This post may contain affiliate links. Please read our disclosure policy.

Kang Shifu is one of the biggest instant noodle names in China, and I’ve been wanting to work my way through their lineup. This Sichuan green pepper beef felt like a good place to start. The draw here is the green peppercorn. That numbing tingle is hard to fake in a powder packet, so I was curious whether they pulled it off.

Produced in China.

The teal package of Kang Shi Fu Beef Instant Noodles with Sichuan Green Pepper on a white surface, showing the small white-hatted chef logo, KANG SHI FU and ๅบทๅธˆๅ‚… in white at the top, ่—คๆค’ (Vine Pepper) in large white kanji, ็‰›่‚‰ๅ‘ณ (Beef Flavor) in red, "Artificial Beef Flavor With Sichuan Green Pepper" in white English text, "Soup Noodle" in the upper right, and a photo of finished noodles with sliced beef and green peppercorn flecks in a pale broth.

What’s in the Package

Inside the pack you get a round disc of fried wavy wheat noodles and four sachets: a small green oil packet, a larger green dehydrated vegetable flake packet, a dark green sauce paste packet, and a red seasoning sauce packet.

The contents of the Kang Shi Fu Beef Instant Noodles with Sichuan Green Pepper pack laid out on a white surface, showing a round disc of fried wavy wheat noodles on the left, a small green ่—คๆค’ๆฒนๅŒ… (Vine Pepper Oil) packet at the top, a larger green dehydrated vegetable flake packet next to it, a dark green sauce paste packet in the middle right, and a red seasoning sauce packet on the bottom right.

How to Cook Kang Shi Fu Beef Instant Noodles with Sichuan Green Pepper

  1. Boil about 500ml of water and add the noodle disc.
  2. Cook for 3 to 5 minutes until the noodles soften.
  3. Stir in the seasoning sachets, adding the green oil packet last, then serve.
A small clear glass ramekin of the Kang Shi Fu Beef Instant Noodles with Sichuan Green Pepper broth on a white surface, showing a clean pale-amber liquid with a faint green peppercorn fleck visible.

How Does It Taste

The first thing I noticed was the noodles. Kang Shi Fu makes properly good packet noodles. Good texture, right size, springy. These are what I wish MAMA noodles were like.

The base is a clean, salty beef broth. Then the green peppercorn shows up at the end of each bite. It’s a small floral, citrusy tingle that’s more bright than spicy. James compared it to Thai peppers in feel. Almost as good as chili peppers, but its own thing.

The green oil packet is what makes this bowl. Without that hit of fresh green pepper on top, you’d have a fine but generic beef noodle. With it, you get the actual Sichuan signature. James also picked up onion and garlic underneath, plus a green chili note from the dehydrated vegetables.

James put the spice at 2 out of 5. The peppercorn does most of the work, more of a tingly numbness than real heat. Broth viscosity is a 1 out of 5, clean and thin. Noodle thickness is a 1 out of 5, thin but well-textured. There are real beef bits in the bowl too.

A white bowl of the finished Kang Shi Fu Beef Instant Noodles with Sichuan Green Pepper on a wooden table, showing wavy wheat noodles in a pale beige-amber broth with visible small dehydrated beef pieces, green scallion flecks, and small dark green leafy bits.

How Does It Compare

The closest reference on the site is the PaMi Zeng Noodles Scallion Sichuan Pepper, which is the dry-noodle Taiwanese take on the same Sichuan green pepper. PaMi is sauced and dry; this Kang Shi Fu is a soup. Both lean on the same core ingredient.

Within the broader Kang Shi Fu universe, the brand has dozens of flavors but only a few are reviewed on the site. The Sichuan green pepper line is where the brand pushes hardest on regional Chinese flavor identity. If you like this, the Kang Shi Fu line is worth exploring.

Outside Kang Shi Fu, the Nongshim Tantanmen with Chili Oil is the Korean take on Sichuan-style heat.

How to Level Up Kang Shi Fu Beef Instant Noodles with Sichuan Green Pepper

James suggested cabbage and I agree. Some wilted napa cabbage in the broth pulls the bowl closer to a proper Sichuan noodle soup and gives you something more substantial to eat alongside the noodles.

Sliced flank steak or thinly cut leftover beef brisket warmed through in the broth amplifies the artificial-beef seasoning into the real thing. Spicy sauteed beef works for the same reason. Or for an extra Sichuan touch: strip steak rubbed with five-spice and crushed Sichuan peppercorn before searing.

For finishing: a soft-boiled egg, fresh green onions, a few extra crushed Sichuan green peppercorns if you have them in the pantry, and a drizzle of chili oil if you want more heat to balance the floral pepper tingle.

A close-up of the Kang Shi Fu Beef Instant Noodles with Sichuan Green Pepper being lifted from a white bowl with wooden chopsticks, showing wavy pale-yellow wheat noodles glossy with broth, small green scallion specks, and steam rising above them.

Final Verdict

The Kang Shifu Beef Instant Noodles with Sichuan Green Pepper is one of the better Chinese instant beef noodles I’ve had. The green oil packet is what separates it from a generic beef bowl and makes it feel like a real Sichuan dish. The noodles are solid, the broth is clean, and the green peppercorn note is subtle in the right way.

Tasting Notes

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

Where to buy Kang Shi Fu Beef Instant Noodles with Sichuan Green Pepper

0
0 out of 5 stars (based on 0 reviews)
Excellent
Very good
Average
Poor
Terrible

There are no reviews yet. Be the first one to write one.

Think about its overall taste (savory, sweet, sour), richness, and authenticity to the advertised flavor.
Think about their texture, consistency, and how well they held up in the broth.
0 (No Spice) 1 (Mild) 2 (Slightly Spicy) 3 (Moderately Spicy) 4 (Spicy) 5 (Extremely Spicy)

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *