If you choose the pickup option in Mitte, your interaction with Food Technique Berlin likely ends on the sidewalk next to the Zionskirche, watching a red bucket descend from a second-floor window. Christopher Selig’s operation isn’t a standard restaurant. Born during the pandemic, it functions as a dedicated culinary project – part ghost kitchen, part pop-up – focused entirely on the technical precision of Japanese ramen.
While much of the local ramen scene leans toward heavy, cloudy tonkotsu, Selig focuses on *chintan* – clear, distinct broths that rely on layering rather than density. The kitchen operates with an obsessive attention to detail, building bases from stewing hens, fresh mussels, oysters, and bonito flakes. Even the vegan options are engineered for complexity, using dried morels and ceps to mimic the depth of meat stocks. Everything, from the alkaline noodles to the aroma oils, is produced from scratch.
Most customers experience this at home. The DIY kits come with all components prepped – broth, tare, noodles, and toppings – requiring just a few minutes of assembly in your own kitchen. For those who prefer the bowl served to them, irregular pop-ups take over spaces like the Chipperfield Kantine, temporarily replacing the sidewalk hand-off with a sit-down meal in architectural surroundings. Availability is usually announced via newsletter or Instagram, so you have to keep an eye out to secure a slot before the week’s batch runs out.