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Home Noodles

Quick Asian Caramelised Beef Ramen Noodles

By Nagi Maehashi
545 Comments
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Published10 Dec '18 Updated12 Jun '25
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Get your chopsticks ready!! With caramelised beef, a tangle of noodles, and a sweet-savoury 4 ingredient sauce, these Asian Beef Ramen Noodles are totally slurp-worthy and quick to make. It’s all cooked in one pan – no need to boil the noodles separately!

Close up of Quick Asian Beef Ramen Noodles fresh off the stove, ready to be served

Also see: Chicken Vegetable Ramen Noodles and Asian Mushroom Ramen Noodles!

Caramelised Asian Beef Ramen Noodles recipe

I’ve previously shared stories where Dozer has been randomly recognised on the streets by readers (ah, it makes me proud!) and the odd occasion when I’ve been recognised. Always in a state of disarray. I am waiting for the time it happens when I just happen to be dolled up for an evening out.🤞🏼

Well, when 3 total strangers within the space of 2 weeks tell you that these Asian Beef Bowls are one of their favourites because it’s so tasty yet quick ‘n easy, it triggered a thought – why not do a ramen noodle version??

So the thought came to life.

That caramelised ground beef / mince is just da bomb!  I just want to pick it all out!!! (Seriously, who talks like that at my age??🙄)

Overhead photo of Quick Asian Beef Ramen Noodles in bowls, ready to be eaten

I hinted at a cheeky little tip that makes this ramen noodles recipe even quicker than you’d expect – and here it is:

How to make ramen noodles – in one pan!

Yes that’s right, these Asian Beef Ramen Noodles are made in ONE POT!!! Sure it saves on washing up an extra pot to cook the noodles separately, but for this recipe, the more important factor is that the starch in the noodles acts as the thickener for the sauce (which has no cornflour/cornstarch or other thickener).

So here’s how this recipe goes down – 4 minutes for the onion and beef, 2 to 3 minutes for the noodles, MAX!

  • Cook the beef with the sauce first – get it real nicely caramelised because it’s key to the flavour in this recipe;

  • Make a well in the centre, add water, plonk uncooked instant or ramen noodles in the water. This serves two purposes – making room for the noodles to sit in the water AND protects the beef from losing their caramelisation by boiling in the water;

  • After 45 seconds, turn the noodles, then 30 seconds later, they will be loose enough to toss through the sauce and beef;

  • Add a big handful of beansprouts (great no-chop veggie option!), toss more then serve;

  • By the time the ramen noodles are cooked, the liquid is absorbed / evaporated, leaving behind a nice coating of sauce on the perfectly cooked noodles.

The beauty of this technique is that it HAS to be a super quick recipe because the noodles are cooked in 2 to 3 minutes. Any longer and they become too soft!

How to make Quick Asian Beef Ramen Noodles

What else can I add to these ramen noodles?

This is a very adaptable recipe. I’ve used onion, garlic, ground beef (mince) and beansprouts because it requires minimal chopping. Finely sliced cabbage would be an ideal substitute for the bean sprouts, otherwise carrots cut into matchsticks, baby spinach or even normal spinach, or even finely sliced kale. Toss these in when the bean sprouts are added, just to wilt.

If using other vegetables that need to be cooked for longer that leach water when cooked, such as peppers, zucchini or mushroom, cook these first then remove from the pan (otherwise they leach too much liquid when the noodles cook so you end up with too much water). Proceed with recipe then toss them in at the end.

Use ramen or instant noodles

I don’t know if you’ve got a hang up about instant noodles – whether from excess consumption in your uni days or because of health concerns – but let’s just say this recipe is a far cry from the plonk-in-water-add-veg that you probably overdosed on.

What I’m making the most of here in this recipe is the quick-cook noodles and the shape of the noodles cakes (flat) so they can be cooked in a shallow skillet.

Any instant noodles or ramen noodles will work just fine because we discard the soup seasoning mix. You can also buy just the noodle cakes (no seasoning) in larger packs of 5+.

If you don’t have instant noodles (or you really can’t get past your dorm days), these Asian Beef Ramen Noodles will work just fine with any other type of noodles. Dried or fresh, rice or wheat / egg noodles.

But honestly, I ask you – does this look like any instant ramen noodles you had in your dorm days?? 😉 – Nagi x

Quick Quick Asian Beef Ramen Noodles (ground beef) in a skillet, fresh off the stove

PS I put together a handy ground beef / beef mince recipe collection, for everybody who, like me, pops beef mince in their shopping cart every week!


Quick Asian ground beef ramen noodles
Watch how to make it

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Close up of Quick Asian Beef Ramen Noodles fresh off the stove, ready to be served

Quick Asian Beef Ramen Noodles

Author: Nagi
Prep: 7 minutes mins
Cook: 8 minutes mins
Total: 15 minutes mins
Mains
Asian
4.95 from 223 votes
Servings2
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Recipe video above. A great quick beef ramen noodle recipe that requires very little prep, and it's a handy one-pan recipe (no need to boil the noodles separately!). It's a great noodle stir fry that's family friendly – everybody loves the sweet-savoury flavour of the sauce!
The flavour-trick here is to caramelise the beef well, it makes all the difference, so don't shortcut it.
Next time: try the Chicken and vegetable and Mushroom versions!

Ingredients

  • 2 packets ramen or other instant noodles , discard seasoning (Note 1)
  • 1 tsp oil
  • 2 tsp sesame oil (or more oil) (Note 2)
  • 2 garlic cloves , minced
  • 1/2 onion , sliced
  • 200g / 7oz beef mince (ground beef) (Note 3)
  • 1 1/4 cups (315 ml) water, plus more as needed
  • Big handful bean sprouts

Sauce:

  • 1 tbsp dark soy sauce (Note 4)
  • 1 tbsp Oyster sauce (or Hoisin, Note 5)
  • 2 tsp Hoisin sauce (or more Oyster sauce)
  • 1 tbsp mirin (Note 6)

Garnishes (optional):

  • Finely sliced green onion / shallots
  • Sesame seeds
Prevent screen from sleeping

Instructions

  • Mix Sauce.
  • Sauté onion and garlic – Heat oils in a medium skillet over high heat. Add onion and garlic, cook for 1 1/2 minutes until starting to go golden.
  • Cook beef – Add beef and cook, breaking it up as you go, until it changes from pink to light brown.
  • Caramelise beef – Add Sauce and cook for 2 to 3 minutes until well caramelised (see video).
  • Add water and noodles – Push beef to the side to make enough space for the noodles. Add water, place noodles in water.
  • Cook ramen – Leave for 45 seconds then turn. Leave for 30 seconds, then untangle the noodles, then toss through the beef.
  • Add beansprouts, toss for 1 minute or until sauce reduces to coat the noodles and the noodles are cooked. (Note 7)
  • Serve immediately, garnished with green onions and sesame seeds.

Recipe Notes:

1. Instant or Ramen Noodles – Any brand or type is fine here, though avoid the extra large ramen packets because you’ll struggle to fit two in the pan (though can break them). If it comes with soup seasoning packets, toss them.
Ssub with fresh or dried noodles (rice or wheat). Prepare per packet, use ~ 2 packed cups, toss through the caramelised beef with a splash of water.
2. Sesame oil – Use toasted sesame oil if you’ve got it, otherwise untoasted is fine. Brown sesame oil = toasted, untoasted = yellow like normal oil.
3. Mince – Ground beef is called mince here in Australia. Can sub with any other ground meat of choice – chicken, turkey, pork, lamb, kangaroo (really!), veal.
4. Dark Soy Sauce has a darker colour and more intense flavour than all purpose and light soy sauce. If you can’t find it, any soy sauce is fine here but the sauce colour will be lighter. 
5. Oyster Sauce – I’ve noticed vegetarian oyster sauce in the supermarkets lately!
6. Mirin – a sweet Japanese cooking sake, very common ingredient in Japanese cooking. Find it in large supermarkets, or Asian grocery stores.
Sub with Chinese cooking wine, dry sherry. Non alcoholic sub: use 1/2 cup water + 3/4 cup low sodium chicken stock/broth (instead of 1 1/4 cups water) and skip the Mirin.
7. Total cook time for noodles should be per packet. Add a touch more water if noodles need longer.
8. SCALING recipe up (click servings and slide) – use a larger skillet. Can break noodle cakes if necessary to fit.
9. Nutrition per serving. Sodium can be reduced by 175mg per serve by using low sodium soy sauce.

Nutrition Information:

Calories: 626cal (31%)Carbohydrates: 58g (19%)Protein: 20g (40%)Fat: 27g (42%)Saturated Fat: 8g (50%)Cholesterol: 71mg (24%)Sodium: 1200mg (52%)Potassium: 406mg (12%)Fiber: 1g (4%)Sugar: 6g (7%)Vitamin C: 9.8mg (12%)Calcium: 37mg (4%)Iron: 2.6mg (14%)
Keywords: Beef and Noodles, Noodles
Did you make this recipe?I love hearing how you went with my recipes! Tag me on Instagram at @recipe_tin.

More noodle recipes

  • Chow Mein – reader fave!

  • Pad Thai and Pad See Ew – reader faves! 😂

  • Singapore Noodles

  • Char Kway Teow – epic street hawker food

  • See all Noodle Recipes

And the Ramen Noodle recipe collection

  • Caramelised Asian Mushroom Ramen Noodles – caramelised mushrooms tossed through ramen noodles in a sweet savoury Asian sauce

  • One Pot Chicken and Vegetable Ramen Noodles – loads of hidden veggies!

  • 12 Minute Thai Chicken Peanut Noodles – super quick, using ground meat

  • Ramen Noodle Salad with Creamy Sesame Peanut Dressing – terrific for work lunchboxes

  • Chow Mein Ramen Noodles –  the faster way to make Chow Mein


Life of Dozer

I’ve been trying to move him onto a paleo diet ie no commercial dog food. Currently experimenting to see what he will and won’t eat.

Raw sardines falls into the Won’t Eat bucket. 🙄

Dozer the golden retriever refusing to eat raw sardines

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I believe you can make great food with everyday ingredients even if you’re short on time and cost conscious. You just need to cook clever and get creative!

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545 Comments

  1. Zeina says

    December 13, 2018 at 12:33 pm

    Any subs for dark soy sauce?

    Reply
  2. Sarina says

    December 12, 2018 at 2:45 pm

    5 stars
    This was so easy and delicious.

    Reply
  3. Angela says

    December 12, 2018 at 4:09 am

    5 stars
    Love your site
    Love Dozer
    Trying this tonight!
    BTW Chicken cordon bleu was an enormous hit as was chicken stroganoff
    Thanks
    Angela from Southampton England!

    Reply
  4. Cath says

    December 11, 2018 at 9:51 pm

    5 stars
    This is agreat recipe! Well done. 👀 ng forward to sharing it with the whole family.

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      December 13, 2018 at 8:32 pm

      Thanks so much Cath!

      Reply
  5. Cath says

    December 11, 2018 at 9:46 pm

    Hi Nagi
    We had this for dinner tonight and it was EXCELLENT… will have it again next week when all the family are home, but my youngest daughter and I really enjoyed it. Thank you. Cheers Cath

    Reply
  6. Bronwyn says

    December 11, 2018 at 9:21 pm

    Good luck with the barf diet for Dozer. It’s how I’ve fed my dogs since 1993, and it’s all pros. Their bones should be small and raw, which means they’re pliable, soft and edible. Big thigh bones and dried and cooked bones are splintery and no good. A bit of veg, offal, fatty fish, eggs….So your dog gets ghost poos, super clean teeth, sweet breath, healthy skin and coat, no weight problems, and a well-regulated appetite. If you’re transitioning, offering it cooked for the first few weeks then slowly less and less cooking should assist. Chicken necks, wings and cages are all good. We have had a couple of now 10 yr old chow chow rescues for a couple of years, and we mostly cook their food, but throw in a few raw wings and necks now and then. Due to their previous poor diet they have broken and missing teeth, and can’t quite digestively cope as well as all our previous dogs, but have made great strides on decent homemade food…We wish you and Dozer all the best.

    Reply
  7. Jonathan Sturm says

    December 11, 2018 at 8:31 pm

    “I’ve noticed vegetarian oyster sauce in the supermarkets lately!”
    But it’s not the same; it’s runny rather than thick and it tastes different.

    I use Pandaroo thin egg noodles in this type of dish. They only take 3–4 minutes to soften. I am inordinately fond of one pot meals even though SWMBO does the washing up in return for gourmet meals.

    I intend to attempt to cook a turkey properly this Christmas thanks to your suggestions. Wish me luck 😉

    Reply
  8. Tanya says

    December 11, 2018 at 4:08 pm

    Thank you Nagi…. Brilliant! Just wish Mom was was here because she would have LOVED your site and absolutely made a home at your Moms site! Give Dozier a big nuzzle for me and know that your work is appreciated. Merry Christmas!

    Reply
  9. Eha says

    December 11, 2018 at 11:15 am

    5 stars
    Ha! Shall be having a variation thereof in about an hour, as I often do during the work week . . . usually use hokkien or other fresh packaged noodles for far better taste and food value methinks with more vegetables but same speed . . . lived at home during all my uni years and my European mom would not touch the two-minute kind of noodles . . . 🙂 !!!

    Reply
  10. Judy M says

    December 11, 2018 at 10:55 am

    Hi Nagi
    Thank you for your recipes. We love your Meat Loaf, chicken tenders and I will try your Beef & noodles. Keep up the good work. I live in Calgary Alberta Canada. I also love the pictures of Dozer.
    Take care

    Reply
  11. Wynn says

    December 11, 2018 at 5:59 am

    5 stars
    This is highly likely to be our dinner tonight! It is right up my alley–noodles having hoisin and oyster sauces in the mix are very big favorites at our house, and one pot meals thrill me no end!

    Does Dozer need to be extra-svelte to protect his knees post-surgery? Adding 1-1.5 cups organic green beans to the recommended portions of dog foods (homemade or commercial) has had great success with helping satisfy dogs’ appetites, while adding only minimal calories to do so. Some dogs (but mainly puppies having no other frame of reference) seem to enjoy carrot sticks or carrot chunks in lieu of dog treats or training treats, too. My large coon cat would have devoured that sardine in a New York minute!

    Reply
  12. Marcia says

    December 11, 2018 at 5:35 am

    I’m not a big beef lover for a variety of reasons, but I’m thinking this might work with ground turkey? This recipe has all the flavors I love (and noodles to boot!) so I’m thinking I’ll give that a try. I’m wondering if there’s some way to cut the sodium without sacrificing flavor? Any ideas?

    As for non-commercial dog food, for the past few years I’ve been feeding my brood home-cooked food using my slow cooker. I toss in ground turkey, sometimes other meat (e.g. ground beef, various meats on sale, leftover chicken, etc), sweet potato, carrots, peas, green beans, whatever. No seasonings, not even salt. It’s so easy, so healthy, and the dogs devour it.

    Reply
    • Marcia says

      December 11, 2018 at 5:39 am

      Just saw that you mentioned turkey as a substitute… missed that on first read! Think I’ll pass on the kangaroo though.

      Reply
    • Wynn says

      December 11, 2018 at 6:10 am

      5 stars
      Slow cooker! What a terrific way to make pet food at home, especially when cooking for more than one pet! Do you need to add any water to the mix of meat proteins, or do the vegetables release enough moisture content into it while it all cooks?

      Reply
  13. Teresa Anderson-Briney says

    December 11, 2018 at 5:24 am

    5 stars
    I love your recipes, but the sodium content is so high!!! Even using low sodium soy sauce makes it still too high!! My husband and I love Asian food but our blood pressure can’t take it. Please find some low-sodium recipes. Always looking for Dozer, he’s a doll.

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      December 11, 2018 at 6:53 am

      Ahh Teresa, this one is hard with the sodium because it includes the sodium from the instant soup broth packs that come with the noodles, and I didn’t know how to remove just the sodium from that! Let me have another look and see if I can manually calculate the nutrition then I will update it 🙂 If you use low sodium soy sauce, then the sodium content shouldn’t be that high for this because there’s very little in noodles and the other sauces. 🙂 N x

      Reply
  14. Sal says

    December 11, 2018 at 5:17 am

    5 stars
    I’ll definitely try this with a healthier noodle:). Thank you- looks delicious!

    Reply
  15. Kathleen says

    December 11, 2018 at 4:44 am

    This looks so delicious! I can’t wait to try it! Pinning <3

    Reply
  16. lilygar says

    December 11, 2018 at 3:56 am

    5 stars
    Hi I love your recipes and for Dozer , I had Dog Mercy for 15 years she never ate Dog food , I cooked every two weeks put food in containers portion for two days at a time from freezer it was eighter ground lamb or beef , 50 percent meat 25 of rice and 25 of veggies ,I would put meat to boil in water cook till almost done lift the meat out of the water because fat control ,wash and cook rice ,use a cooked veggie like carrot pumpin was her favorite mix and freeze in containers ,she was 55 LBS ,so I was using about two cups twice a day , I used flax seed oil twice a week for her fur , vitamins is up to you , I also made cookies flours were rye buck wheat ,peanut butter, pumpkin ,apple sauce ,made them small after baking left them to dry for 24 hours no mold container with screen Pass it on please

    Reply
    • Tanya says

      December 11, 2018 at 3:55 pm

      Lilygar, Nice to see just how you loved your Pup, I can feel all your love- good job!

      Reply
  17. faith says

    December 11, 2018 at 3:24 am

    5 stars
    Hi Nagi, that recipe looks perfect EXCEPT that I detest bean sprouts. Any other suggestions for substitutes? Thank you for all the wonderful recipes that you have shared over this past year, every one that I’ve made has turned out perfect! Wishing you, your family and that great big wonderful Dozer a Merry Christmas and Happy New Year and hope that 2019 brings you everything you want.

    Reply
    • Joan says

      December 11, 2018 at 4:46 am

      I’m going to try it with baby spinach, as it’s in my fridge waiting to be used.

      Reply
    • Beck says

      December 11, 2018 at 8:47 am

      Hi Faith, if you’re after a bit of crunch that you’d usually get with bean sprouts, personally I’d sub in finely julienned carrot. I used to be a hater too, and that’s what I would do!

      Reply
  18. Kay Torrence says

    December 11, 2018 at 3:07 am

    Love all your recipes and LOVE the updates on your dog !

    Reply
  19. Linda says

    December 11, 2018 at 2:03 am

    Should not give dogs or cats raw chickens and bones. High chance of salmonella. There are several reputable websites that have recipes for raw diets with directions.

    Reply
    • Marcia says

      December 11, 2018 at 5:49 am

      And many types of bones turn in to sharp shards once eaten– chicken is definitely one of the worst in this regard. I once made one of my dogs totally miserable (and surely endangered her life) by giving her some meat bones a neighbor gave me that broke up that way and made her so sick all night. I can’t imagine what all those sharp pieces did to her poor tummy. Never again.

      Reply
  20. Jonathan Schrauer says

    December 11, 2018 at 1:47 am

    5 stars
    Haven’t tried yet, but on my list. Sounds great.
    Why the Paleo diet for Dozer?

    Reply
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I believe you can make great food with everyday ingredients even if you’re short on time and cost conscious. You just need to cook clever and get creative! Read More

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