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  1. Naengmyeon: Korea's Ice-Cold Noodle Masterpiece
Food Guide

Naengmyeon: Korea's Ice-Cold Noodle Masterpiece

By Knowaboutkorea · March 10, 2026

Naengmyeon explained: icy broth mul naengmyeon vs spicy bibim style. How to eat with scissors & mustard, Pyongyang vs Hamhung differences & best spots in Seoul.

Naengmyeon: Korea's Ice-Cold Noodle Masterpiece
NaengmyeonCold NoodlesKorean Food Bucket ListSummerTraditional
Quick Facts

What You Need to Know

🌡️
Best Season
Year-round
All seasons
💰
Price Range
₩8,000–30,000
per person
📍
Origin
Seoul
Overview

What Is It?

Naengmyeon (냉면, literally "cold noodles") is one of Korea's most iconic dishes — thin, chewy buckwheat noodles served in ice-cold beef broth or tossed in spicy gochujang sauce.

Originally a winter dish from Pyongyang and Hamhung in what is now North Korea, it became a year-round favourite in the South.

The dish even made global headlines when it was served at the 2018 Inter-Korean Summit between Moon Jae-in and Kim Jong-un.

The Two Main Styles

  • Mul Naengmyeon (물냉면) — Pyongyang Style
    Thin buckwheat noodles in icy dongchimi (radish water kimchi) or beef broth. Topped with sliced beef, pickled radish, cucumber, a boiled egg half, and sometimes Asian pear. The broth should be tangy, slightly sweet, and cold enough to have ice crystals. This is the refined, subtle version
  • Bibim Naengmyeon (비빔냉면) — Hamhung Style
    Thinner, chewier noodles (made from potato or sweet potato starch) tossed in a fiery gochujang-based sauce with raw fish (홍어 or 가오리). No broth — just intense spice and chewy texture. A small cup of broth is served on the side to sip between bites

How to Eat

When your bowl arrives, cut the noodles with the scissors provided (or ask the server to cut — "면 잘라주세요").

Korean noodles are intentionally long (symbolising longevity), but naengmyeon is nearly impossible to eat without cutting.

Add mustard (겨자) and vinegar (식초) from the table to brighten the broth. Mix bibim naengmyeon thoroughly from the bottom.

Cultural Significance

Naengmyeon carries deep cultural weight. In North Korea, it was traditionally eaten in winter — the logic being that cold noodles pair with ondol (heated floor) warmth.

After the Korean War, North Korean refugees brought their recipes south, establishing legendary restaurants in Seoul.

The Pyongyang naengmyeon served at the 2018 Panmunjom Summit came from Okryugwan, Pyongyang's most famous restaurant, and became a symbol of inter-Korean peace.

Famous Spots

  • Woo Lae Oak (우래옥) — operating since 1946, known as the original Pyongyang naengmyeon in Seoul
  • Pildong Myeonok (필동면옥) — beloved by locals for its clean, deep beef broth
  • Eulji Myeonok (을지면옥) — Euljiro institution, perfect dongchimi broth

When to Eat

Peak season is summer (June–August), but Koreans eat it year-round. After a heavy Korean BBQ meal, ordering naengmyeon as a finisher is a beloved tradition — the cold noodles cleanse the palate perfectly.

Price Range

A bowl of naengmyeon typically costs ₩10,000–14,000. Famous establishments charge ₩12,000–16,000. It's always one bowl per person — sharing is not the done thing.

The Summit Bowl: Why Naengmyeon Matters Beyond the Table

When North Korean leader Kim Jong-un crossed the border at Panmunjom in April 2018, the dinner table told its own story. The naengmyeon served that night came from Okryugwan — Pyongyang's most celebrated restaurant, established in 1960. South Korean President Moon Jae-in remarked that he hoped the dish would help ease the long separation between North and South.

For many Koreans, naengmyeon is inseparable from the story of division. The refugees who brought their recipes south after the Korean War kept something of home alive in a bowl of cold noodles. Today's legendary Seoul naengmyeon restaurants — Woo Lae Oak, Pildong Myeonok — are direct descendants of that migration. Eating naengmyeon in Seoul is, in a quiet way, participating in that history.

The After-BBQ Ritual

One of the most distinctly Korean dining experiences is the sequence: Korean BBQ followed by naengmyeon. After an hour of grilling samgyeopsal or galbi, the table is heavy with smoke, sesame oil, and soju. Then a cold bowl of mul naengmyeon arrives — and the transformation is immediate. The icy broth cuts through the richness, the buckwheat noodles reset the palate, and suddenly you feel capable of eating again.

This combination is so ingrained in Korean dining culture that many Korean BBQ restaurants have naengmyeon permanently on the menu as the expected finale. If you're planning a BBQ dinner, hold space for it.

Understanding the Noodle Texture

Naengmyeon noodles are unlike anything in most Western cuisines. Buckwheat gives mul naengmyeon its slightly gritty, earthy chew — denser than ramen, more elastic than pasta. Hamhung-style noodles made from sweet potato starch are even chewier, with a glossy translucence that makes them look almost glass-like.

First-time eaters sometimes find the texture unexpected. The noodles resist cutting between your teeth in a satisfying way — each bite requires a small deliberate effort. This is considered a quality marker, not a flaw. A naengmyeon noodle that breaks apart too easily is considered inferior.

Practical Tips for Ordering

  • At most naengmyeon restaurants, the menu is essentially two items: mul (broth) or bibim (spicy). Point, or say the name.
  • Ask the server to cut the noodles if scissors aren't provided: "면 잘라주세요 (myeon jallajuseyo)."
  • Add vinegar and mustard gradually — the broth transforms noticeably with each addition.
  • Mul naengmyeon broth should arrive near-freezing, sometimes with actual ice chips. If it's not cold, it's not right.
  • Famous restaurants often sell out by early afternoon — arrive before noon for the best experience.
📖 Brief History

Buckwheat noodles in ice-cold broth or fiery chili sauce — naengmyeon is Korea's beloved summer dish with roots in North Korean cuisine and a history tied to diplomacy.

By Neighborhood

Restaurants by District

📍
Eulji Myeonok
을지면옥
🚇종로3가역 · 377m
View →
📍
Sinseong
신성
🚇Jongno 3-ga Station · 1.1km
View →
📍
Ilpumjinjinsura Gwanghwamun Branch
일품진진수라 광화문점
🚇Jongno 3-ga Station · 7.1km
View →
📍
Dakteorobin Gwanghwamun Branch
닥터로빈 광화문점
🚇Jongno 3-ga Station · 1.2km
View →
📍
Simin Restaurant Main Branch
시민식당 본점
🚇Myeongdong Station · 1.0km
View →
📍
Gwanghwamun Gogi House
광화문 고기집
🚇Jongno 3-ga Station · 1.6km
View →
📍
Gyerim Jongro Main Branch
계림 종로본점
🚇Myeongdong Station · 1.3km
View →
📍
Jongro Pojangmacha
종로포차
🚇Jongno 3-ga Station · 612m
View →
📍
Pyeongyanggogit House
평양고깃집
🚇Jonggak Station · 280m
View →

🍳 Try the Recipe at Home

Government-certified healthy Korean recipes you can make yourself.

Naengmyeon (Cold Noodles)
Main DishBoiled

Naengmyeon (Cold Noodles)

🔥 91.7 kcal🧂 Na 89.5mg💪 Protein 1.5g

Ingredients: 실곤약(100g), 무(20g), 식초(10g), 소금(0.2g), 설탕(10g) 홍파프리카(20g), 오이(20g), 배(20g), 달걀(30g) - 국물 : 동치미국물(200g), 배즙(10g), 홍초(20g) 설탕(10g), 겨자(5g), 식초(10g)

  1. 1. 곤약은 끓는 물에 넣어 데친다.
  2. 2. 데친 곤약은 찬물에 헹구어 채에 받쳐 물기를 빼 놓는다.
  3. 3. 무는 얇게 썰어 식초, 소금, 설탕에 넣어 김치를 만든다.
  4. 4. 파프리카는 5cm 길이로 썰고, 배와 오이도 같은 길이로 얇게 썬 뒤 오이는 살짝 절인다.
  5. 5. 달걀은 삶아 껍질을 벗겨, 실로 잘라 놓는다.
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