Famed for its clam-and-truffle shio soba, this Shinjuku Gyoen shop held a Michelin one star in 2022-2023 and currently carries a Michelin Bib Gourmand; it runs a numbered-ticket system, so arrive early.
★ Hakata Junjo Ramen — rich tonkotsu broth with ultra-thin noodles
A well-known Fukuoka tonkotsu chain that grew from Tenjin yatai (street stalls), serving rich pork-bone broth with ultra-thin noodles and tender chashu, with convenient branches inside the Hakata Station complex. It is not suitable for any restricted diet — the broth and toppings are pork throughout — and the official site is Japanese-only, so do not assume an English menu.
★ Creamy soy-milk ramen with rice-flour noodles and gluten-free soy sauce
A vegan and gluten-free ramen specialist in Gion run by patissier Yukiko Uno, using rice-flour-and-kelp noodles and gluten-free soy sauce in a soy-milk broth — one of Kyoto's most reliably gluten-free, fish-dashi-free ramen options. The strongest 'dedicated kitchen' claims come from third-party listings rather than the venue itself, so celiac diners should confirm cross-contamination protocol directly with staff.
★ Spicy shoyu chicken ramen with halal-verified ingredients
A halal chicken-ramen counter near Karasuma/Shijo from the Ayam-Ya group, third-party halal-certified (by the Malaysia Halal Corporation), fully pork- and alcohol-free with separate halal storage and tableware, an English menu and a prayer room. It is effectively a lunch-only shop and closes midweek, so check hours before visiting.
★ Creamy soy-milk ramen with a kombu-and-soy broth (no fish dashi)
A small fully-vegan soy-milk ramen shop in quiet Shimogamo, vegan since 2018, with a creamy kombu-and-soy-milk broth and no fish dashi at all — one of the cleanest strict-vegan ramen options in Kyoto. It also avoids the Buddhist five pungent spices (onion and garlic). The noodles contain wheat, so it is vegan but not gluten-free; closed midweek, so check days before visiting.
★ Chilled seiro soba with a robust, strongly seasoned Edo dipping broth
A buckwheat institution founded in 1880 and regarded as the head house of Edo's 'Yabu' soba lineage, known for fragrant chilled seiro and a strongly seasoned dipping broth. The current wooden building reopened in 2014 on the same Awajicho site after a fire.
★ Vegan tempura soba and zaru soba with a plant-based broth
A small standing-style soba shop in Shimokitazawa (opened 2024) serving ni-hachi soba with a fully plant-based kombu broth and toppings, so there is no bonito or fish dashi. The noodles are ni-hachi (80% buckwheat, 20% wheat), so it is vegan but not gluten-free; it is daytime-only and closed early in the week, so check hours before visiting.
A long-running Turkish kebab house near Shinjuku Gyoen serving grills, doner and mezze made with halal meat. It is Muslim-friendly / halal-meat rather than third-party certified, and alcohol is served on the premises, so it suits Muslim diners who are comfortable with that distinction.
★ All-you-can-eat premium sushi, snow crab and halal-certified A5 wagyu
A sushi izakaya offering a dedicated halal-CERTIFIED course (100% halal ingredients with separate utensils and storage). Because the general venue also serves alcohol, it is best treated as Muslim-friendly with a certified halal course — request the halal course when booking.
A perpetually-queued Tabelog Top-100 udon shop near Shinjuku where every bowl of springy noodles is cut and boiled to order — try the cult carbonara udon.
This flagship near Shinjuku-sanchome crowns a 100% halal-certified bowl with slices of seared A5 wagyu roast beef — pork- and alcohol-free, prayer space on hand.
★ Chicken paitan ramen — creamy broth from halal chicken simmered over 6 hours
A no-pork, no-alcohol ramen counter east of Shinjuku Gyoen where Japan Islamic Trust-certified halal chicken is coaxed into a tonkotsu-rich paitan that converts sceptics.
The Shinjuku birthplace of the cloud-soft 'Heavenly Vegan Pancakes' that draw queues from vegans and non-vegans alike, with gluten-free options on the same menu.