Sanuki Udon Master Class Experience
Kagawa has 600-700 udon shops for a population of 950,000—one shop per 1,400 people. People here eat udon three times a day without getting tired of it. The noodles are thick, slippery, and chewy in a specific way that's hard to describe until you've bitten through one: resistance, then give, then a slight spring back. The texture comes from kneading technique, water temperature, and wheat flour milled specifically for sanuki udon. Every shop makes noodles differently, and locals argue about which shop has the best koshi (chew).
You can learn to make them yourself at udon schools scattered across Takamatsu and the Sanuki Plains. Tourist classes run ¥2,500-¥4,000, last 90 minutes, and teach you the basic method: mix flour and salted water, knead it into a ball, wrap it in plastic, then step on it. Literally—you put the dough in a bag and knead it with your feet, pressing and folding for 15-20 minutes while the instructor yells encouragement. Your body weight does the work your hands can't. After resting, you roll the dough flat, fold it into layers, and cut it with a long knife into noodles exactly 3-4mm thick. Then you boil them, rinse them in cold water three times to stop the cooking and firm the texture, and eat them. Fresh udon tastes different from restaurant udon—softer, almost sweet, with more wheat flavor.
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Opening Hours
Tourist classes run 9:00–12:00 or 13:00–16:00; master workshops begin 6:00–7:00 AM. Hours vary by school or master — confirm at time of booking.
Closed: Varies by workshop. Most tourist schools open daily; master workshops by appointment only, often unavailable during major holidays.
Entrance Fee
Tourist group classes ¥2,500–¥4,000. Master family workshops ¥15,000–¥25,000 per person, including mill visit and restaurant access.
Best Season
Year-round. Autumn (September–November) is ideal — newly harvested wheat flour gives classes extra depth. Summer humidity makes kneading harder but is manageable.
Visit Duration
Tourist class: 90 minutes. Master workshop: 5–7 hours including mill visit, noodle-making, and lunch at respected udon shops.
Getting There
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