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Tuesday, Dec 17, 2024

Ramen Ready

Ramen is one of Japan’s most basic meals, and in the United States it is widely known as a quick and cheap dish perfect for a college student between classes. A Burbank-based company, however, has enhanced the famed humble meal and created a chain that just opened its 50th restaurant.

Takahashi

How did it do that?
Jinya Ramen Bar’s founder and chief executive, Tomo Takahashi, said it was because the company strives to elevate ramen beyond just a fast, hot and inexpensive meal. For example, its broth is simmered for 20 hours, Takahashi said, speaking through an interpreter. The chain even imports its serving bowls from Japan “in order to make our ramen special,” Takahashi said. The red and black bowls match the restaurants’ colors.

Another component of that success is selecting locations carefully. Takahashi likes to be close to mixed-use developments of residential, office and retail so that his establishments it can attract workers for weekday lunches, shoppers who might happen by and residential neighbors who may turn in to regulars.

In fact, Jinya Ramen Bar recently opened its 50th location in Long Beach, at 2nd Street and Pacific Coast Highway, in just such a setting.

“It is in a mall that was developed recently and in the surrounding area there are restaurants, condos and offices,” Takahashi said.

Fifty locations

Takahashi’s company, Jinya Holdings Inc., owns six brands with locations across the country, from Hawaii to Washington, D.C., and all places in between.

The new restaurant, like many of the Jinya Ramen Bar locations, is franchised. Jinya was No. 22 on the Los Angeles Business Journal’s top franchisers list published in January. The list is ranked by the number of franchised units.

Franchisees pay $45,000 as the initial fee and generally invest between $1 million and $2 million, depending on the size of the restaurant, Takahashi said. The royalty taken by the company is 5% of sales, he added.

 

Patrons sit around the central fire pit at the Long Beach location of Jinya Ramen Bar.

 

In addition to Jinya Ramen Bar, Takahashi also owns Robata Jinya, with two locations, on Third Street near The Grove and in Honolulu, with a third to open soon in Hollywood; LBD Japanese Bar and Lounge, with a single location in Honolulu; Saijo, a handroll and skewered-meat restaurant that will open a location in Houston this year; Bushi by Jinya, with locations in Glendora and Rancho Cucamonga; and Shirogane, a Japanese-style bakery for which the company is seeking locations.

Takahashi’s growth plans for the brands are ambitious but steady.

He said the idea for Jinya Ramen Bar was to have 100 locations in the next two to three years, while with Saijo it is to open in Houston and then expand to Washington, D.C., and Vancouver.

Bushi by Jinya is looking to grow as well.

“We are trying to expand locations, for example such as an airport, and we are in discussions to find those locations,” Takahashi said.

Corporate stores

But not all Jinya restaurants are franchise operations.

There are six corporate-owned locations, including the Jinya Ramen Bar in Studio City; Robata Jinya on 3rd Street in the Beverly Grove neighborhood of Los Angeles; Bushi by Jinya Glendora; and the three locations in Honolulu of Jinya Ramen Bar, Robata Jinya, and LBD.

 

Jinya Ramen Bar’s ramen bowls.

 

With two more corporate locations coming online this year – Robata Jinya in Hollywood and a Jinya Ramen Bar in Topanga — that number will increase to eight.

Takahashi also owns two restaurants in Japan – Robata Jinya and Setouchi Suigun, both in Tokyo.

It was while growing up in the Asian country that Takahashi learned to appreciate the food his father made at their family-owned restaurant. He also learned to appreciate “the philosophy of kaizen – the Japanese practice of continuous improvement and the bedrock of hospitality,” according to the company’s website.

Patrons at the Honolulu location of Jinya Robata, a Burbank-based restaurant brand.

After a number of years learning about the restaurant industry, Takahashi opened his first eatery in 2000 in central Tokyo.

He would go on to open seven more in Japan, all featuring different kinds of food. In 2010, he came to California and opened his first Robata Jinya restaurant.

“Playing to the traditional robatayaki service of slow charcoal-grilled skewered meats and vegetables served on large wooden paddles, or shamoji, (Takahashi) aims to provide a lively space where the sharing of small plates, as well as conversation, is encouraged,” the brand’s website said.

Also contributing to the ability to share and converse are the outdoor patios and the fire pits, which are found at about 20% to 30% of the Jinya Ramen Bar locations.

“The customers can surround the fire pit and enjoy our food, which helps make the Jinya Ramen Bar brand so popular,” Takahashi said.

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Mark R. Madler Author