Yaki Ramen Recipe — Stir-Fried Ramen Noodles



⚠️ Allergen notice: This recipe contains wheat (ramen noodles, Worcestershire sauce, soy sauce), soy (soy sauce), and may contain eggs depending on the noodle brand. Pork belly must reach an internal temperature of 145 °F (63 °C). Always check individual product labels if cooking for guests with allergies.

Picture a narrow Fukuoka yatai stall at midnight — the sizzle of a flat iron plate, a plume of fragrant smoke, and a bowl of blistered ramen noodles arriving in under five minutes. That is yaki ramen (焼きラーメン), one of Japan’s most underrated street-food dishes. While yakisoba gets all the international attention, yaki ramen delivers something richer and more complex: thin tonkotsu-style ramen noodles stir-fried on a screaming-hot surface, coated in a sticky, umami-packed sauce built from reduced pork bone broth and Worcestershire sauce.

The dish was born at Kogane-chan (小金ちゃん), a yatai stall established in 1968 in Tenjin, central Fukuoka. According to food historians, the stall owner began grilling leftover ramen noodles doused in tonkotsu broth on the teppan iron plate for customers who found the summer heat too oppressive for a bowl of hot soup. The improvised “makan” (staff meal) became an instant menu item, and the dish spread across Fukuoka’s yatai culture. Today it is a defining Hakata food — as closely associated with the city as tonkotsu ramen itself.

💡 What you’ll learn in this article

  • How yaki ramen differs from yakisoba — noodle type, sauce, and flavor profile
  • Step-by-step recipe with pork belly, bean sprouts, and tonkotsu-Worcestershire sauce
  • Techniques for getting crispy noodles on a home stove (no iron plate required)
  • Three popular variations: shio yaki ramen, mentaiko, and seafood style
  • Answers to the four most common yaki ramen questions

What Is Yaki Ramen?

Yaki ramen (焼きラーメン, literally “grilled ramen”) is a teppan stir-fry dish made with the same ultra-thin straight wheat noodles used in Hakata tonkotsu ramen. Rather than being served in soup, the pre-boiled noodles are pressed onto a hot iron surface, char-grilled until they develop crispy edges, and then tossed with pork belly, bean sprouts, and cabbage. The binding sauce is built from reduced tonkotsu pork bone broth mixed with Worcestershire sauce — a combination that delivers savoury depth with a gentle sweetness that pure tonkotsu soup alone cannot provide.

How yaki ramen compares to yakisoba

At a glance, yaki ramen and yakisoba look almost identical — both are stir-fried noodle dishes topped with pork and vegetables. But they diverge in nearly every important way.

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FeatureYaki RamenYakisoba
Noodle typeThin straight ramen noodle (kansui wheat)Pre-steamed chukamen (slightly thicker)
Sauce baseReduced tonkotsu broth + Worcestershire sauceWorcestershire-based yakisoba sauce
Flavour profileRich, porky, umami-forward, mildly tangyTangy, slightly sweet, lighter body
OriginFukuoka yatai street stalls, 1960s–70sNational festival food, mid-20th century
Cooking surfaceIron plate (teppan) preferred; wok worksWok or flat pan both standard
Common toppingsBenishoga (red pickled ginger), white sesameAonori seaweed powder, katsuobushi flakes
💡 Tip: Why “soba” in yakisoba?
Yakisoba literally means “fried soba,” but the noodles contain no buckwheat. The word soba in this context simply means “thin noodle” in old colloquial Japanese. Similarly, yakisoba noodles are made from wheat — the same raw material as ramen. The key distinction is that yaki ramen uses the specific thin, straight noodle developed for Hakata tonkotsu shops, giving it a silkier bite after stir-frying.

Ingredients (2 Servings)

Main noodle ingredients

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IngredientAmount (metric)Amount (imperial)Notes
Fresh tonkotsu-style ramen noodles180 g (2 portions)6.3 ozStraight, thin; instant tonkotsu noodles work as a shortcut
Pork belly, thinly sliced120 g4.2 ozCut into 3 cm pieces; cook to 145 °F / 63 °C internal
Bean sprouts (moyashi)100 g3.5 ozRinse and drain well before use
Cabbage80 g (~2 leaves)2.8 ozCut into roughly 2 cm squares
Green onion (naganegi)2 stalksWhite part thinly sliced; green part for garnish
Sesame oil1 tsp (5 ml)1 tspAdded at the end for fragrance; do not use for stir-frying
Neutral cooking oil1 tbsp (15 ml)1 tbspCanola, sunflower, or rice bran oil

Tonkotsu-Worcestershire sauce

IngredientAmountNotes
Tonkotsu soup stock (or noodle soup packet)120 ml (½ cup)Use the broth from instant noodle packet, or prepared tonkotsu broth
Worcestershire sauce (chuno or regular)2 tsp (10 ml)Chuno (medium-thick) sauce gives a rounder flavour
Soy sauce1 tsp (5 ml)Adds depth; reduce if using a salty tonkotsu packet
Garlic, grated or minced½ cloveOptional but recommended for home cooking

Garnishes

ItemNotes
Benishoga (red pickled ginger)Small handful; essential for the authentic Fukuoka look
White sesame seeds, toasted1 tsp; sprinkle right before serving
Green onion tops, slicedFor colour contrast
⚠️ Shortcut note on noodles
If you cannot source fresh Hakata-style noodles, a bag of instant tonkotsu ramen is an excellent substitute. Boil the noodles for 30 seconds less than the packet instructions to keep them firm (they will continue cooking in the pan), and reserve the soup powder packet to use as part of your tonkotsu sauce base. This is how many home cooks in Fukuoka actually make yaki ramen at home.

Stir-Frying the Toppings

Getting the toppings right before the noodles hit the pan is the most important step in yaki ramen. The pork needs to be cooked through and lightly caramelised, and the vegetables should retain a slight crunch. Because everything moves quickly once the noodles join the pan, set up your mise en place — all ingredients sliced and sauces mixed — before you turn on the heat.

Step 1: Heat your pan

Place a carbon-steel wok or deep iron frying pan over high heat. Heat it dry for 1–2 minutes until the surface begins to shimmer and a drop of water vaporises instantly on contact. Add the neutral cooking oil and swirl to coat.

💡 Tip: Preheat to prevent sticking
Thin ramen noodles have a strong tendency to stick to a cold or lukewarm pan. A properly preheated iron or carbon-steel surface creates a brief “leidenfrost effect” where the surface moisture evaporates instantly, lifting the noodle away from the metal. Non-stick coated pans rarely get hot enough to achieve this. If you only have a non-stick pan, raise the heat to its maximum safe limit and be sure to dry the noodles thoroughly after boiling.

Step 2: Sear the pork belly

Add the pork belly pieces in a single layer and leave undisturbed for 60–90 seconds until the underside develops a golden-brown colour. Flip and cook for another 30–60 seconds. The pork should reach an internal temperature of 145 °F (63 °C). Push the cooked pork to one side of the pan.

⚠️ Food safety reminder
Thinly sliced pork belly cooks fast, but the internal temperature still needs to reach 145 °F / 63 °C for food safety. Use an instant-read thermometer to check the thickest piece, especially when using slices thicker than 5 mm. Ground pork or minced pork used in variations must reach 160 °F / 71 °C.

Step 3: Add aromatics and vegetables

Add the sliced white part of the green onion to the pork side of the pan and stir-fry for 30 seconds until fragrant. Then add the cabbage and toss vigorously over high heat for 60 seconds until it just begins to soften at the edges but still has bite. Finally, add the bean sprouts and toss for another 30 seconds — they only need brief contact with the heat to warm through without going limp.

💡 Tip: Keep the bean sprouts crunchy
Bean sprouts (moyashi) lose their signature crunch within seconds of overheating. Add them last among the vegetables and keep the pan motion constant. If your home stove cannot sustain a very high heat, you can also add the sprouts at the same time as the noodles in the next step to preserve texture.

Adding Noodles & Sauce

This is the heart of the dish. The noodles need to hit the hot pan, press flat against the surface to develop a slightly charred, blistered exterior, and then absorb the tonkotsu-Worcestershire sauce evenly. Work in stages rather than dumping everything in at once.

Step 4: Boil and drain the noodles

In a separate pot, bring plenty of water to a rolling boil. Cook the ramen noodles for 30–45 seconds less than the packet’s recommended time — you are looking for a firm, almost undercooked texture. Drain immediately and shake the colander vigorously to remove as much surface water as possible. Excess moisture is the enemy of a properly charred noodle.

⚠️ Do not rinse the noodles
Unlike cold noodle dishes where rinsing removes starch to prevent sticking, yaki ramen benefits from the natural starch on the noodle surface. This starch acts as a binder that helps the tonkotsu-Worcestershire sauce cling to each strand rather than pooling at the bottom of the pan.

Step 5: Press and char the noodles

Push the cooked toppings to the edges of the pan, creating a clear hot zone in the centre. Add the drained noodles in a compact mound, then press them firmly with a spatula against the iron surface. Leave undisturbed for 45–60 seconds. You should hear a sustained sizzle and detect a faint toasty aroma — this is the Maillard reaction developing the characteristic char that distinguishes authentic teppan yaki ramen from a plain noodle stir-fry.

💡 Tip: The spatula press technique
Street-stall cooks in Fukuoka use a wide metal spatula (hera) that spans the full width of the iron plate to apply even pressure across the noodles. At home, the back of a flat spatula works well. The goal is to maximise surface contact — not to crush the noodles. If your pan is very large and the noodles spread too thin, cook in two batches.

Step 6: Add the sauce and toss

Pour the pre-mixed tonkotsu-Worcestershire sauce over the noodles. Toss everything together — noodles, toppings, and sauce — for 60–90 seconds over high heat until the sauce reduces to a sticky glaze and coats every strand. The noodles should look slightly caramel-coloured rather than wet. Remove from heat and drizzle the sesame oil over the top.

⚠️ Watch the salt level
Instant ramen soup packets can be quite salty. If you are using the powder packet as your tonkotsu broth base, use only three-quarters of the packet and taste before adding the soy sauce. The finished dish should be savoury and well-seasoned, but not overwhelmingly salty.

Finishing & Plating

Plating the Fukuoka way

Transfer the noodles to a warm plate or bowl. In Fukuoka’s yatai culture, yaki ramen is typically served in a shallow bowl — deeper than a flat plate but less curved than a ramen bowl — so the noodles spread out and the charred edges remain visible. Add a small pile of red pickled ginger (benishoga) to one corner, scatter the sliced green onion tops, and finish with a pinch of toasted white sesame seeds.

💡 Tip: Serve immediately
Yaki ramen is one of the few noodle dishes that genuinely cannot wait. The charred exterior of the noodles softens within 3–4 minutes of leaving the pan as residual moisture from the sauce migrates inward. Serve your guests first, then sit down yourself. If you are cooking for a larger group, use two pans simultaneously rather than batching.

Optional egg finish

Some Fukuoka stalls crack a raw egg directly onto the iron plate alongside the noodles in the final 30 seconds of cooking, then fold it into the dish just before plating. The partially set egg white and runny yolk mix into the sauce, creating a richer, creamier coating. If you prefer your eggs fully cooked, add the beaten egg earlier and scramble it in before adding the noodles.

⚠️ Raw egg safety
If adding a raw egg, use a fresh refrigerated egg and serve immediately without further resting time. Pregnant individuals, young children, older adults, and immunocompromised guests should avoid raw or undercooked eggs. If in doubt, use a fully pasteurised egg or cook the egg completely before folding it into the noodles.

Variations

Shio yaki ramen (salt-seasoned)

Shio yaki ramen substitutes the tonkotsu-Worcestershire base with a lighter chicken-or-dashi-based shio (salt) sauce. The flavour is cleaner and more delicate, letting the charred noodle aroma take centre stage. To make the shio sauce, combine 100 ml of light chicken stock, 1 tsp of sea salt, ½ tsp of white pepper, and a small splash of sake. Reduce this in the pan until just syrupy before adding the noodles. Omit the benishoga garnish and use yuzu zest instead for a bright, citrusy finish.

💡 Tip: Shio variation pairs well with seafood
The lighter shio base is an excellent match for seafood toppings. Replace the pork belly with peeled shrimp (ebi) or scallop slices (hotate). Sear the seafood quickly — shrimp need only 60 seconds per side — and add them back to the dish at the very end to avoid overcooking.

Mentaiko yaki ramen

Mentaiko (辛子明太子), the spicy marinated pollock roe that is another Fukuoka signature product, turns yaki ramen into a richer, more indulgent dish. After removing the pan from heat, dot the hot noodles with 2–3 tablespoons of mentaiko removed from its membrane. The residual heat gently warms the roe without fully cooking it, leaving a creamy, briny flavour. Finish with a drizzle of sesame oil and a squeeze of lemon. Butter (about 1 tsp) folded in alongside the mentaiko creates the popular “mentaiko butter” version found at modern Fukuoka restaurants.

⚠️ Mentaiko allergy note
Mentaiko is pollock roe — a fish product. It also commonly contains chilli powder and MSG. Check the label for cross-contamination with shellfish, as it is often processed in facilities handling multiple types of seafood. Individuals with fish allergies should avoid this variation.

Stamina yaki ramen (garlic-heavy)

The “stamina” style (スタミナ焼きラーメン) amplifies the garlic component to restaurant-style intensity and adds chives (nira) alongside the cabbage and bean sprouts. Double the garlic in the base sauce, slice two cloves of garlic and fry them until golden in the oil before adding the pork, and use a small drizzle of toban djan (chilli bean paste) in the sauce for a background heat. This version is the closest to what you find at Fukuoka lunch joints serving workers during the week.

💡 Tip: Garlic chips as garnish
If you fry the sliced garlic at the very start of cooking in a small pool of oil before the pork belly goes in, you can rescue the golden chips and use them as a crunchy topping at the end. They add a textural contrast and concentrated garlic flavour without making the dish bitter.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Can I use regular yakisoba noodles instead of ramen noodles?

A: Yes, you can, but the texture will differ noticeably. Pre-steamed yakisoba noodles are slightly thicker and already par-cooked, so they dry out faster on high heat and produce a chewier result. For closer authenticity, use the thinnest straight ramen noodles you can find — or use the noodle portion from an instant tonkotsu ramen pack. If yakisoba noodles are your only option, reduce the pan time by about 20 seconds to avoid over-drying them.

Q: What can I use instead of tonkotsu broth?

A: Light chicken stock is the most practical substitute — it has a similar neutral meatiness without the pork intensity. If you are using instant ramen, the attached soup powder packet dissolved in 120 ml of hot water is specifically designed to mimic tonkotsu flavour and is the most convenient option. For a vegetarian version, use a concentrated kombu-shiitake dashi (double strength) combined with a spoonful of white miso. The flavour will be lighter, but the sauce technique remains the same.

Q: Why do my noodles keep sticking to the pan?

A: The two most common causes are insufficient pan heat and excess moisture on the noodles. The pan must be fully preheated before the oil goes in, and the noodles must be drained and shaken dry immediately after boiling. If you are using a non-stick pan, try lightly coating the drained noodles with a small amount of neutral oil in the colander before adding them to the pan — this prevents the starch coating from gluing the strands together during the brief period before the pan heat reaches them.

Q: Is it possible to make yaki ramen in advance?

A: The dish is best cooked and served within 5 minutes for optimal texture. However, you can prepare all components in advance: boil and drain the noodles up to 30 minutes ahead (toss in a tiny bit of sesame oil to prevent clumping), mix the sauce, and have the vegetables sliced and ready. The final stir-fry itself takes less than 5 minutes from the moment the pan is hot. This way you can have restaurant-speed service at a dinner party without last-minute stress.

These three products — a high-performance iron stir-fry pan, the authentic Worcestershire-style sauce used in Fukuoka yaki ramen, and a quality instant tonkotsu noodle shortcut — cover everything you need to make this dish at home. All three are available on Amazon Japan.

極 鉄 フライパン 深型 炒め鍋 26cm IH対応 K1426 (リバーライト)

This Riverlight iron deep stir-fry pan features nitrided iron construction that prevents rust without any chemical coating, and its 26 cm deep shape provides the high-heat cooking surface essential for achieving yaki ramen’s signature charred noodle texture. The thermal mass retains heat when cold drained noodles are added, maintaining the surface temperature needed for the Maillard reaction to develop. IH-compatible and made in Japan. A lighter alternative to the heavier Kiwame JAPAN series with the same performance fundamentals.

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日清ラ王 豚骨 5食パック — restaurant-grade non-fried tonkotsu noodles for yaki ramen

Nissin’s La King Tonkotsu is one of Japan’s top-selling premium instant ramen lines, made with non-fried straight noodles that replicate the texture of fresh Hakata-style ramen noodles far more closely than conventional fried instant noodles. The non-fried process retains a firmer bite, which means the noodles hold their structure when pressed against a hot iron pan for the charring step. Boil for 30–45 seconds less than the packet time to keep them slightly firm, and reserve the tonkotsu soup packet as the base for your sauce. Each pack contains five portions, making it easy to practice the charring technique across multiple cooking sessions.

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S&B 紅しょうが チューブ 38g×10本 — essential Fukuoka yaki ramen garnish

Red pickled ginger (benishoga) is the non-negotiable garnish of authentic Fukuoka yaki ramen — its sharp vinegar punch and crunchy texture cut through the richness of the tonkotsu-Worcestershire sauce in the same way lemon cuts through fried food. S&B’s tube format eliminates the need to chop or drain packaged benishoga, and the measured squeeze control prevents over-garnishing. The same tube works for okonomiyaki, takoyaki, and gyudon. Each pack contains 10 tubes for consistent freshness across multiple cooking sessions.

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🍜 More Hakata & Fukuoka recipes on HowToCook.jp
Explore our full collection of Hakata tonkotsu ramen, Fukuoka street food, and Japanese stir-fry recipes — including step-by-step cooking videos from top Japanese chefs.
Browse all ramen recipes at HowToCook.jp →

Sources & References

  1. Food in Japan — Yaki ramen: history, recipe, and Fukuoka restaurants (foodinjapan.org)
  2. Cookpit — Complete recreation of Kogane-chan yaki ramen: professional-grade recipe analysis (cookpit.jp)
  3. Myojo Foods — Barikata tonkotsu yaki ramen official recipe (myojofoods.co.jp)
  4. Ramensoup-tare.com — Hakata yaki ramen recipe: tonkotsu broth and Worcestershire sauce proportions (ramensoup-tare.com)
  5. Wikipedia — Tonkotsu ramen: history, Fukuoka origin, and preparation overview (en.wikipedia.org)
  6. Visit Kyushu — Everything you need to know about Fukuoka’s tonkotsu ramen culture (visit-kyushu.com)
  7. Hakata Tonkotsu Yaki Ramen — Myojo USA — English-language recipe for stir-fried Hakata tonkotsu yaki ramen, covering the iron-plate stir-fry method, Worcestershire sauce seasoning, and pork belly preparation.
  8. Yakisoba Recipe (Japanese Stir-Fried Noodles) — Just One Cookbook — Detailed stir-fry noodle technique guide with sauce ratios and vegetable preparation steps applicable to the yaki ramen cooking method.

情報の最終確認日: 2026年02月

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