Hiyashi Chuka Recipe — Japanese Cold Ramen for Summer
This recipe contains wheat (noodles, soy sauce), eggs (kinshi tamago), soy (soy sauce, sesame paste may contain traces), and sesame (sesame sauce, sesame oil in soy dressing). If serving guests with allergies, check all packaged noodles and condiments for cross-contamination declarations.
When the humidity climbs and a hot bowl of ramen feels like the last thing you want, hiyashi chuka (冷やし中華, literally “chilled Chinese-style”) is the answer every Japanese household reaches for. A mound of springy ramen noodles — shocked in ice water until they snap against your teeth — gets fanned with vibrant, julienned toppings and doused in a bright, tangy dressing. The whole bowl is served cold and eaten at the table with no waiting, no steaming broth to navigate around. It is one of Japan’s most beloved seasonal dishes, and it disappears from restaurant menus the moment autumn arrives.
What makes hiyashi chuka endlessly interesting is that Japanese home cooks and restaurants are divided into two camps: soy sauce dressing (醤油だれ) versus sesame sauce (ごまだれ). The soy dressing is tart, clean, and citrusy — a vinegar-forward style that lets the toppings shine. The sesame sauce is rich, nutty, and creamy — closer in spirit to a chilled dan dan noodle. Both are equally traditional, and this guide gives you a complete recipe for each.
- The difference between soy sauce dressing and sesame sauce — and when to use each
- How to make kinshi tamago (paper-thin egg crepe strips) without tearing them
- The ice-water noodle technique that gives hiyashi chuka its signature snap
- Classic topping combinations and assembly tips for a restaurant-style presentation
- Answers to the four most common hiyashi chuka questions
What Is Hiyashi Chuka?
Hiyashi chuka is a Japanese cold noodle dish made with ramen-style wheat noodles served at room temperature or chilled, topped with a colorful array of sliced vegetables, egg crepe, and cured meat, then dressed with either a soy-vinegar or sesame-based sauce. Despite the word chūka (中華, “Chinese”) in the name, the dish is thoroughly Japanese — an adaptation of Chinese cold noodle concepts that took on its own identity in Japan by the late 1930s.
A brief history: two origin stories
The most widely accepted account places the dish’s invention in 1937 at a Chinese restaurant called Ryūtei in Sendai, Miyagi Prefecture. The owner developed the cold noodle dish to reverse the summer sales slump, pairing cold ramen with a soy-vinegar soup. A competing theory traces the dish to the early 1930s at Yōsukō Saikan in Jimbocho, Tokyo, where the chef drew inspiration from the Shanghai cold noodle dish liangban mian (涼拌麺) and Japanese zaru soba. Either way, the dish had become a national staple by the 1960s when packaged kits from Sendai-based Daikyu Seimen brought it into every home kitchen. July 7th is now officially Hiyashi Chuka Day in Japan, registered in 1995 to mark the start of the hottest part of summer.
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| Feature | Soy Sauce Dressing (醤油だれ) | Sesame Sauce (ごまだれ) |
|---|---|---|
| Flavor profile | Tart, savory, clean | Rich, nutty, creamy |
| Main character | Rice vinegar and soy sauce | White sesame paste |
| Texture on noodles | Thin and watery — pours freely | Thick and coating — clings to noodles |
| Best with | Ham, cucumber, tomato, crab | Steamed chicken, bean sprouts, corn |
| Regional leaning | Tohoku, Tokyo standard | Popular nationwide, especially Kansai |
| Prep time | 5 minutes (no cooking) | 5 minutes (no cooking) |
| Make-ahead | Up to 3 days refrigerated | Up to 3 days refrigerated |
Ingredients (2 servings)
Noodles
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| Ingredient | Amount (metric) | Amount (imperial) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fresh ramen noodles (or dried hiyashi chuka noodles) | 280 g | 10 oz | Medium-thin (1–1.5 mm); wavy preferred |
| Ice cubes | Large bowl’s worth | — | Essential for the cold-shock step |
Toppings
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| Ingredient | Amount | Prep |
|---|---|---|
| Eggs | 2 large | Made into kinshi tamago (see below) |
| Ham (or sliced roast pork) | 4 slices (60 g / 2 oz) | Julienned into thin matchsticks |
| Japanese cucumber | 1 medium (100 g / 3.5 oz) | Julienned into thin matchsticks |
| Tomato | 1 medium | Cut into wedges or thin half-moons |
| Bean sprouts (optional) | 80 g (3 oz) | Blanched 30 seconds, cooled, drained |
| Japanese mustard (karashi), or yellow mustard | Small dab per bowl | Served on the side; classic garnish |
The easiest way to taste both dressing styles side by side: Maruchan’s premium seimen (生麺-style) pack includes five soy-dressing and five sesame-dressing portions. The noodles have noticeably more bounce than standard instant hiyashi chuka kits, and the included tare sachets are well-balanced enough to use as a reference when calibrating your homemade sauce.
Soy-Based Sauce
The soy dressing is built on four equal parts: soy sauce, rice vinegar, and water, with sugar to take the edge off the acid. Sesame oil adds fragrance without making the sauce heavy. The mixture is stirred cold — no cooking needed — which keeps the vinegar’s bright edge intact.
Ingredients (soy dressing, 2 servings)
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| Ingredient | Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Soy sauce (koikuchi) | 3 Tbsp (45 ml) | Standard Japanese dark soy sauce |
| Rice vinegar (unseasoned) | 3 Tbsp (45 ml) | Unseasoned; seasoned rice vinegar adds unwanted sweetness |
| Water | 3 Tbsp (45 ml) | Cold; dilutes without clouding |
| Sugar | 1 Tbsp | Dissolves easily; adjust to taste |
| Toasted sesame oil | 1 tsp | Fragrance only — do not increase |
| La-yu (Japanese chili oil), optional | ¼ tsp | Adds a mild, traditional heat |
How to make the soy dressing
- Combine soy sauce, rice vinegar, water, and sugar in a small bowl or jar. Stir or shake vigorously until the sugar is fully dissolved — about 30 seconds.
- Add sesame oil and la-yu (if using). Stir to combine.
- Refrigerate for at least 15 minutes before serving. The dressing keeps in the fridge for up to 3 days.
Japanese rice vinegar is milder than cider or white wine vinegar. If you are substituting, start with 2 tablespoons of the stronger vinegar and add more water to compensate. The dressing should taste pleasantly tart but not mouth-puckering — the noodles and toppings will absorb some of the acidity when dressed.
Sesame Sauce
The sesame sauce starts from white sesame paste (白ねりごま, shiro neri goma) — the same base used for Japanese sesame dressings and dan dan noodles. It is thicker and more filling than the soy dressing, and it coats every strand of noodle in a smooth, fragrant layer.
Ingredients (sesame sauce, 2 servings)
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| Ingredient | Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| White sesame paste (shiro neri goma) | 3 Tbsp | Or substitute unsweetened tahini |
| Soy sauce | 3 Tbsp (45 ml) | Koikuchi; adds saltiness and depth |
| Rice vinegar (unseasoned) | 2 Tbsp (30 ml) | Less vinegar than soy dressing — creaminess needs less acid |
| Sugar | 1½ Tbsp | Slightly sweeter than the soy version |
| Chicken stock or water | 4 Tbsp (60 ml) | Loosens the paste; chicken stock adds more body |
| Toasted sesame oil | 1 tsp | Amplifies sesame fragrance |
How to make the sesame sauce
- Place the sesame paste in a bowl. It may be firm or have separated oil on top — stir it within the jar first.
- Add soy sauce and sugar. Whisk together until the paste loosens into a thick, unified mixture.
- Gradually pour in the chicken stock (or water), whisking constantly. The sauce will thin and become smooth. If it looks lumpy at first, keep whisking — it comes together quickly.
- Add rice vinegar and sesame oil. Taste and adjust: add more vinegar if it feels too rich, more sugar if it tastes too sharp.
- Refrigerate for at least 15 minutes. The sauce thickens slightly as it chills, which is fine — it will loosen again when poured over warm-from-the-ice-bath noodles.
Japanese white sesame paste is lighter in flavor than Chinese sesame paste (which is roasted darker). If you use Chinese-style sesame paste or dark tahini, reduce the amount to 2 tablespoons and add an extra teaspoon of toasted sesame oil to brighten the fragrance. Peanut butter works in a pinch — the flavor will shift toward satay-style rather than classic Japanese sesame.
Noodle Prep
The noodles are what separates a memorable hiyashi chuka from a mediocre one. Under-chilled noodles turn soft and sticky within minutes of plating. The two-step method below — cold running water followed by an ice-water bath — gives the noodles a firm, snappy texture that holds up through the whole bowl.
Boiling the noodles
- Bring a large pot of unsalted water to a full rolling boil. Use at least 2 liters (8 cups) of water per 140 g (5 oz) of noodles so the temperature recovers quickly.
- Add the noodles and cook according to the package instructions — typically 2–3 minutes for fresh noodles and 4–5 minutes for dried. Stir with chopsticks or tongs for the first 30 seconds to prevent clumping.
- Taste a strand 30 seconds before the suggested time. You are looking for fully cooked but with a very slight firmness at the core — they will firm up further in the ice bath.
Ramen noodles already contain salt and kansui (alkaline mineral water), which gives them their characteristic springiness and yellow tint. Adding salt to the boiling water can make the noodles noticeably salty before the dressing is even applied.
The cold-shock (ice-water bath)
- Drain the cooked noodles immediately into a colander. Do not rinse yet.
- Rinse under cold running water for 30 seconds, rubbing the noodles between your palms to wash off surface starch. This prevents the sticky, clumped texture that is the main complaint with home-made hiyashi chuka.
- Transfer the rinsed noodles into a large bowl filled with ice water. Leave for 1–2 minutes. The noodles will contract and tighten, developing a noticeably springier bite.
- Drain thoroughly and shake the colander to remove as much water as possible. Excess moisture dilutes the dressing on the plate.
Skipping the cold water rinse leaves a sticky coating of surface starch on each noodle. This makes the noodles clump together as soon as they cool, and causes the dressing to pool at the bottom of the bowl rather than coating the strands evenly. Always rinse until the water runs clear before the ice bath.
Toppings
The toppings for hiyashi chuka are cut into uniform matchsticks (about 5 cm / 2 inches long and 3–4 mm wide), which lets you eat them together with the noodles in a single chopstick motion. Tomato is the exception — it is sliced into wedges or thin crescents for color contrast. The visual arrangement matters: toppings are traditionally placed in separate rows fanning out from the center of the noodle mound, creating a striped, rainbow-like appearance before the dressing is poured.
Kinshi tamago (錦糸卵 — golden thread eggs)
Kinshi tamago is a paper-thin egg crepe cut into fine strips. It is the most technically demanding of the standard toppings, but only marginally — the key is low heat and patience.
- Beat 2 eggs with a pinch of salt and ½ tsp sugar. Strain through a fine-mesh sieve into a bowl to remove any chalazae (white strings). This gives the crepes a uniformly smooth, glossy texture.
- Heat a 26–28 cm (10–11 in) non-stick pan over low heat. Brush with a thin film of neutral oil.
- Pour in half the egg mixture and immediately tilt the pan to spread it into a thin, even layer — thinner than a regular omelette. Cook on low heat for about 90 seconds until the surface is just set and no longer wet-looking. Do not flip; the steam from the pan cooks the top.
- Slide the egg crepe onto a cutting board. Let it cool for 2 minutes, then roll it loosely and cut into fine strips (2–3 mm wide). Fluff the strips with your fingers to separate them.
- Repeat with the remaining egg mixture.
The white, rope-like chalazae in a raw egg will cook into visible white streaks in your crepe — harmless, but less attractive. Straining takes under 30 seconds and produces a uniformly yellow, silk-smooth kinshi tamago that looks professional on the plate.
Ham
Standard Japanese hiyashi chuka uses thinly sliced processed ham (ハム). Stack 3–4 slices and cut into matchsticks about 4 mm (⅙ in) wide. For a more substantial version, use thin-sliced chashu pork or steamed chicken breast (shredded or julienned). Imitation crab sticks (kanikama) are also traditional and can be mixed with the ham or used alone.
Cucumber releases significant moisture after cutting. If you are prepping toppings more than 30 minutes in advance, lightly salt the julienned cucumber, let it sit for 5 minutes, then squeeze gently and pat dry before plating. This prevents a pool of cucumber water from collecting at the base of the noodles and diluting the dressing.
Cucumber
Japanese cucumbers (きゅうり) are thinner, less watery, and have fewer seeds than the standard Western cucumber. They are ideal here. If using a regular cucumber, halve it lengthways and scrape out the seedy core before julienning. Cut into thin matchsticks about 5 cm (2 in) long.
Tomato
Cut into thin wedges or half-moon slices. The tomato is the only topping that is not julienned — its broader surface adds color and a juicy contrast to the crisp cucumber and salty ham. Use ripe, in-season tomatoes for maximum sweetness.
Assembly
Plating the bowl
- Mound the chilled, drained noodles in the center of a wide, shallow bowl. For two people, divide the noodles evenly between two bowls. Keep the mound slightly domed rather than flattened — this gives you room to arrange the toppings in the traditional fan pattern.
- Arrange the toppings in separate sections radiating outward from the center: kinshi tamago, cucumber, ham, and tomato each occupy their own “stripe.” Bean sprouts, if using, can go beneath or between sections. Aim for visual balance — alternate warm and cool colors around the bowl.
- Add a small dab of Japanese mustard (karashi) to the side of each bowl. This is not mixed in but dabbed onto individual bites as you eat. It cuts through the richness of the sesame sauce particularly well.
- Pour or spoon the chilled dressing over the noodles and toppings at the table, just before eating. Pouring in advance soaks the noodles and softens the toppings.
In Japan, the appearance of hand-written signs in ramen shop windows reading 冷やし中華はじめました (“We’ve started serving hiyashi chuka”) is an unofficial sign of summer’s arrival. The dish typically disappears from menus around mid-September with an equally ceremonious 終わりました (“We’ve finished serving it for the year”). Making it at home means you can enjoy it any time — but its brevity in restaurants is part of its charm.
How to eat it
Use chopsticks to mix the noodles with the toppings and dressing before eating, ensuring every strand is coated. Hiyashi chuka is meant to be eaten briskly — the noodles are at their best in the first 10 minutes after dressing is applied, before the toppings warm slightly from room temperature. Dab mustard onto individual bites as you go.
Applying the dressing more than a few minutes before eating causes the noodles to absorb the liquid and soften noticeably. For the best texture, keep the dressing in a small jug or bowl, bring it to the table with the plated noodles, and pour just before the first bite. This is especially important with the sesame sauce, which is thick enough to mat the noodles together if left to sit.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What noodles should I use if I can’t find hiyashi chuka noodles?
A: Fresh or dried ramen noodles (the medium-thin, wavy style sold at Asian grocery stores) are the closest substitute. Sun Noodle brand, available at many Asian supermarkets in North America, works well. In a pinch, thin Chinese egg noodles or even dried somen noodles can stand in — both hold up to the cold-shock rinse. Avoid thick udon; the texture mismatch makes the dish feel heavy rather than refreshing. If you are in Japan, look for 中華麺 (chūka men) in the refrigerated or dried noodle aisle.
Q: Can I make hiyashi chuka ahead for a packed lunch?
A: Yes, with some precautions. Pack the dressing in a separate sealed container and pour it over at lunchtime rather than mixing in advance. Keep the noodles and toppings in a cold container with an ice pack — the noodles turn soft quickly at room temperature. A practical bento trick from food professionals: freeze the dressing sachet overnight and place it directly on top of the noodles inside the box; it acts as its own ice pack and defrosts in time for lunch.
Q: Why does my hiyashi chuka dressing taste too sharp or too flat?
A: For the soy dressing, sharpness usually means too much vinegar relative to sugar — add sugar in ½ tsp increments and taste after each addition. Flatness usually means not enough salt (soy sauce) or the dressing was applied too generously, diluting itself across too many noodles. For the sesame sauce, if it tastes one-dimensional, add a small splash more rice vinegar — the acid brings all the other flavors into focus. Both sauces benefit from being made 30+ minutes ahead so the flavors can meld in the refrigerator.
Q: Is hiyashi chuka the same as hiyashi ramen or reimen?
A: They are related but distinct. Hiyashi chuka uses a dressing-style sauce (no broth) and the classic five-stripe topping arrangement. Hiyashi ramen is a less common term sometimes used for cold ramen served in a small amount of chilled broth — closer to a cold soup. Reimen (冷麺) refers to Korean-style cold noodles (naengmyeon) made from buckwheat or potato starch; these have a chewier, bouncier texture, a sweet-sour broth, and different toppings including julienned pear and cucumber. The three dishes share the cold temperature but differ significantly in noodle, sauce, and cultural origin.
Recommended Items
These items cover three different needs: a quality noodle kit for quick weeknight preparation, a sesame paste for making restaurant-grade sesame sauce from scratch, and a wide shallow bowl that presents the finished dish properly.
Made from 100% selected white sesame with no emulsifiers or stabilizers, this Kyoto-based mill’s paste is noticeably smoother and more fragrant than supermarket brands. Its naturally separated oil on top is a sign of purity — just stir it in before use. This is the type of sesame paste that produces a properly thick, coating sesame sauce rather than a thin, watery one. Works equally well for dan dan noodles and dressings.
Direct from a specialist noodle maker, this set provides restaurant-quality fresh (not dried) hiyashi chuka noodles with a commercial-grade tare. The noodles have a noticeably higher water content than mass-market products, which translates to a softer, more authentic chew after the ice bath. Shelf life is 10 days at room temperature.
A convenient pantry option for sesame-style lovers: Itsuki’s 220 g single-serving packs store at room temperature and have a good shelf life, making them practical for summer meal prep. The noodles and sesame tare are packaged separately so the noodles don’t absorb the sauce before use.
For a step-by-step video version of hiyashi chuka, watch Koh Kentetsu’s recipe on HowToCook.jp. His approach to the sesame sauce is particularly precise, with exact ratios and a technique for achieving the right consistency every time.
Sources & References
- Kikkoman Home Cooking — Homemade Soy Sauce Dressing Hiyashi Chuka (手づくりしょうゆだれの冷やし中華): Kikkoman’s official recipe with precise soy-vinegar tare ratios and technique notes for the dressing, used as a benchmark for ingredient proportions in this article.
- Kikkoman Home Cooking — Popular Hiyashi Chuka Recipe Collection: Overview of multiple hiyashi chuka variations including the standard soy dressing, sesame variation, and cold noodle preparation tips.
- Nichirei Foods Media — Hiyashi Chuka Bento: Noodle Tips and Cold-Pack Techniques: Professional guidance on preventing noodle sticking, moisture management for toppings, and the frozen-dressing-as-ice-pack bento method.
- Wikipedia — Hiyashi Chūka: Overview of the dish’s origin stories (Sendai 1937 and Tokyo 1930s), the registration of Hiyashi Chuka Day on July 7th, and its national popularization through packaged kits in the 1960s.
- Food in Japan — Hiyashi Chuka: Soy Sauce vs Sesame Sauce, Recipe, Restaurants: Detailed regional comparison of the two dressing styles, historical context of the dish’s Sendai origins, and guidance on topping variety by region.
- Sudachi Recipes — Authentic Hiyashi Chuka (Japanese Cold Ramen for Summer): Step-by-step recipe with detailed kinshi tamago technique, julienning guidance for standard toppings, and notes on sauce consistency for both dressing styles.
- Just One Cookbook — Hiyashi Chuka (Japanese Cold Ramen): Comprehensive recipe with detailed kinshi tamago instructions, egg-straining technique, and tips for achieving uniform thin strips ideal for cold noodle presentation.
Information last verified: February 2026