For melbourne locals

Best Ramen and Soup in Mordialloc for Cold Days

Jack Carver May 8, 2026 4 min read
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Best Ramen and Soup in Mordialloc for Cold Days
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Mordialloc’s soup stock has a specific shape, set by the suburb’s character. Mordialloc is a bayside suburb at the mouth of Mordialloc Creek, with a fishing-pier history and a working main street that’s gentrified slowly through the 2010s, and that geography determines what kind of cold-weather bowls are actually available here. The short version: ramen options are usually fewer than the inner north or CBD, but Vietnamese pho and pan-Asian soup options are stronger than people expect, especially along Main Street from the station to the beach.

This is the practical guide to soup eating in Mordialloc on a cold day — what kind of kitchens to look for, what to order, and where the surrounding suburbs fill the gaps.

What Mordialloc Has, and What It Doesn’t

A useful frame for soup eating in Mordialloc:

  • Pho and Vietnamese soups: present in most cases — the broader inner-east and inner-south Vietnamese diaspora extends into Mordialloc via Mentone and Victoria Street
  • Ramen: smaller selection — dedicated ramen-yas are concentrated in the CBD, Carlton, and Brunswick, with Mordialloc usually running ramen as part of broader Japanese menus rather than as the only thing
  • Korean and Chinese soups: scattered — sundubu jjigae, kimchi jjigae, and Chinese hot pots are usually one or two venues per suburb, often inside larger Korean BBQ or Chinese family restaurants

The result for cold-day eating: pho is the reliable default, ramen is the occasional indulgence, and the wider Asian soup category (Korean stews, Chinese hand-pulled noodle soups, Thai tom yum) fills out the rotation across the week.

Pho — The Cold-Day Default

If you’re in Mordialloc on a 9°C day and want a fast, hot, satisfying lunch, pho is the answer. The Vietnamese pho infrastructure in Melbourne is one of the city’s strongest food categories, and Mordialloc’s share of it is workable.

What to order:

  • Pho tai chin — rare beef and brisket combo, the standard, $14–$18 for a large
  • Pho bo vien — meatball pho, deeper broth flavour, slightly more filling
  • Bun bo Hue — spicy lemongrass-and-chilli soup from central Vietnam, the warming-up option, $16–$20
  • Hu tieu nam vang — clear pork-and-prawn soup, lighter but still hot, $14–$18
  • Mi vit tiem — duck noodle soup with Chinese herbs, less common, harder to find but worth it when you do

Pho lunches take 30–45 minutes start to finish, and the broth keeps your core warm for an hour after.

Ramen Options

Mordialloc’s ramen options usually live inside broader Japanese menus rather than at dedicated ramen-yas. The standard ramen line on a Japanese menu in Mordialloc runs:

  • Tonkotsu — pork-bone broth, the fattiest and warmest, $19–$23
  • Shoyu — soy-based, lighter, the everyday ramen
  • Miso — fermented bean paste base, deeply savoury, the cold-day pick
  • Spicy miso — heat plus richness, the warmest of the standard four

For tsukemen (dipping ramen), Carlton and the CBD are usually the trip. Mordialloc’s Japanese kitchens lean toward the standard four ramen styles and don’t usually run the more specialist dishes.

If ramen is the priority and Mordialloc’s options aren’t deep enough on the day, Mentone and Aspendale are usually 10–15 minutes away by Frankston line via Mordialloc station.

Korean and Pan-Asian Soups

Beyond Japanese and Vietnamese, the broader Asian soup category in Mordialloc:

  • Sundubu jjigae — Korean soft tofu stew, served bubbling in a stone pot, spicy
  • Kimchi jjigae — Korean kimchi-and-pork stew, deeply warming
  • Tom yum — Thai hot-and-sour soup, common at most Thai restaurants, $14–$20
  • Wonton noodle soup — Chinese wonton-and-egg-noodle soup, simple, restorative
  • Hand-pulled lamian — Chinese hand-pulled noodle soup, sometimes available at northern-Chinese kitchens

These are the dishes worth keeping in rotation through winter rather than defaulting to the same pho place every cold week.

Pairing Soup With a Wet-Day Plan

The practical move for Mordialloc soup eating in winter is to combine it with another indoor activity, because most pho lunches take 30–45 minutes and you’ve still got the rest of the afternoon. Built around Mordialloc’s anchors:

  • A pho lunch then 90 minutes at Mordialloc Pier
  • Soup at midday then a tram or train trip into the CBD for a cinema or gallery
  • A soup-and-dessert run combining pho with a coffee at one of the cafes on Main Street from the station to the beach

Chained this way, soup eating becomes the spine of a 4–5 hour winter day rather than just lunch.

Walking Times and Transport

Most of Mordialloc’s soup options cluster along Main Street from the station to the beach. With Frankston line via Mordialloc station; the 902 SmartBus along Springvale Road; buses 708 and 825 cross to Cheltenham and Mentone, you can reach the strip from anywhere central in 20–30 minutes. If a specific dish isn’t available in Mordialloc, the trip to Mentone or Aspendale is usually 10–15 minutes by tram or train.

What This Means for You

For a cold-day soup lunch in Mordialloc, the move is: walk Main Street from the station to the beach at 12.30pm, look for the pho shop with the most locals at the counter (the queue is the signal), and order pho tai chin or bun bo Hue. If you want ramen and Mordialloc’s options aren’t deep, take the Frankston line via Mordialloc station to Mentone. For a longer rotation across the week, swap in Korean stews and Thai tom yum to avoid pho fatigue.

For more, see winter pubs in Mordialloc and cafes and bars with fireplaces in Mordialloc. The best soup in Melbourne 2026 guide covers the city-wide winter soup picks.


Jack Carver writes about Melbourne’s inner suburbs for MELBZ.

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