Singapore heat and a bowl of icy naengmyeon have a natural affinity. Korea’s famous cold noodle dish, served either in a chilled beef or dongchimi broth or tossed in spicy bibim sauce, has been a staple of Korean summers and post-BBQ meals for generations. It requires no cooking skill beyond boiling noodles and whisking a sauce together. What it does require, however, is knowing which ingredients matter and why. This guide covers both.
What Is Naengmyeon?
Naengmyeon translates directly to “cold noodles” in Korean, and the dish comes in two main styles. Mul naengmyeon features buckwheat noodles served in a clear, chilled broth made from beef stock or dongchimi (radish water kimchi), typically garnished with sliced beef brisket, pickled radish, cucumber, a halved boiled egg and a drizzle of vinegar and mustard. Bibim naengmyeon skips the broth entirely and tosses the same noodles in a fiery, sweet gochujang-based sauce.
Both styles originated in the Pyongyang and Hamhung regions of what is now North Korea, where buckwheat grew abundantly and cold winters made chilled dishes surprisingly practical. Today, naengmyeon is eaten year-round across South Korea, with particular enthusiasm in summer, and increasingly, in food-loving cities across Southeast Asia.
For a home attempt, bibim naengmyeon is the more forgiving of the two. The sauce can be made ahead, adjusted to taste, and doesn’t require a well-developed broth as its base. It’s the version most Koreans go for when cooking at home, and it’s where this recipe begins.
What You’ll Need
Serves 2
For the noodles:
- 2 portions of naengmyeon noodles (dried or fresh, available at Korean grocery stores or online)
- 1 small cucumber, julienned
- 2 boiled eggs, halved
- 100g Korean radish or daikon, julienned and briefly pickled in rice vinegar, sugar, and salt
- Toasted sesame seeds, to finish
For the bibim sauce:
- 3 tablespoons gochujang
- 1.5 tablespoons rice vinegar
- 1 tablespoon sugar
- 1 tablespoon soy sauce
- 1 teaspoon sesame oil
- 1 teaspoon minced garlic
This ingredient list is short by design. Naengmyeon’s appeal lies in the balance between a punchy, well-seasoned sauce and clean, cold garnishes, not in the number of components.
How to Make It
Step 1: Make the sauce
Combine the gochujang, rice vinegar, sugar, soy sauce, sesame oil and minced garlic in a bowl. Stir until the sugar dissolves and the mixture is smooth. Taste it, then adjust: more vinegar for sharpness, more gochujang for heat, more sugar if you want a rounder finish. Set aside in the refrigerator while you prepare everything else. The sauce improves with even 20 to 30 minutes of rest.
Step 2: Prep your garnishes
Julienne the cucumber into thin matchsticks. For the pickled radish, toss the julienned radish with one tablespoon each of rice vinegar and sugar, plus a pinch of salt. Leave it for at least 15 minutes—it should soften slightly and turn lightly sweet and tangy. Boil your eggs for 7 minutes for a just-set yolk, then transfer them to cold water, peel and halve.
Step 3: Cook the noodles
Bring a large pot of water to a rolling boil. Add the naengmyeon noodles and cook according to the packet instructions, usually 2 to 3 minutes for fresh or 4 to 5 minutes for dried. The noodles should be tender but with a firm, chewy bite throughout. Drain immediately and rinse thoroughly under cold running water, then transfer to a bowl of iced water for 1 to 2 minutes. This step is non-negotiable. The shock of cold water stops the cooking instantly and gives the noodles their characteristic springy texture.
Drain well, shaking off as much excess water as possible.
Step 4: Assemble
Divide the noodles between two bowls. Spoon the bibim sauce generously over each portion. Arrange the cucumber, pickled radish and halved egg on top. Finally, scatter sesame seeds over everything and serve immediately. Some people like to add a final splash of rice vinegar at the table for extra brightness.
Tips That Make the Difference
A few things separate a bowl that tastes right from one that tastes merely fine.
- Keep everything cold. Chill your serving bowls in the freezer for 10 minutes before plating. Naengmyeon is meant to be eaten ice-cold, and a warm bowl undoes the effort quickly.
- Don’t skip the iced water rinse. Room temperature tap water isn’t cold enough to arrest the cooking properly. Use actual ice.
- Source proper naengmyeon noodles. They’re made from buckwheat (and often a proportion of sweet potato starch), giving them a chewy, almost elastic texture that regular noodles can’t emulate. Most Korean supermarkets in Singapore carry them dried or fresh. You can also try the Korean aisle in larger supermarkets.
- Season the sauce in layers. Mix the sauce a day ahead if you can. The flavours deepen considerably overnight, and you’ll find yourself reaching for it on other things too.
- Taste before serving. Gochujang varies in heat and saltiness across brands. Always taste the final sauce before tossing, not just during mixing, as the flavour shifts once it sits.
From Your Kitchen to Clarke Quay
Naengmyeon is one of those dishes that rewards familiarity. Make it once and you’ll understand the balance it’s aiming for; make it a few times and it starts to feel genuinely yours. That said, there’s something worth experiencing in a version made by people who’ve spent years getting it right. At Hanjip Korean Grill House, cold noodles are served exactly as they should be, cold enough to feel restorative, and balanced in a way that’s difficult to achieve without practice.
Come taste what the benchmark looks like. Reserve your table at Hanjip Korean Grill House now.
