The only shrimp yaki udon recipe that's genuinely Korean, genuinely spicy, and genuinely 10 minutes

Spicy Korean Shrimp Yaki Udon (10-Minute Seafood Stir Fry)

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This Korean-style shrimp yaki udon is spicier, bolder, and ready in just 10 minutes, faster than any other version out there.

I know what you’re thinking: ‘Korean noodles’ sounds a bit out of reach. You’ve probably seen recipes calling for a trip to the Korean grocery store to pick up gochujang, kimchi, and a list of ingredients you’ve yet to discover. This is not that recipe. As a Korean home cook, I can confidently say this stir fried udon recipe is the most accessible Korean noodle dish you’ll ever make and it doesn’t sacrifice a single drop of that bold, fiery Korean flavor.

Korean shrimp yaki udon recipe, seafood udon stir fry, stir fried udon recipe
10-Minute Spicy Korean Shrimp Yaki Udon

This spicy shrimp yaki udon is my weeknight secret. One pan, pantry staples, and 10 minutes standing between you and a restaurant-worthy bowl. No kimchi. No gochujang. And yes, it’s still genuinely, deeply Korean.

Why This Recipe Works

  • Ready in 10 minutes: Faster than any other Korean noodle dish or any shrimp yaki udon recipe online.
  • No kimchi needed: Real Korean flavor comes from gochugaru + oyster sauce. No specialty shopping required.
  • One pan, minimal cleanup: The whole thing cooks in a single wok. Done in the time it takes to wash dishes.
Korean shrimp yaki udon recipe, seafood udon stir fry, stir fried udon recipe
Spicy shrimp yaki udon in a bowl

Is Yaki Udon Korean or Japanese?

Yaki udon is originally a Japanese dish, widely believed to have been created in Fukuoka during World War II when ramen noodles were scarce. The word “yaki” simply means “fried” or “grilled” in Japanese.

what is japanese and korean yaki udon difference?
Japanese yaki udon: cooking.nytimes

Here’s the fun part: the Korean-style version has its own separate origin story. It didn’t come from a Japanese restaurant, it’s actually said to have started in a Chinese restaurant in Daegu, Korea. Over time, Korean cooks put their own spin on it, swapping out the traditional sweet soy glaze for something spicier and more intensely savory. The result is something that stands entirely on its own and the best way to experience it is this seafood udon stir fry.

Korean shrimp yaki udon recipe, seafood udon stir fry, stir fried udon recipe
Spicy Korean stir fried udon recipe

The biggest difference? Fine Gochugaru (Korean red pepper powder). It gives this Korean shrimp yaki udon its signature deep-red color and that warm, smoky heat you can’t get from regular chili flakes. And unlike a gochujang cream sauce or kimchi stir-fry, you don’t need any specialty Korean ingredients to make this dish work.

StyleSauce BaseHeat LevelGarnish
🇯🇵 Japanese Yaki UdonWorcestershire sauce, soy sauce, oyster sauce : salty-sweetNone (mild)Fried egg, kewpie mayo, bonito flakes
🇰🇷 Korean Yaki UdonSoy sauce + oyster sauce + gochugaru: savory with bold heatMedium–high (adjustable)Bonito flakes; no mayo (Koreans don’t like it too rich)

Once you try this Korean shrimp yaki udon, the mild Japanese original feels incomplete. This is the stir fried udon recipe that changes how you think about weeknight noodles.

[Shop Gochugaru🌶]

If you can’t find gochugaru, substitute it with paprika powder (for color without heat), cayenne pepper (for pure heat), or any mild chili powder you have on hand. Or skip it entirely. This seafood udon stir fry is still incredibly flavorful without it.

Korean shrimp yaki udon recipe, seafood udon stir fry, stir fried udon recipe
The Korean seafood udon stir fry that beats any takeout, made in one pan.

Ingredients

Here’s everything you need for this shrimp yaki udon. The ingredient list is intentionally short, that’s the point of this stir fried udon recipe.

Main Ingredients

  • 1 pack Udon noodles: Frozen or vacuum-packed. Avoid dried, texture won’t be the same.
  • 6 pieces Shrimp: Frozen is fine, thaw in cold water before cooking.
  • 1 small Onion: Sliced thin.
  • ½ stalk Green onion
  • 50g Bean sprouts
  • ½ tbsp Minced garlic: Garlic is non-negotiable in Korean cooking.
  • 3 tbsp Cooking oil

🍤 Shop Ingredients on Amazon

Sauce

🌶 Shop Ingredients on Amazon

🔄 Easy Substitutions

Gochugaru: Paprika powder (color, no heat), cayenne pepper (heat, no color), or any chili powder. Skip entirely if you don’t like spice, still delicious.

Mirin: Dry white wine or a splash of rice vinegar + a pinch of sugar.

Korean jin ganjang: Regular Japanese soy sauce works perfectly. The flavor is slightly lighter but still great.

Korean shrimp yaki udon recipe, seafood udon stir fry, stir fried udon recipe
Paring the Korean shrimp yaki udon with beer

Step-by-Step: Spicy Korean Shrimp Yaki Udon

This seafood udon stir fry comes together so fast that I strongly recommend prepping everything before you turn on the heat. Stir-fry waits for no one.

Thaw & Peel the Shrimp

Place frozen shrimp in a bowl of cold water and let them thaw while you prep everything else. Once thawed, peel and devein.

Korean shrimp yaki udon recipe, seafood udon stir fry, stir fried udon recipe
Frozen shrimp thawing in cold water: spicy stir fried udon recipe

Prep the Vegetables

Mince the garlic, slice the onion into thin strips, and chop the green onion into small rounds. In Korean cooking, garlic is mostly minced.

Korean shrimp yaki udon recipe, seafood udon stir fry, stir fried udon recipe
Minced garlic, sliced onion, and chopped green onion.

🧄 Save time with a garlic press

Over 99% of Korean recipes call for minced garlic. A good garlic press means no knife and no garlic smell on your cutting board. [Shop garlic press on Amazon 🧄]

Rinse the Bean Sprouts

Rinse the bean sprouts under cold water and drain well. For the best texture, trim off the brown root tips. It’s a small step that makes the final dish look much more polished.

Korean shrimp yaki udon recipe, seafood udon stir fry, stir fried udon recipe
Trim the bean sprout roots for a cleaner look.

Make the Sauce

This is the sauce that makes this shrimp yaki udon taste unmistakably Korean bold and spicy. In a small bowl, combine 2 tbsp oyster sauce, 1 tbsp soy sauce, 1 tbsp mirin, ⅔ tbsp sugar, and ⅔ tbsp gochugaru. Mix well and set aside. This is your bold, spicy Korean shrimp yaki udon sauce.

Korean shrimp yaki udon recipe, seafood udon stir fry, stir fried udon recipe
The spicy shrimp yaki udon sauce

Blanch the Udon Noodles

Drop the udon into boiling water for exactly 10 seconds, just long enough to loosen the noodles. Immediately rinse under cold water and drain in a colander.

  • Pro Tip: Don’t overcook the noodles. 10 seconds is not a typo. Over-blanched udon turns mushy the moment it hits the hot pan. You want noodles that are still firm enough to stir-fry. They’ll finish cooking in the wok.
Korean shrimp yaki udon recipe, seafood udon stir fry, stir fried udon recipe
10 seconds in boiling water is all the udon needs.

Stir-Fry the Aromatics

Heat the cooking oil in your pan over high heat. Add the green onion, sliced onion, and minced garlic. Stir-fry quickly until fragrant, you want some color on the onion but not fully softened.

Korean shrimp yaki udon recipe, seafood udon stir fry, stir fried udon recipe
Aromatics hit the hot oil: Korean stir fried udon recipe

Add the Shrimp

When the onion turns slightly translucent, add the shrimp. Stir-fry over high heat, shrimp cooks fast. You’re looking for the color to change from grey to pink on the outside.

Korean shrimp yaki udon recipe, seafood udon stir fry, stir fried udon recipe
Shrimp going in at 80%: shrimp yaki udon recipe

Add Noodles, Bean Sprouts & Sauce

When the shrimp is about 80% cooked, still slightly translucent in the center, add the udon noodles and bean sprouts. Pour the sauce over everything and toss continuously over high heat until the noodles are deeply coated and the sauce has been absorbed.

  • Why 80% cooked shrimp? The shrimp will finish cooking in the sauce as you toss. If you wait until they’re fully cooked before adding the noodles, they’ll be rubbery and overcooked by the time the dish is done. This is the most common mistake people make with seafood udon stir fry.
Korean shrimp yaki udon recipe, seafood udon stir fry, stir fried udon recipe
TKorean seafood udon stir fry made with shrimp, onion, and bean sprouts in a single pan

🍳 Why I use a steel pan

wok pan
[Steel wok pan on Amazon↗]

Unlike coated non-stick pans that degrade over time, steel is chemical-free and gets better with every use. The high heat retention creates the Maillard reaction that gives stir-fries their deep flavor, the same reason every professional kitchen runs on steel.

[Shop carbon steel wok on Amazon →🍳]

Plate & Serve

Transfer to a plate and immediately top with bonito flakes if using. They’ll wave and curl from the heat, a satisfying visual that also signals freshness. Serve right away, seafood udon stir fry is best eaten hot.

Korean shrimp yaki udon recipe, seafood udon stir fry, stir fried udon recipe
One pan Korean shrimp yaki udon

Pro Tips for The Best Shrimp Yaki Udon

  • Don’t overcook the shrimp. Overcooked shrimp turns chalky and tough. They’ll finish in the sauce.
  • Blanch udon for exactly 10 seconds. Longer than that, and the noodles will fall apart during stir-frying. You’ll end up with mush instead of that satisfying chewy bite.
  • Always use high heat. Onions and bean sprouts release water when cooked low and slow. You’ll get a soggy stir-fry instead of a caramelized, flavorful one.
  • Adjust the spice to your comfort. Start with half the gochugaru if you’re heat-sensitive, and taste before adding more. Or swap it for paprika for a mild, colorful result, still a great stir fried udon recipe.
  • Mix the sauce before you start cooking. Once the pan is hot, everything moves fast. Having the sauce ready to pour in is essential for a smooth 10-minute cook.
Korean shrimp yaki udon recipe, seafood udon stir fry, stir fried udon recipe
One pan, 10 minutes, and the best shrimp yaki udon

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Japanese ketchup pasta

Napolitan Spaghetti Recipe (Naporitan): Easy Japanese Ketchup Pasta

Master Napolitan Spaghetti recipe (Naporitan). A delicious Japanese ketchup pasta ready in 15 minutes. Perfect for a quick and satisfying dinner!
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toowoomba pasta

Toowoomba Pasta (Cream Korean Pasta)

This dish features thick pasta coated in a spicy cream sauce made with Korean red pepper flakes. The addition of gochugaru helps balance the richness of the cream, making it more appealing to Koreans, who generally prefer less greasy flavors.
CHECK OUT THIS RECIPE

FAQ about Korean Seafood Udon Stir Fry

Yaki udon is originally a Japanese dish, believed to have started in Fukuoka. Interestingly, Korean-style yaki udon has its own separate origin. It’s said to have developed in a Chinese restaurant in Daegu, Korea, though it was clearly inspired by the Japanese version. Today the two styles are distinct enough to be considered their own dishes.

Regular udon is a soup dish served in hot dashi broth. Yaki udon is stir-fried in oil in a wok or pan, giving it a completely different texture and flavor profile, chewy, slightly charred, and coated in a savory sauce rather than swimming in liquid.

This shrimp yaki udon tastes savory, umami-rich, with a warm spicy heat that builds gradually. The oyster sauce adds depth, gochugaru brings that distinctly Korean smoky spice, and the bean sprouts give satisfying crunch against the chewy noodles.


Absolutely. Replace the gochugaru with paprika powder for color without any heat, or skip the chili altogether. The dish is still deeply flavorful. The oyster sauce and soy sauce carry more than enough umami on their own. This seafood udon stir fry is just as good at zero spice.

Absolutely. Thinly sliced chicken or pork belly both work great in this seafood udon stir fry base, just adjust cook time since chicken takes longer than shrimp.

Fresh shrimp for Korean shrimp yaki udon — peeled and deveined
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Spicy Korean Shrimp Yaki Udon

By Blonde Kimchi
A quick and fiery Korean-style shrimp yaki udon loaded with chewy noodles, juicy shrimp, and crisp vegetables, all tossed in a bold gochugaru-spiked sauce. Ready in just 10 minutes. No kimchi or gochujang required.
Prep Time:1 minute
Cook Time:9 minutes
Total Time:10 minutes
Servings: 1 person
Calories: 898kcal

Ingredients

Main

  • 1 pack Udon noodles
  • 6 pieces Shrimp
  • 1 Onion small
  • 1/2 stalk Green onion
  • 50 g Bean sprouts
  • 1/2 tbsp Minced garlic
  • 3 tbsp Cooking oil

Sauce

Garnish (Optional)

Instructions

  1. Thaw & peel shrimp in cold water.
    💡Add a splash of mirin to reduce any fishy odor. Peel and devein once thawed.
    6 pieces Shrimp
    Korean shrimp yaki udon recipe, seafood udon stir fry, stir fried udon recipe
  2. Prep vegetables: mince garlic, slice onion thin, chop green onion into rounds.
    1 Onion, 1/2 stalk Green onion, 1/2 tbsp Minced garlic
    Korean shrimp yaki udon recipe, seafood udon stir fry, stir fried udon recipe
  3. Rinse bean sprouts, trim roots, and drain well.
    50 g Bean sprouts
    Korean shrimp yaki udon recipe, seafood udon stir fry, stir fried udon recipe
  4. Mix the sauce: oyster sauce, soy sauce, mirin, sugar, and gochugaru in a small bowl. Set aside.
    2 tbsp Oyster sauce, 1 tbsp Korean soy sauce, 1 tbsp Korean cooking wine Matsul, 2/3 tbsp Fine Gochugaru, 2/3 tbsp Sugar
    Spicy Korean shrimp yaki udon sauce mixed in a bowl — oyster sauce, soy sauce, mirin, sugar, and gochugaru
  5. Blanch udon for exactly 10 seconds in boiling water.
    Rinse with cold water and drain.
    1 pack Udon noodles
  6. Heat oil in a pan on high heat.
    Stir-fry green onion, onion, and garlic until fragrant.
    1/2 stalk Green onion, 1/2 tbsp Minced garlic, 3 tbsp Cooking oil, 1 Onion
    Garlic, onion, and green onion stir-frying in hot oil for Korean seafood udon stir fry
  7. Add shrimp once onion is translucent.
    Stir-fry until the shrimp is about 80% cooked.
    6 pieces Shrimp
    Shrimp added to the pan at 80% cooked — the timing secret for perfect shrimp yaki udon
  8. Add udon, bean sprouts, and sauce.
    1 pack Udon noodles, 50 g Bean sprouts, 2 tbsp Oyster sauce, 1 tbsp Korean soy sauce, 1 tbsp Korean cooking wine Matsul, 2/3 tbsp Sugar, 2/3 tbsp Fine Gochugaru
    Tossing udon noodles on high heat with Korean sauce — final step of seafood udon stir fry
  9. Toss everything together on high heat until noodles are evenly coated and sauce is absorbed.
    1 pack Udon noodles
    Carbon steel wok pan for high-heat stir fried udon recipe — creates the best Maillard reaction
  10. Plate and top with bonito flakes. Serve immediately.
    1 tbsp Bonito flakes
    Korean seafood udon stir fry made with shrimp, onion, and bean sprouts in a single pan

Notes

💡 Notes: The sauce can be mixed ahead of time. For the best stir-fry char and Maillard reaction, use a carbon steel or cast iron pan on high heat.

Nutrition

Calories: 898kcal | Carbohydrates: 343g | Protein: 76g | Fat: 56g | Saturated Fat: 3g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 13g | Monounsaturated Fat: 27g | Trans Fat: 0.2g | Cholesterol: 10mg | Sodium: 7692mg | Potassium: 454mg | Fiber: 30g | Sugar: 61g | Vitamin A: 1677IU | Vitamin C: 17mg | Calcium: 81mg | Iron: 2mg
Nutrition info is an estimate provided by an online calculator. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.
📸 Tried this recipe? Tag @blondekimchi_ on Instagram or leave a comment below, it means so much to me!

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