Elwood’s soup geography is shaped by who lives here and who comes through. Elwood is the small bayside village south of st kilda — art deco apartments, a dog-friendly beach, a tight-knit village retail strip, and a population that skews professional-and-creative. For winter eating, that translates into a particular soup mix — a small but quality cluster — Japanese, Vietnamese and Korean operators in the village.
The Elwood Soup Map
Ormond road around the village centre is the eating hub; glenhuntly road has additional cafe stock. The soup operators in Elwood cluster around the main retail strip rather than spreading across the whole suburb, which is good news on a cold day — you can compare options without walking far.
Three rough categories of soup available:
- Ramen — Japanese kitchens running tonkotsu, shoyu, and miso broths
- Vietnamese — pho, bun bo Hue, hu tieu, plus the lesser-known options
- Pan-Asian — laksa, Korean stews, Chinese noodle soups
Not every Elwood kitchen runs all three — the depth in each category depends on the suburb’s demographics and food history.
Ramen — What’s Available
Ramen prices in Elwood run $18–$24 for a bowl with toppings, depending on the operator. Standard options:
- Tonkotsu — pork-bone broth, fattiest, longest-lasting warmth, the strongest cold-day pick
- Shoyu — soy-based, lighter, better for a midday meal
- Spicy miso — heat plus richness combined
- Tantanmen — sesame-spice base, a slightly different format
The smaller Japanese kitchens often run udon, soba, or curry-don menus alongside ramen, which gives you a soup or stew alternative if ramen isn’t the mood.
Pho and Vietnamese Soups
Pho prices in Elwood run $14–$18 for a large bowl. Standard cuts:
- Pho tai chin — rare beef and brisket, the default
- Pho ga — chicken pho, lighter winter option
- Bun bo Hue — spicy Hue-style soup with lemongrass and chilli, the warming default
- Hu tieu — clear pork-and-prawn soup, lighter than pho
The Vietnamese kitchens often run bun (vermicelli) and com tam (broken rice) menus alongside soups, so you can mix the order if a soup-only meal feels narrow.
Other Asian Soups
Beyond ramen and pho, Elwood kitchens often run:
- Laksa — Malaysian curry noodle soup, one of the strongest cold-day soups (chilli plus coconut)
- Tom yum — Thai hot-and-sour, available at most Thai operators
- Sundubu jjigae — Korean soft-tofu stew, served bubbling hot
- Kimchi jjigae — kimchi-and-pork stew, deeply warming
- Beef brisket noodle soup — Hong Kong style, slow-cooked brisket in star-anise broth
The variety depends on which Asian communities have settled in Elwood over the past few decades.
Practical Notes
- Transit: the 67 tram on Glenhuntly Road, plus Elsternwick station on the Sandringham line within walking distance
- Lunch peak: 12.30–1.30pm at the busiest kitchens; arrive at 12 or after 2pm to walk in
- Cash-vs-card: most operators accept card; some smaller kitchens are cash-only
- Mid-afternoon: many soup kitchens close 3–5pm before reopening for dinner
What to Pair Soup With
A pho or ramen lunch typically takes 30–45 minutes, which leaves time for the rest of a winter day. Combine with:
- A walk along Ormond Road for shopping or browsing
- A cafe stop for a slow afternoon coffee — see our Elwood fireplace cafes guide
- A pub for the early-evening transition — see our Elwood winter pubs guide
The soup-cafe-pub chain is one of the more efficient cold-weather day patterns in Melbourne and works particularly well in suburbs with high walking density.
What This Means for You
For a Elwood cold-day soup lunch, the strongest move depends on what’s available locally — a tonkotsu ramen at a Japanese kitchen is the heaviest warming option, a laksa is the strongest spice-and-coconut hit, and a bowl of bun bo Hue is the underrated middle-ground. Mid-week walk-ins are the easiest; weekend lunches book out at the busier kitchens. Build the soup into a longer afternoon and you’ve got a real winter outing rather than just a quick meal.
For more, see winter pubs in Elwood and cafes and bars with fireplaces in Elwood.
Jack Carver writes about Melbourne’s suburbs for MELBZ.
