences rather than the marketing and promotion tool it is today. The dining public was somewhat easier to entice. In that context, the ramen burger's impact was surprising.
It brought about 'this sheeple effect,' says Smorgasburg co-founder Eric Demby. 'Trying it and obtaining it [became] the goal.'
Following the KFC Double Down (launched in 2010), internet sensations like the Turbaconducken, and the rise of the Cronut (released in May 2013), the food world was on the cusp of a major overhaul. Right when social media was starting to turn dining experiences into social currency, the ramen burger's novelty created a fervor.
Whether he planned to or not, Shimamoto helped usher in a pessimistic new age of food, one in which producers developed formulas to guarantee social media success. The ramen burger became the poster child for a flood of mashups that had gone and would continue to go mainstream: the sushi burrito, the sushi pizza, the sushi burger, the spaghetti doughnut, the scallion pancake burrito, the Yorkshire burrito, birria ramen, birria pizza, and so on. Judging by what makes it to my feed today, these techniques still work. We might see fewer ramen burgers now, but we're still living in the ramen burger's world.
Before 2013, the rising stars at Smorgasburg were operations like Salvatore Bklyn ricotta, Mast Brothers chocolate, and Mighty Quinn's barbecue. 'A lot of vendors that came through were taking off,' Demby says.
The festival was about vendors getting creative with food that you couldn't get anywhere else. In that sense, the ramen burger fit right in. Prior to its appearance, Smorgasburg didn't have a burger vendor, Demby recalls; burgers were too commonplace. 'And then the ramen burger came along and we were like, There's our burger,' Demby says. 'It's not a burger burger.'
But Shimamoto's work also represented a break. Most other vendors traded in the sincere-seeming foods of the artisanal, hipster moment. This was the era of 'farm-to-table' dining and back-to-the-land authenticity, which, at times, could be precious to the point of parody. 'There was this focus on how you made it,' Demby says. While Shimamoto invested the same sort of time and attention into his product, the ramen burger's quality and flavor were almost beside the point for many consumers.
Mike Chau, one of the city's original food Instagrammers, sees the ramen burger as a turning point; the burger's success led to an 'escalation' of people not only waiting in lines but also 'getting food for the sake of posting about it,' he says. Instagram, which had launched in 2010 and hit its first 100 million users in 2013, was beginning a period of rapid growth. (Chau distinctly remembers the ramen burger's first weekend, but with his wife days just away from giving birth, 'the line was so long that we just gave up,' he says. If you live in NYC, you probably recognize that kid: Chau runs the popular account @foodbabyny.)
With its ability to draw customers primarily interested in posting online, the ramen burger quickly began to outshine its neighbors. 'A lot of people came to Smorgasburg for the ramen burger and then they discovered the rest of Smorgasburg,' Demby says. Other vendors took notice. It became obvious that it was crucial to stand out from the competition, both in person and online. 'People all started to look for their shot to make something like [the ramen burger],' Chau says. A few years later, the raindrop cake debuted at the festival.
The ramen burger changed Smorgasburg — and Smorgasburg changed food culture. As eating increasingly became an activity and an aesthetic promoted through social media, people began to chase culinary spectacle over substance outside of food festivals. Virality became a new way of engaging with food in nearly all contexts. Ruby Tandoh writes in her forthcoming book All Consuming that the rise of Instagram 'allowed you to bypass thinking altogether and just look.'
The ramen burger's formula for a viral food still holds true. Writer and pastry chef Tanya Bush recently theorized in i-D that the first step toward virality is manipulation (you give a familiar food a tantalizing new appearance) and the second hybridization (you mash it up with another food that people already know). Nail those two steps, as the ramen burger did, and you increase the likelihood of a dish that people will make an effort to seek out.
It may be cynical to paint purveyors as shrewd manipulators of the attention economy and diners as disloyal clout-chasers. But it's the game.
No one is really fooled anymore. Viral food trends don't seem as organic now, according to Allyson Reedy, author of The Phone Eats First Cookbook, a compilation of 'social media's best recipes' published earlier this year. Unlike 2013, when foods like the ramen burger could make the news basically unintentionally, viral food is now more clearly 'a manipulation,' Reedy says. 'It's more strategic and intentional.'
Perhaps that's why the ramen burger became so polarizing. Before the dish was even a year old, it was already drawing ire along with imitators. By 2025, Taste Atlas, the publication whose food rankings are calibrated for social media engagement, put the ramen burger at No. 7 on its list of the 'worst rated foods in the world,' right between jellied eels and blood pancakes. It still routinely makes the rounds on Reddit's r/stupidfood forum. Some consumers decided the ramen burger was the moment internet food culture jumped the shark (even while its contemporary, the Cronut, skated by on Western esteem for French pastry culture).
Shimamoto himself has been let down by social media-famous food. In the early days of Instagram, 'even if [food] was [made] for the 'gram, people were still putting their heart into the flavors,' he says. Now, 'it's really hard to judge' what he sees on social media, Shimamoto says.
'If you can get remembered for something, you'll have customers for a long time.'
Shimamoto's cooking was always about more than virality. While the novelty of the ramen burger was the bun made of noodles, the 'heart and soul' was its shoyu glaze, he explains. 'That juice from the meat and the sauce, and then that texture from the noodles, is really what makes it.' While the burger might have gotten people in the door at Shimamoto's restaurants, he hoped to flex his broader culinary skills on bowls of ramen too — something on which he was an expert, as his blog proved. In Serious Eats, Sho Spaeth once described Ramen Shack as 'the most exciting place to eat ramen in the United States,' though the ramen burger's success 'always risked occluding [Shimamoto's] true skill as a ramen-making savant with seemingly perfect taste-memory.'
In 2019, Shimamoto closed the New York City location of Ramen Shack. In 2022, he closed the Ramen Shack location in Orange County, California, as well, citing staffing changes and personal health issues. While he says that he never grew to resent the ramen burger, the business around it could be 'overwhelming at times, with everyone trying to get a piece of the pie.'
Smorgasburg's approach to choosing vendors has also crystallized over the past decade-plus. Food that works at Smorgasburg has to be good, Demby says, but it also has what he calls a 'moment of theater.' 'You've got to get known for something,' he says. 'If you can get remembered for something, you'll have customers for a long time.'
The ramen burger has much more competition now, but interest in it has remained relatively steady since 2017 (though vastly decreased from its 2013 to 2016 heyday). 'I didn't close my shops because I thought that the ramen burger was no longer sellable,' Shimamoto says. Whenever he posts the ramen burger on Instagram now, commenters tend to reminisce about the good old days.
And whenever his kids or friends request one, he'll make the ramen burger — just on a smaller scale now. 'To this day, it's still great,' he says.
Sign up for Eater's newsletter
The freshest news from the food world every day Email (required)
Sign Up
By submitting your email, you agree to our Terms and Privacy Notice . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Who Has Brittany Snow Dated?
Who Has Brittany Snow Dated?

Cosmopolitan

time27 minutes ago

  • Cosmopolitan

Who Has Brittany Snow Dated?

If you watched The Hunting Wives on Netflix in one sitting (guilty), then you might be wondering whether Brittany Snow's love life is as complicated IRL as it is on screen. The answer? Very much yes. In fact, the Pitch Perfect alum's marriage (and subsequent divorce) was a big part of Selling the OC season I'm getting a bit ahead of myself. Want to know everyone Brittany has romanced in the past (as well as what happened with her marriage to Tyler Stanaland)? Let's get into it. Brittany's first major relationship in the spotlight was with musician Michael Johnson, who she dated for just about three years before calling it quits in 2007. 'Brittany really cares about him but can't focus on a relationship now,' a source told In Touch at the time. The two then gave their relationship another shot in 2012 but ended up splitting a few months later. (Fun fact: Michael later went on to briefly date Brittany's Pitch Perfect costar Anna Camp.) Little is known about Brittany's relationship with actor Josh Henderson, but it's widely reported that the two ~briefly dated~ between 2007 and 2008 (as evidenced by the above photo). After meeting on the set of the indie film Walk, Brittany and Ryan Rottman dated for about two years before breaking up in 2010. 'They just grew apart,' an insider later told Just Jared. 'They're still great friends but are just focused on their careers right now.' Dating rumors started circulating about Brittany and musician William Tell after they were spotted holding hands at Coachella. However! By early 2012, William was dating Lauren Conrad, to whom he's now married. Brittany dated Teen Wolf alum Tyler Hoechlin for three years, though the two kept their romance pretty low-key. As she told Cosmo back in 2015, 'We like to keep our moments to ourselves, which is why we don't do much social media. We're not hiding anything. We're not not wanting people to know.' By the end of 2015, the relationship had fizzled out. In late 2015, Brittany raised eyebrows when she was seen at Madison Square Garden attending a Knicks game with filmmaker Andrew Jenks. At the time, a source told E! News that the two were 'casually' dating, but little else was heard about the maybe-romance. Brittany began dating her future husband—professional surfer turned real estate broker Tyler Stanaland—in 2018 after he slid into her Instagram DMs. 'We had a bunch of friends in common, and he actually reached out to me on Instagram with a really lame pickup line,' she told People when asked how they met. By February 2019, the pair was engaged, and they married a year later in March 2020. But then, in September 2022—less than a month after the release of Tyler's Netflix reality series Selling the OC—the couple announced their decision to separate. The reason? Tyler's Selling the OC costar Alex Hall, with whom he developed a very flirty relationship in season one. After the divorce was finalized, Brittany spilled all the breakup tea during a tell-all interview on Call Her Daddy. 'I was not aware of a lot of things, and I'll say that,' she told host Alex Cooper. 'So, I will say, what people think happened, happened.' Well then! Most recently, Brittany sparked romance rumors with photographer Hunter Moreno after they were papped kissing in New York City in October 2024. It's unclear whether they're still dating, but she did give him photo cred on this July 2025 IG post, which feels promising!

This ‘Top Gun' star visited S.F. for its Grateful Dead 60th anniversary celebration
This ‘Top Gun' star visited S.F. for its Grateful Dead 60th anniversary celebration

San Francisco Chronicle​

time28 minutes ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

This ‘Top Gun' star visited S.F. for its Grateful Dead 60th anniversary celebration

Actor Miles Teller and television personality Andy Cohen were among the tens of thousands of Deadheads flowing through Golden Gate Park last weekend to celebrate the lasting legacy of the Grateful Dead. The two were photographed together during one of Dead & Company's sold-out shows at the Polo Field, posing with black sunglasses against the backdrop of the event's packed crowd. Cohen, host of Bravo's late-night talk show 'Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen,' wore a yellow and grey tie dye hoodie, while the ' Top Gun: Maverick ' star had on a white T-shirt and denim jacket. The image was shared by internet personality Maurice Aouad on Tuesday, Aug. 5, as part of a carousel of film photos that he took over the three-day outdoor event, which kicked off Friday, Aug. 1, with bluegrass musician Billy Strings as the opening act. Cohen reposted the image to his Instagram story later that day. Another photo of Cohen and Teller at Golden Gate Park, shared to Instagram by the New York Post's Page Six on Monday, Aug. 4, shows the two taking a selfie amid the crowd, with the stage behind them. The caption notes that the image came from Cohen's Instagram account, but his post seems to have expired since then. It is unclear if they attended all three of Dead & Company's San Francisco concerts, but the two photos appear to have been taken on the same day. Both Teller and Cohen have never been subtle about their Deadheads status. Cohen even has a Highlight saved to his Instagram profile titled 'Grateful Stuff,' filled with archived story posts of his experiences at Dead & Company concerts. Teller previously revealed that fans sent him Grateful Dead T-shirts after he and his wife, Keleigh Sperry Teller, lost their Los Angeles home to the Palisades fire at the start of the year. He also recounted a "spiritual experience' that he had while watching Grateful Dead founding member Bob Weir perform during college. 'From then on, that was it,' Teller told NME Magazine. 'I was sold.' The historic weekend celebrated the legacy of the Bay Area jam band and its members, old and new. Festivities kicked off Thursday, July 31, with the Heart of Town concert series. The three-night event was organized by Grahame Lesh, son of late Grateful Dead bassist Phil Lesh, and featured appearances by Dallas musician Stephen Stills, Los Angeles folk rock group Dawes and Melvin Seals, longtime member of the Jerry Garcia Band . A number of free celebrations took place in tandem, from the open-air, city-sanctioned Shakedown Street market to the Jerry Garcia Street naming event and Dead drummer Mickey Hart's ' Art at the Edge of Magic ' exhibition at Haight Street Art Center.

NYC's hilarious ‘de-influencer' is the hero TikTok needs — and he's beating his phony foes at their own game
NYC's hilarious ‘de-influencer' is the hero TikTok needs — and he's beating his phony foes at their own game

New York Post

time28 minutes ago

  • New York Post

NYC's hilarious ‘de-influencer' is the hero TikTok needs — and he's beating his phony foes at their own game

NYC's suffering from serious influence-a — and one man's hilarious TikTok videos could be the cure. After a divisive decade that saw the city fall under the spell of obnoxious influencers, an anonymous social media account administrator for a local, family-owned popcorn company has become the hero Gotham needs — delighting viewers with viral clips mocking the tiresome trend of crummy content creation. From faux-foodies to freebie-obsessed fashionistas, nobody's safe from the self-described 'de-influencer' in charge of the Daadi Snacks account, where the mystery man racks up scores of views on sarcastic send-ups of social media's worst offenders — all delivered in a dead-on rendition of the nasally, uptalky, vocally fried 'influencer voice' that's become the noxious norm. Typical methods clearly aren't for this unnamed marketing man turned app agitator — he's too busy snapping up new fans with satirical reactions aimed squarely at the hordes of entitled interlopers running amok on Big Apple streets. 'I'm literally shaking. They sent me an $80,000 car instead of a $120,000 car. I guess they do say God gives his toughest battles to his strongest soldiers,' the popular pot-stirrer joked in his most successful video aimed at a typically tough-to-take over-sharer, with nearly 9 million views to date. Not only are the punny pushbacks from a formerly-unknown 'corn popper making people laugh, they're also helping him beat actual influencers at their own game. Since achieving newfound notoriety, the small company, which now has 300K followers on TikTok and another 150K on Instagram, has struggled to keep product in stock. Daadi Snacks offers vegan, all-natural popcorn — characterized by South Asian-inspired flavors like Sweet Chai and Spicy Masala, according to the brand. The Daadi Snacks-repping de-influencer explained that the family company was inspired by his grandmother's recipes. Instagram/daadisnacks The instigator claimed in a recent post that he's not in it for the content creation money, like most people posting to TikTok at this level — 'I post to speak my mind and help my family's snack biz,' he explained last May. For his trouble, the de-influencer says that he's received multiple cease and desist letters and several lawsuit threats from irate creators — apparently irked by his increasing popularity. And he's missing out on even more followers due to the nature of his content, he said. Though he takes down tacky TikTokkers from all over, his NYC-based videos are scoring well among fed-up local viewers. TikTok/@daadisnacks 'People unfollow me because they say I'm too mean to influencers, but I would argue I need to be meaner,' he mused in one video. Plenty appear to agree, with a recent Reddit thread heaping praise on the mystery man. 'I can imagine … a lot of toxic influencers choking on their matcha lattes searching their Balenciaga bags to reply on their smart phones adorned with cheap cubic zirconia crystals,' a poster snarked. ''Influencers are boring and unoriginal and can get bent,' another chimed in. The Post has reached out to Daadi Snacks for comment.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store