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Korean Slang · neutral

짬뽕

jjamppong/t͈ɕam.p͈oŋ/noun

Spicy seafood noodle soup — the bright-red Korean-Chinese dish that's the fierce rival of 짜장면 in every Korean-Chinese restaurant.

TL;DR · 짬뽕 (jjamppong)
  • Meaning: Spicy seafood noodle soup — the bright-red Korean-Chinese dish that's the fierce rival of 짜장면 in every Korean-Chinese restaurant.
  • Pronunciation: /t͈ɕam.p͈oŋ/ (jjamppong)
  • Part of speech: noun
  • Formality: Neutral — works in most everyday settings.
  • Literal: mixed-things — from Hokkien Chinese 吃飯 via Japanese ちゃんぽん

What does 짬뽕 mean?

짬뽕 (jjamppong) is the spicy Korean-Chinese (중식) noodle soup: thick wheat noodles in a fiery red broth made with 고추기름 (chili oil), seafood (mussels, squid, shrimp), pork, vegetables, and 고추가루 (chili powder). It is the eternal rival of 짜장면 (jjajangmyeon, black bean noodles) — every Korean-Chinese restaurant offers both, and Koreans famously agonize over the choice ("짬짜면" — "jjam-jja-myeon" — was invented as a half-and-half compromise dish). 짬뽕 originates from the Japanese ちゃんぽん (chanpon), itself derived from Hokkien Chinese 吃飯 (chiah-pn̄g, "eat rice"), but the Korean version diverged into a much spicier dish in the 20th century. The "짜장면 vs 짬뽕" dilemma is so culturally embedded it appears in K-drama dialogue, internet memes, and personality test questions ("짜장파 or 짬뽕파?"). Default order on rainy days; comfort food for hangovers.

Literal meaning
mixed-things — from Hokkien Chinese 吃飯 via Japanese ちゃんぽん
Origin
Borrowed from Japanese ちゃんぽん (chanpon, Nagasaki noodle dish), itself from Hokkien Chinese 吃飯. The Korean spicy red-broth version evolved through Korean-Chinese restaurant culture in the early 20th century.

Examples in context

오늘 짬뽕 먹을까?
Oneul jjamppong meogeulkka?
Should we have jjamppong today?
Lunch decision
짜장면 vs 짬뽕, 너는 뭐 좋아해?
Jjajangmyeon dae jjamppong, neoneun mwo joahae?
Jjajangmyeon vs jjamppong — which do you prefer?
Classic Korean dilemma
비 오는 날엔 짬뽕이지.
Bi oneun nalen jjamppongiji.
Rainy days call for jjamppong.
Cultural saying

When to use 짬뽕

  • Korean-Chinese restaurant ordering
  • K-drama food scenes — rainy day, hangover, late-night meals
  • Korean food culture comparisons
  • Discussing the 짜장면 vs 짬뽕 cultural dilemma

When NOT to use 짬뽕

  • Describing Japanese ちゃんぽん — though etymologically related, the Japanese dish is creamy/non-spicy and quite different
  • Describing Chinese spicy seafood noodles — Korean 짬뽕 has its own distinct flavor profile
  • Formal cuisine writing — note the Korean-Chinese (중식) classification explicitly

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Frequently asked questions

What is 짬뽕 (jjamppong)?

짬뽕 (jjamppong) is a Korean-Chinese spicy seafood noodle soup featuring thick wheat noodles in a bright-red broth made with chili oil, chili powder, seafood (squid, mussels, shrimp), pork, and vegetables. It is one of the two pillars of Korean-Chinese cuisine alongside 짜장면.

Is 짬뽕 the same as Japanese ちゃんぽん (chanpon)?

They share an etymology but the dishes are very different. Japanese ちゃんぽん (Nagasaki chanpon) has a creamy white pork-bone broth and is not particularly spicy. Korean 짬뽕 evolved into a fiery red chili broth. Both come from Hokkien Chinese 吃飯 (chiah-pn̄g, "eat rice").

What is the 짜장면 vs 짬뽕 dilemma?

Every Korean-Chinese restaurant offers both 짜장면 (jjajangmyeon, black bean noodles) and 짬뽕 (jjamppong, spicy noodle soup). Choosing between them is a famous Korean cultural dilemma — so famous that 짬짜면 (jjamjjamyeon, half-and-half bowl) was invented as a compromise. Personality tests ask "짜장파 or 짬뽕파?"

How is 짬뽕 pronounced?

짬뽕 is pronounced [t͈ɕam.p͈oŋ] — "jjam-ppong." Two syllables. Both feature tense consonants (the "jj" and "pp" are sharper than English "j/p"). The final -ng is a velar nasal as in English "song." Common Romanizations: "jjamppong" (Revised) or "jjampong."

Further reading

External references for cross-checking the information on this page.

More Korean slang?

Browse the full Korean Slang Dictionary or read the deep-dive: Korean Slang Ultimate Guide.