today i got around to eat instant noodles
Comments
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armchair_warrior wrote: since the guy who invented it die last week. i always meant to eat one of those in his honor.
Do you mean the Ramen Noodles that you have to crush? Those are awful tasty but not diet food by any means.
I rarely eat that stuff these days. only during my leaner days do i eat it.
you sir save me from the hungriest days. with cheap food. -
I think he meant leaner = broke?
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Three packs of Ramen noodles is great with a stick of butter and vodka sauce. All the broth does is take up space.
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one of the packs of kimchi ramen with some fishcake is a great way to inhale a thousand calories of palm oil. yum.
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yes leaner as in broke
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here is article about him on nytimes.
Momofuku Ando, 96, Dies; Invented Instant Ramen
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By DENNIS HEVESI
Published: January 9, 2007
Momofuku Ando, who — to the delight of dormitory students and other kitchen-resistant customers worldwide — invented those small packets of preflavored dried noodles that require just a three-minute boil, died Friday at a hospital in Osaka, Japan. Mr. Ando, the founder of the Nissin Food Products Company, was 96.
The cause was heart failure, said Larry Lampel, the company’s senior resources manager at its American headquarters in Gardena, Calif.
Starting with the chicken-broth noodles in cellophane bags that Mr. Ando first concocted in a shack behind his house in Ikeda, Japan, 49 years ago, Nissin now produces 16 flavors of what it calls Top Ramen and Cup Noodles. Besides six varieties of chicken, they include beef, shrimp, vegetable and spicy chili.
The company sold 46.3 billion packs and cups around the world last year, earning $131 million in profits.
In 1958, Mr. Ando — virtually penniless after a credit association he served as chairman went bankrupt — began experimenting with ways to prepare flavored noodles by simply adding hot water.
The idea stemmed from an experience a decade earlier, when Japan was still ravaged by postwar poverty. In “The Story of the Invention of Instant Ramen,†an autobiography published in 2002, Mr. Ando told of walking through the rubble-strewn streets of Osaka.
“I happened to pass this area and saw a line 20, 30 meters long in front of a dimly lit stall from which clouds of steam were steadily rising,†he wrote. “People dressed in shabby clothes shivered in the cold while waiting for their turn. The person who was with me said they were lined up for a bowl of ramen.â€
“I realized that people were willing to wait patiently just for a bowl of ramen,†he said.
Ordinary unflavored noodles were not the solution; Mr. Ando insisted that his noodles be tasty, inexpensive and easy to prepare. The problem was flavoring them without making them mushy. Using a secondhand noodle-making machine and a large wok, Mr. Ando sprinkled soup on the noodles with a watering can, then kneaded and loosened them by hand after letting them partly dry. “This allowed the noodles to soak up the soup on the outer layer,†he wrote. “I then dried the noodles so they would keep longer and could be easily prepared with boiling water.â€
Born on March 5, 1910, in Taiwan while it was under Japanese occupation, Mr. Ando was a son of Japanese parents who had moved there from Osaka. When he was 23, he returned to Japan and, while a student at Ritsumeikan University, ran several clothing companies. In 1948, he started a company that produced salt; it changed its name to Nissin 10 years later. He is survived by his wife, Masako, two sons and a daughter.
Chicken was the prime ingredient in Nissin’s global success. “By using chicken soup, instant ramen managed to circumvent religious taboos when it was introduced in different countries,†Mr. Ando wrote. “Hindus may not eat beef and Muslims may not eat pork, but there is not a single culture, religion or country that forbids the eating of chicken.â€
Nissin opened its first overseas operation, in California, in 1970. Besides Japan, it has plants in Hong Kong, Indonesia, India, Brazil, Mexico, Peru, Singapore, China, the Philippines, Thailand, Hungary and Germany as well as in Lancaster, Pa.
In July 2005, the company vacuum-packed portions of instant noodles so that a Japanese astronaut, Soichi Noguchi, could have them on the space shuttle Discovery. Mr. Ando said at the time, “I’ve realized my dream that noodles can go into space.†-
GiGi wrote: [quote=armchair_warrior]since the guy who invented it die last week. i always meant to eat one of those in his honor.
Do you mean the Ramen Noodles that you have to crush? Those are awful tasty but not diet food by any means.
I rarely eat that stuff these days. only during my leaner days do i eat it.
you sir save me from the hungriest days. with cheap food.
i mean the instant ones where you put hot water in and five mins later you got instant cheap food
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I stir fry veggies and/or meat while soaking the noodles. Strain, toss'em in along with the spice packet and you got cheap, quick, tasty meal.
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I like to add any of the following I have around:
frozen fishballs (preferably the fried ones)
frozen shrimp balls
frozen dumplings
tofu
mushrooms
greens (any kind)
chopped scallions
I usually use the Korean ones- Shin Ramyun or Neoguri Seafood and Spicy. -
Yum, yum. Oh and of course you meant leaner as in broke. How dumb of me to miss that.
armchair_warrior wrote: [quote=GiGi][quote=armchair_warrior]since the guy who invented it die last week. i always meant to eat one of those in his honor.
Do you mean the Ramen Noodles that you have to crush? Those are awful tasty but not diet food by any means.
I rarely eat that stuff these days. only during my leaner days do i eat it.
you sir save me from the hungriest days. with cheap food.
i mean the instant ones where you put hot water in and five mins later you got instant cheap food
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i blame my lack of grammar skills.
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graduate to a bag of fresh Hong Kong style noodles
which are also precooked, and meant to be panfried (or boiled one minute then panfried)
of course those require a trip to the Chinese market, and are not shelf stable...
R.I.P. Mr Momofuku
[the east village noodle bar of the same name says Momofuku = "lucky peach"] -
Idlewild wrote: Three packs of Ramen noodles is great with a stick of butter and vodka sauce. All the broth does is take up space.
Once again, dude: you rock!
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Idlewild wrote: All the broth does is take up space.
But it gives you about a week's worth of your sodium requirements. So you can check that off your list for a while. -
I'd rather get my sodium from the stick of salted butter and vodka sauce.
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