webwide noodling

nong shim shin ramyun: the shins and flaming lips

by rameniac | 01 Jun 2007

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Take a walk through the Namdaemun market district in Seoul and you’ll notice, amid all the imitation Burberry and Polo, stalls selling nothing but chili, whole peppers hanging from shanties like red plantains and enormous mounds of the powdered stuff like sand dunes on a seashore. This is Korea, and the essence of cooking is savory and red and brimming with enough heat to light up an unintiated stomach for days, interpret that how you will.

Perhaps it’s fitting then that Korean ramen, ramyun, as it is called, is dominated by exactly one flavor - red - and if you’ve ever had kimchi, you’ve surely tasted it - that sour, mildly pickled funk, the burn of crushed chili clawing its way into your palate, driving you into a mild sweat. Ramyun noodles are both instant and shop-sold; both are typicallly pre-fried and cut slightly thicker than their Japanese counterparts and are often called as u-dong, a linguistic cousin to udon.

As Hyundai is to Honda, Nong Shim is to Nissin, the king of the Hangul hill when it comes to instant noodles. An offspring of the Lotte conglomerate, the food manufacturer (they make chips and other assorted dried snacks as well) is so dominant that I cannot even think of competing brands by name without doing research, although there are a few.

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Nong Shim’s Shin Ramyun then, is the flagship product of the whole enterprise, the national instant noodle if ever there were such a thing. Walk those same streets of Seoul late at night and you’ll find drunken salarymen eagerly slurping down the stuff at park benches and food stalls, accompanied by paper bowls filled with black mussels (the national beer snack) and green vials of Jinro Soju in hand. I don’t know what they’ll be feeling when they wake up in the morning, but I will definitely testify that a bowl of big red goes down fantastic after a hard night at the norebang. Lusciously curled, fried noodles with remarkable firmness, token tidbits of green onion, carrot, and mushroom, and that chili powder to set your stomach alight. If you have the means and the resources, throw in a raw egg and poach it directly under the stream from the hot water dispenser. I’ll never buy a Hyundai, but Shin Ramyun is easily my bread and butter when there’s neither time nor inclination for the fancier, fattier stuff. Plus it’s super cheap. Dae han min kuk!

 

Comments

This is the brand of instant ramen I buy.  I love it :D

Posted by Amy on 06/02 at 10:03 AM

A-HA!!!  I had NEVER thought of dropping an egg into the instant noodle cup before putting the hot water in.  GENIUS.  great tip.

Posted by kayoko on 06/03 at 12:20 PM

I LOVE THIS RAMEN
this is naruto’s ramen and I love the vegetarian version of it but I can’t find it anymore T-T tis’ NO FAIR T-T.

Everyone seems to put flames to this type for no reason T-T. I mean really IT’S RED FOR A REASON, IT’S SUPPOSED TO BE HOT! DON’T WHINE ABOUT IT SINCE YOUR SISSY BELLIES CAN’T TAKE THE HEAT!

Posted by Avi den Kanashimi on 06/04 at 05:01 PM

Shin is the workhorse of Korean ramens - solid and dependable. If Shin was a basketball player, it would Ben Wallace. As far as Korean brands go, Sutah is more nuanced (in all permutations), but you can really never go wrong with Shin Ramyun. At any given time there’s 2-10 packets in my cupboard, and usually a cup or two or five in a file drawer at work. Plus, it’s my haole’s wife favorite brand - though she doesn’t go for the dried vegetable packet. Fucking white people.

Posted by The Guilty Carnivore on 06/09 at 01:34 AM

Yes! Hot and Spicy Bowl Noodle Soup = the best! Rameniac: I heard you on KCRW this morning. Your site is excellent! Thank you!

Posted by Jane on 07/21 at 12:22 PM

I, too, heard you on KCRW. Mmmm, I remember my mom getting these ramyun packets when I was a kid. So good! And bless you for living in Los Angeles!

Posted by on 07/21 at 01:05 PM

A bag of Shin, two thinly sliced, sauteed sweet Lap Chongs, a half-handful of black fungus, two poached eggs with runny yolks, a heavy squirt of sriracha, a few dots of hoisin, and a sprinkling of fried red onion.

Emergency Heaven: break glass and boil up.

Posted by panicBoy on 09/01 at 02:29 PM

bomb shin:

- half the water
- add full packets
- 1 baby bok choy
- several slices of lap chonga

i like to half the water, make that shiet hella hot and spicy son.  add some ground cayenne to that too kid… when u take a piss after, that isht be burnin son.  big ups to nong shim!!

Posted by Tong Po("you bleed like mai-lee") on 10/30 at 09:23 AM

half the water? an extra squirt of sriracha? you guys must have that medical affliction known as “colon with a death wish”.

Posted by rameniac on 10/30 at 02:25 PM

Never even winced.

Of course, I also usually put another half to a full cup of water in to accomodate all the other extra ingredients I use.

Tong Po’s version, now that’s nuts.  Half-water, cock-sauce, AND cayenne?  I’m gonna go ahead and call bullshit.

Posted by panicBoy on 11/25 at 10:06 AM

I don’t use many extra ingredients but i still put a cup of water ...makes the whole thing more easy to mix

Posted by Sears Parts on 12/16 at 04:44 AM

Looks tasty! I’d jump into that cup and eat it inside out!

Posted by association on 12/27 at 11:55 AM

The Korean Shin-Ramen?!  Definitely one of my three favorite instant noodles (the others two being the Taiwanese Tong-I minced pork noodle and the oringinal Japanese Nissin chicken ramen).  In fact, I think I have 1 box (20 packs) in my kitchen right now.  My personal special recipe for Shin ramen is as follows:

1 bag of shin-ramen
water
japanese or korean seaweed (soaked for 20 minutes)
2-4 slices of Japanese fish cake or 2-4 frozen fish or beef balls
2-4 frozen dumplings
1 egg

I actually cook the soup base and the extra ingrients first before adding the noodle.  This way the noodle will remain chewy and not too soggy.  I lived off this recipe during my 4 years of college and even my Indian roommate love it.

Posted by on 01/17 at 12:01 AM

Ya this ramen is the shit, it’s mah fav an all that.

Posted by on 03/02 at 10:01 PM

well I would like to try them all but unfortunately these things are not available in my country. It feels bad they really look pretty good.

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Posted by chakru on 03/06 at 06:39 AM

I so love Nong Shim noodles. I love Shin Ramen. Havent eat it in a long time. But I am currently eating packs of Kimchi ramen.so good. If you ever buy Kimchi ramen, here’s the instructions:
-boil about 550 ml of water into pot
-when it’s bubbling, add noodle, spicy powder and dried kimchi and veggies
-wait till its bubbling and its soft, at its softest
-let it cool
-bon appitite!

Posted by on 03/10 at 12:47 PM

Nicely written. I can relate to most of your points.

Posted by ddd on 03/26 at 07:52 AM

Thank you! Hot and Spicy Bowl Noodle Soup the best! I heard you on KCRW this morning. Your site is excellent!

Posted by Dodge on 04/17 at 12:37 AM

I would also like to try them out again but I moved :( soo unlucky!

Btw im sure as hell will take your advice ritsuka

Posted by RadicalX on 05/04 at 02:48 AM

On seeing the colourful presentations I wish I could have it at this moment. It looks really hot and sipcy. I like to have noodles right a way and I shall try. Look for more details about this in http://www.indiaovenlasvegas.com

Posted by on 05/12 at 02:32 AM
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