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Protein data

Protein in Noodles

One 1 cup cooked ramen noodles of noodles contains 4g of protein at 115 kcal. That\'s a protein-per-calorie ratio of 3.5g per 100 kcal — low protein per calorie — fine as part of a balanced diet but not a meaningful protein source.

Protein density
3.5g/100kcal
LOW
Per primary serving
4g
1 cup cooked ramen noodles

Protein by portion size

Portion Protein (g) Calories g protein / 100 kcal
1 cup cooked ramen noodles (~165g) 4 115 3.5
1 cup cooked rice noodles (~176g) 1.6 192 0.8
1 cup cooked egg noodles (~160g) 7.3 221 3.3
1 packet instant ramen (with seasoning) 7 380 1.8
100g cooked rice noodles 0.9 109 0.8
100g cooked udon noodles 4 138 2.9

How much noodles to hit your protein target?

Phillips & Van Loon 2009 (JISSN) established 0.4 g/kg per meal as the per-meal threshold to fully stimulate muscle protein synthesis — roughly 25–40g for most adults. To hit those targets purely from noodles:

What this protein density means

For perspective, the highest-density protein whole foods cluster around 15–19g of protein per 100 kcal: chicken breast 18.8, white fish 16–17, Greek yoghurt 17 (non-fat), tuna 15. Medium-density sources (5–12 g/100kcal) include eggs, beef, salmon, tofu, and lentils. Below 4g/100kcal, foods are primarily carb or fat sources with incidental protein. Noodles at 3.5g/100kcal is not a primary protein source. Pair it with chicken, fish, eggs, Greek yoghurt, or legumes to bring meal-level protein up to the 25–40g per-meal MPS threshold.

Protein density comparison

Reference points for context (g protein per 100 kcal):

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Protein content of related foods

Frequently asked questions

How much protein is in noodles?
Noodles contains approximately 4g of protein per 1 cup cooked ramen noodles (115 kcal). Per 100g, that's 2.4g of protein. The protein-per-calorie density is 3.5g per 100 kcal — classified as low.
Is noodles a good source of protein?
Noodles is not a meaningful protein source — treat it as a carb or fat food in your daily macros. For protein targets, focus on chicken breast, fish, eggs, Greek yoghurt, legumes, or tofu. For comparison: chicken breast delivers 18.8g protein per 100 kcal; Greek yoghurt 17g; eggs 8g; lentils 8g; rice 2g.
How much protein do I actually need per day?
The Morton 2018 meta-analysis in the British Journal of Sports Medicine (49 randomised trials, 1,863 subjects) established 1.62 g/kg of body weight per day as the dose-response plateau for muscle gain from resistance training. For active adults during fat loss, the Helms 2014 review recommended 1.8–2.2 g/kg of total body weight to preserve lean mass. The old RDA of 0.8 g/kg is a population minimum, not an optimum. For a 70 kg adult, evidence-based daily protein targets are 112–154g.
How is protein quality measured beyond grams?
The Digestible Indispensable Amino Acid Score (DIAAS) is the modern protein quality measure, evaluating both amino acid profile and digestibility against human requirements. Animal proteins — whey, casein, eggs, chicken, fish — score 1.0+ (complete and highly digestible). Most plant proteins score below 1.0: pea ~0.82, rice ~0.59, soy ~1.0 (the plant exception). For vegans, combining sources across the day (legumes + grains, soy + nuts) produces a complete amino acid profile and offsets the digestibility gap by targeting the upper end of intake ranges.
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