When the Melbourne weather drops below 10°C, the most reliable food in Berwick is whatever has hot broth in it. The outer-south-east character of the suburb shapes what’s actually on offer here — fewer destination ramen shops than the Carlton/CBD axis, but a solid mix of pho, pan-Asian noodle soups, and a couple of Japanese kitchens running ramen on the menu. Wilson Botanic Park gets fog on still mornings through June and July, which is why the soup-shop walk-in is one of the best winter habits to develop here.
This is the cold-day soup guide for Berwick — what to order, where to find it, and how to use the strip.
Pho and Vietnamese Soups
Pho is the workhorse Melbourne winter dish. In Berwick, the Vietnamese kitchens cluster around High Street Berwick Village and Clyde Road, with most running large bowls in the $14–$18 range. What to order on a cold day:
- Pho tai chin — rare beef and brisket combination, the standard and reliably good
- Pho bo vien — meatball pho, deeper-flavoured broth, less common but worth ordering when available
- Bun bo Hue — spicy Hue-style soup with lemongrass and chilli oil, the warming option for a 7°C day
- Hu tieu nam vang — clear pork-and-prawn soup, lighter than pho but still warming
According to the City of Melbourne’s 2023 small-business census, Vietnamese kitchens are among the highest-density food categories across the metropolitan area, and most stay open from lunch through to about 9pm — busiest 12–2pm and 6–8pm. Mid-afternoon is the time to walk in without a wait. Most operators take cash and card; tipping isn’t expected.
Ramen
Berwick has fewer dedicated ramen shops than the inner-north, but most pan-Asian or Japanese restaurants in the area run ramen on their menus. For the best ramen in cold weather:
- Tonkotsu — pork-bone broth, fattiest and warmest, around $19–$23 per bowl
- Spicy miso — heat plus richness, the cold-day default
- Shoyu — soy-based, lighter, the more traditional Tokyo style
- Tsukemen — dipping noodles served with a separate broth, less traditional but excellent on a freezing day
Smaller Japanese restaurants in the area also typically run a noodle soup or udon section if ramen isn’t headlining — udon with hot broth is an underrated cold-weather option, especially the kake udon (clear broth) or curry udon variants.
Other Asian Soups Worth Knowing
Beyond pho and ramen, Berwick usually has a mix of:
- Sundubu jjigae — Korean soft tofu stew, spicy, served bubbling in stone pot
- Kimchi jjigae — Korean kimchi stew, deeply warming and reliably available
- Tom yum — Thai hot-and-sour, available at most Thai restaurants in the area
- Wonton noodle soup — Cantonese clear-broth dish at most Chinese kitchens
- Lamian — hand-pulled northern-Chinese noodles in broth, increasingly common
- Laksa — Malaysian/Singaporean spiced coconut soup, usually with prawns or chicken
Worth keeping in rotation rather than defaulting to the same pho shop every cold week. The variety also helps if you’re cooking through a six-week winter — switching cuisines week to week stops the broth fatigue.
Where to Go in Berwick
The highest density of soup options sits on High Street Berwick Village and Clyde Road. If you’re picking by area:
- The pho strip is the densest — walk it and pick the shop with the most locals at midday.
- For ramen and Japanese, the smaller independent kitchens around the strip do better than the chain operators (Hakata Gensuke and similar).
- Korean is more scattered; the bigger sit-down Korean restaurants are usually on the main road rather than in the side streets.
- Thai is widely available but the soup quality varies — the older operators with full menus tend to do better tom yum than the newer takeaway-focused shops.
Public transport in is straightforward: no trams; bus 893 and 894 across Berwick; Berwick station on the Pakenham line. Anchors when you’re orienting: Wilson Botanic Park on Princes Highway, Berwick Village on High Street, Eden Rise Shopping Centre.
Pairing Soup With Indoor Stuff
A pho or ramen lunch takes 30–45 minutes. Pair it with a warm afternoon at one of the Berwick indoor anchors and you’ve made a half-day out of a cold Tuesday. The Saturday market or Sunday afternoon options work especially well in winter — the food sits well in your stomach, the room you’re walking into next is heated, and the post-lunch coffee is the bridge.
For families with kids who don’t like spicy food: most pho shops do plain chicken pho (pho ga) or a kid-portion bowl on request. Most ramen shops do a kid-friendly shoyu or chicken ramen. Korean and Thai are harder for spice-averse kids; the udon shops are the best fallback.
What This Means for You
For the deepest pho selection on a cold day in Berwick, walk High Street Berwick Village and pick the shop with the most locals at midday — the queue is the signal. For ramen, the smaller Japanese kitchens do better than the chain operators. For something different, try a Korean tofu stew or a Thai tom yum — the warming effect on a 9°C day is much stronger than standard pho.
For more, see winter pubs in Berwick, cafes and bars with fireplaces in Berwick and indoor things to do in Berwick this winter.
Tom Hartigan writes about Melbourne’s outer-south-east suburbs for MELBZ.
