Spin-off: How do you prepare Ramen?

Rhie

Faith, Trust & Pixie Dust!
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Jan 21, 2016
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The conversation about eggs made me wonder how other people prepare an equally common food: Ramen.

I mash up the noodles while they are still in the package, and boil them like the directions say. I use my own spices rather than the package that comes in the noodles. That's way too salty for me. If I am feeling fancy, I add soy sauce and scrambled egg and scallions. Sometimes I stirfry the cooked noodles with beef or chicken in a pan for a sort of college kid lo-mein. Its far cheaper than ordering out!

How bout you?
 
What do you mean by "ramen"? Most think instant noodles, but there's really good stuff that's not instant noodles.
 
The conversation about eggs made me wonder how other people prepare an equally common food: Ramen.

I mash up the noodles while they are still in the package, and boil them like the directions say. I use my own spices rather than the package that comes in the noodles. That's way too salty for me. If I am feeling fancy, I add soy sauce and scrambled egg and scallions. Sometimes I stirfry the cooked noodles with beef or chicken in a pan for a sort of college kid lo-mein. Its far cheaper than ordering out!

How bout you?

Like you, I break them up while they're still in the package. I boil (or microwave) them and drain off all the water (instead of making them as soup). I only use half the seasoning packet, for the same reason you said - too much salt.

But next time I'm going to try some of your ideas!
 

I never break them up. I like them long and stringy.

I just boil them, add the seasoning package and a few hot chili flakes for extra zing and eat.
 
If we're talking about the 6 for a dollar instant kind and not the legit ramen that requires actual prep, then it's:
Dump noodles (why would you purposely break them?!) into microwave container, add seasoning, cover with varying amount of water depending on how much broth I'm in the mood for, nuke for 5 1/2 minutes, let stand for at least 30. I like them extra soft.
I watched a friend make ramen once. Instead of dumping the contents of the package into the cooking container, he pulled the block of noodles out and then discarded all the broken pieces that were left behind. Made me irate. :p
 
I don't eat them, but my kids break them apart in the package, sprinkle them with the seasoning, and eat them out of the bag.
 
I leave the whole block intact. Add water until JUST covered, microwave for 3 min, let them sit for another min or so, add the whole salty packet and enjoy. I only eat the chicken flavor.
 
My husband drains most of the water after over cooking (IMO) and then adds the seasoning packet, doesn't look appealing to me at all. I add the seasoning packet to boiling water, toss whole brick in, cook just until it's not a brick anymore. Eat with broth immediately. If it gets even a hint soft I won't touch it. When I was a kid I would stir mustard into it. I rarely eat it anymore because it's a sodium bomb but usually when I do, I cook it like above then scramble eggs, add veggies and green onions, toss the drained noodles in and fry it all up together.
 
If we're talking about the 6 for a dollar instant kind and not the legit ramen that requires actual prep, then it's:
Dump noodles (why would you purposely break them?!) into microwave container, add seasoning, cover with varying amount of water depending on how much broth I'm in the mood for, nuke for 5 1/2 minutes, let stand for at least 30. I like them extra soft.
I watched a friend make ramen once. Instead of dumping the contents of the package into the cooking container, he pulled the block of noodles out and then discarded all the broken pieces that were left behind. Made me irate. :p


I break the block into 4 sections, so some strings are still intact without being crazy long. The reason for breaking it is so that you can eat it with a soup spoon without slopping broth down the front of your chin.
 
I break the block into 4 sections, so some strings are still intact without being crazy long. The reason for breaking it is so that you can eat it with a soup spoon without slopping broth down the front of your chin.
Wait, you're supposed to eat it with a spoon? :oops:
 
We actually had my favorite Ramen dish this week. 4 packages of Ramen noodles, strips of chicken breast, broccoli and red bell pepper, with a bit of soy sauce and crushed red pepper flake. It's really easy and tasty!
 














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