I picked up a bunch of unflavored instant ramen packets with the intention of making my own. I’m a big fan of Korean Ramyun packs and make them often, but they are getting pricy nowadays. Does anyone else in c/cooking do this as well? What are your favorite quick broth recipes?
Some dried mushrooms, ground ginger, onion powder, and a stock cube all ground up in the spice grinder. Then just add to water. Maybe add a spoon of gochujang and/or miso.
Ooh, I’ll have to make a bunch of this and vacuum seal for easy instant ramyun. Thank you!
Sure! Sometimes I throw other stuff in there, too. Sichuan peppercorn is nice.
Miso paste, dashi powder, chicken buillion powder, sesame oil, soy sauce, chili powder or oil, and a raw egg.
Mix well, combine with noodles reserving cooking water. Mix to thoroughly coat noodles. Add reserved cooking water to desired consistency.
You can skip or adjust any ingredients as you prefer. It is easy to make it too salty though. I would say it is most important to keep the egg in there. It helps get the consistency and thickness of a proper broth.
That sounds perfect, thanks so much!
Chicken bullion, soy sauce, msg, sesame oil, garlic, and a lot of hot chile. I kinda of just like hot. I want my nose running and eyes watering so much I can’t really taste anything, or if I can that’s not what I’m paying attention to.
I don’t have an exact recipe, but my wife likes to add Perilla or Sesame oil to ramyun broth. We want to try truffle oil but we can’t find it in any of the asian groceries in our area. Oh and dashi and/or miso are definitely what I would use if I made broth from scratch.
Thanks! Perilla and truffle oil would be so good. I usually add a little sesame oil and soy sauce in most ramyun as well. I did try making Gyudon (Japanese thin sliced beef over rice/noodles) recently using dashi. Turned out pretty good. Miso is definitely a staple, even just mixing some paste with water for a quick soup.
One day I may try making an actual ramen broth but that takes forever, lol. I’m thinking about doing just a simple garlic and ginger fry and adding in chicken broth, sesame oil, and soy sauce for a quick Shoyu style broth. Probably experiment with everything you mentioned as well. Thanks!
Yeah, dashi is basically my cheat code. lol. When trying various mixes of soy sauce, sesame oil, garlic, onions, etc., adding dashi just automatically makes it taste complete.
Another thing we “discovered” was using the *don (i.e. oyakodon, gyudon, etc.) sauce recipe to make a thick broth for tsukemen (dipping noodles), and it works! We just add a little more water than usual so it’s more like thick soup in consistency rather than sauce. And the recipe being soy sauce, mirin, sake, sugar/honey.
Oh that sounds great too! Appreciate the tip!
It isn’t exactly what you’re asking for, but here’s how I prepare those instant lamen packages when I don’t have frozen broth:
- brown the meat in the pot that I’m going to use with the lamen. Reserve.
- add ginger, sesame seeds, and brown sugar to the pot. Let them caramelise a bit, and add the rest of the seasoning (garlic, soy sauce, pepper sauce, MSG, etc). Then water.
- add vegs and let them cook. Aside cook the noodles and probably boil some eggs.
- assemble everything.
So the “broth” is mostly the juice of the vegs and meat, soy sauce, vinegar and condiments. It isn’t exactly flavourful, but good enough.
If I had to improve it I’d probably use a chicken bouillon (for any land meat) or powdered dashi (for fish lamen). And perhaps half of a package of flavourless gelatine, for texture. (Some people might use miso instead. My body does not handle it well so I don’t even have it, but it’s an option for you.)
Sometimes I also add half a sheet of nori, as kombu is hard to find where I live. Taste-wise it’s good, but be aware that you’ll get some “nori fragments” at the bottom, I don’t mind but the texture isn’t exactly great.
That sounds yummy! Thank you!
I always have one or two different stocks in the fridge, as well as miso paste and chili crisp. Also a bunch of leftover ramen bowl packets.