Noodle
Mul-naengmyeon
Cold Buckwheat Noodles

Chewy buckwheat noodles in an icy, tangy broth — Korea's signature cold noodle dish for summer heat.
Mul-naengmyeon ('water cold noodles') is how Koreans beat the summer: thin, chewy buckwheat noodles served in a chilled, slightly tart beef-and-radish broth, sometimes with shards of ice floating on top. It traces back to the northern regions of the Korean peninsula, and Pyongyang-style versions are revered for their restrained, clean broth. It's the traditional finish to a Korean BBQ meal, eaten to cleanse the palate after grilled meat. The bowl comes garnished with cucumber, half a boiled egg, and a slice of pear, and you season it yourself with vinegar and mustard oil at the table. The noodles are famously long and resilient, so scissors are offered to cut them.
✦ Tastypinch tip
The noodles are slippery and elastic — gather a small twist and lift slowly so they don't whip broth at you.
How to eat it
- Add a little vinegar and mustard oil to taste, then mix before eating.
- Use the table scissors to cut the long noodles into manageable lengths.
- Drink the cold broth directly from the bowl between bites.
Common mistakes
- Don't be shy with the scissors; uncut noodles are very hard to eat politely.
- Taste before drowning it in vinegar/mustard — the broth is meant to stay subtle.
Where to try it
- Naengmyeon specialty houses
- The customary closer at Korean BBQ restaurants
- Everywhere in summer


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