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Мильмён

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Busan's unique cold wheat noodle dish — a survivor's creation from the Korean War that became the city's proudest food identity.

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Milmyeon (밀면, literally 'wheat noodles') is a cold noodle dish indigenous to Busan, Korea's second-largest city. It is prepared in two primary styles: mul-milmyeon (물밀면), served in a cold, savory broth; and bibim-milmyeon (비빔밀면), dressed in a sweet-spicy gochujang sauce. Toppings typically include thin slices of boiled pork, a half hard-boiled egg, julienned cucumber, and braised radish. The noodles that distinguish milmyeon from its cousin naengmyeon are made from wheat flour (sometimes mixed with sweet potato starch) rather than buckwheat. This gives them a somewhat different character: thinner, slightly more elastic, and with a gentler flavor than the earthier buckwheat noodles. The broth for mul-milmyeon is typically made from a combination of pork and beef bones, producing a deeper, richer base than the lighter dongchimi (radish kimchi water) broth common in Pyongyang naengmyeon. Milmyeon is distinctly a Busan food — rarely found in authentic form outside the city. For Busan residents, it is a source of local pride and culinary identity, positioned as their city's answer to Seoul's naengmyeon culture.

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Milmyeon is a Busan-specific dish — the most authentic versions are found only in Busan, particularly in the Seomyeon and Haeundae neighborhoods.

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The Gami Milmyeon area in Seomyeon is the most famous milmyeon district — expect queues at lunchtime.

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If you enjoy naengmyeon but find the buckwheat noodles challenging, milmyeon's wheat noodles are more approachable and the broth is typically more robust.

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