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This is a bowl version of Shin Ramyun in Tom Yum flavor, made in collaboration with Jay Fai, the Michelin-starred Thai street food chef whose face is on the front of the cup. I had high hopes going in. I think I’ve tried the packet version before and liked it. This one I was really looking forward to, and it delivered.

Produced in the United States. Distributed by South Korea.

The deep magenta bowl of Nongshim Shin Ramyun Tom Yum Flavor Jay Fai edition on a white surface, showing the white NONGSHIM logo, the large hand-brushed black ่พ› character, SHIN RAMYUN in black and yellow text, a purple TOM YUM flavor banner, the JAYFAI yellow logo with Jay Fai's photo, SPICY HAPPINESS IN NOODLES vertical text down the right side, and a photo of the finished Tom Yum ramyun in a black bowl with chili and kaffir lime leaf.

What’s in the Package

Inside the bowl you get a dry noodle disc with small dehydrated vegetable flecks visible, a Tom Yum Paste purple sachet, and a red Shin Cup soup base packet.

The contents of the Nongshim Shin Ramyun Tom Yum Flavor Jay Fai cup laid out on a white surface, showing the empty paper bowl with a round disc of fried wavy wheat noodles dotted with dehydrated vegetable flecks, a purple TOM YUM PASTE sachet, and a red Shin Cup SOUP BASE packet.

How to Cook Nongshim Shin Ramyun Tom Yum Flavor Jay Fai Bowl

Cooking directions per package instructions:

  1. Completely remove lid and tom yum paste. Add soup base.
  2. Pour room temperature water up to the inside line (400ml, about 1 2/3 cups).
  3. Microwave for 5 minutes.
  4. Add tom yum paste, mix well, and serve.

How Does It Taste

I liked this one a lot. Really a lot. James and I both flagged it as a possible favorite of the year.

The broth carries an anchovy umami depth with a clear seafood flavor running through it. The Korean base is still present underneath the Tom Yum paste. You can taste the gochugaru-style red chili that Shin Ramyun is known for, and it holds up against the Thai additions. The bowl reads as a Korean Tom Yum rather than a Thai one, which is exactly what this collaboration is supposed to be.

What keeps it from being a straight Thai Tom Yum is what’s missing: the sharp lemongrass, the bright kaffir lime leaf, the galangal lift. Those notes are there but muted. Tom Yum in Korea reads as a warm, red-spiced, seafood-umami bowl with a little citrus hint, rather than the bright herbal punch of a Thai bowl.

The noodles are the only weak spot. Nongshim’s cup-format noodles are softer than the packet-format ones. They came out a little soft for me. Noodle thickness is a 1 out of 5. Broth viscosity lands at a 2 out of 5. The Tom Yum paste adds body to what would otherwise be a thinner Shin-style broth.

Spice is a 3 out of 5. It’s firmly present but the Tom Yum component adds enough sweetness and sourness that the heat doesn’t carry alone. A comfortable warm level that most people can handle.

A three-quarter view of the finished Nongshim Shin Ramyun Tom Yum Flavor Jay Fai in its paper cup, showing wavy wheat noodles in a deep red-brown Tom Yum broth with visible green onion flecks floating on top.

How Does It Compare

This sits alongside the original Nongshim Shin Ramyun as the Tom Yum variant of the same base formula. Shin is beef-and-mushroom, this is red-chili-and-seafood-with-a-Thai-lean. If you love Shin and want a seafood direction, this one works.

For actual Thai Tom Yum comparisons, theย Mama Tom Yum Shrimpย is the real deal. It’s brighter, more lemongrass and kaffir lime forward, truer to the Thai original but with less broth richness. Theย Maggi Perisa Tom Yamย is the Malaysian take, closer to the Thai direction with that sour-sharp profile. If you want real Tom Yum, grab the Mama. If you want a Korean take on Tom Yum, this is the one.

Within the Nongshim cup family, the Neoguri is the other seafood-forward Nongshim option, though it pushes clam and anchovy rather than Tom Yum’s shrimp-and-lime direction.

Nongshim Shin Ramyun Tom Yum Flavor Jay Fai broth in a glass ramekin

How to Level Up Nongshim Shin Ramyun Tom Yum Flavor Jay Fai Bowl

The broth is rich and what it needs is brightness, not more depth. A squeeze of lime juice at the end is the single biggest upgrade.

A generous handful ofย green onionsย on top gives the bowl the fresh lift it’s looking for. Fresh cilantro if you have it. If you can track down fresh kaffir lime leaf or lemongrass, even better. Those push the bowl toward a real Thai Tom Yum in the way the packet paste doesn’t.

Frozen shrimp dropped in during the steep gives the bowl the real protein element the Tom Yum name implies. A few slices of fresh red chili or a spoonful of chili oil for anyone who wants more heat.

A close-up of the Nongshim Shin Ramyun Tom Yum Flavor Jay Fai being lifted from the paper cup with wooden chopsticks, showing wavy wheat noodles glossy with red-orange Tom Yum broth and steam rising above them.

Final Verdict

The Nongshim Shin Ramyun Tom Yum Flavor Jay Fai Bowl is a Korean take on Tom Yum in cup form, and it’s one of the best Nongshim collaborations I’ve tried. The anchovy umami depth is the standout. The Korean red-chili base holds the bowl together. Marking this as one of our favorites of the year. I’d buy this over and over. Bump the water slightly above the fill line and let it steep a touch longer than the pack says for the best result.

Tasting Notes

  • Spice Level: 3/5
  • Broth Viscosity: 2/5
  • Noodle Thickness: 1/5
  • Noodle Type: Thin and Wavy
  • Topping Suggestions: Lime, Cilantro, Green Onions

How do I rate my ramen? Check out the Ramen Rating Guide.

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