Lemmings of ...uh... Lemmy who ate ramen noodles dry, whaddup wit dat?

lazylion_ca@lemmy.ca to Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world – 71 points –
51

The best thing about that is that you save the flavor packet. Then, next time you make popcorn, you put some butter on the popcorn and then use the flavor packet as seasoning. Start with half; it's powerful ju-ju.

But it makes the most amazing popcorn. We now scavenge ramen packages for the seasoning packets, and eat the noodles dry only secondarily; we're really after the seasonings.

Big upvote for sharing the single quirkiest food tip I've read all... year, really. There's unique, and then there's "I buy ramen and eat it dry to season my popcorn." Cooks all over can only envy your genius.

You do know you can buy the chicken powder separately, right? Like, you can get oxo cubes in the soup aisle. The filipina made ones from the asian store are better though.

chicken powder separately

Unfortunately, the ones around here aren't all that great. Going by a ramen packet right now, it looks like this "Maruchan" version probably has more spices and dehydrated veggies than the straight chicken powder. Also, methinks the OXO cubes would be pretty hard to sprinkle over popcorn(!)

That said, there's all kinds of great popcorn toppings (store bought and homemade), so I don't suspect it's a big problem.

They sell the ramen seasoning separately. It's the same stuff in the little packets. If you can't get it locally, Amazon has it. Search for "ramen seasoning".

This conversation reminds me of when I discovered I can buy the Mac and Cheese powder for a lot less than buying the box. I love it on popcorn and homemade tortilla chips. Also can be used to make Mac and Cheese for cheap.

Good points. I remember that one can buy powdered tomato and a whole bunch of other useful powdered items on Amazon, etc. One can also buy that certain seasoning that makes movie-theatre popcorn taste so good.

Wyler's makes powdered boullion seasonings! They're fantastic. The problem is that Wyler's, and many other boullions, often inexplicably contain dairy and/or egg, for both of which we have an allergy in the household.

The Maruchen Ramen Soy flavor (which used to be "Asian") is actually vegetarian (IIRC - I'd double-check that), but most importantly for us is dairy and egg-free.

It's a quick and easy crunchy snack that's pretty tasty. Break up the noodles into small pieces/clusters, dump in all or part of the flavor packet, and shake it up really well, then snack away!

This exact thing is very popular in prison according to some family members.

Go for gold, snort the seasoning packet

wait, what else would you do with it?

Hardcore version would be to pour it into your eyes.

I did until my cousin died from lukemia.

I used to make a huge mess with them everywhere.

My dad told me, that dried Noodles like that gave you lukemia and that's what killed my cousin.

I've never done it again, even though I know my dad lied to me

Most people eat it like chips. I used to just bite on the whole damn brick, without any flavor. Pretty cheap meal.

Lazy croutons!

LPT: Whip the flavor packet into 1 part mayonnaise and 1 part sour cream for the dressing.

Expand your horizons, and live a little.

Because we're risk takers who dont have time to waste! Too many risks need taken!

Used to tour in bands and would pour the flavor packet in and shake it up for salty road carbs. And then I quit drinking and started eating nuts instead.

Back in college, I had a salad I had gotten and wanted something crunchy on top. All I had was ramen noodles. I smashed the pack up a bit and sprinkled on top. After that, I would munch on a pack when I wanted a snack cause I broke, hungry, and lazy.

They literally sell a seasoned dry noodle snack in some corner stores. Just a block of instant noodles with the powder stuck to it.

Best croutons that aren't bread. Crumble and put over salads fruit veggie or otherwise is awesome for some texture depth.

Sometimes I make ramen... and then I put it in the air fryer with some soy sauce and make it crunchy again.

Yup, plenty of times as a lazy teenager!

Yes same!... As a teenager!... πŸ‘€

There's a brand called Ko-Lee Go Noodles which market themselves as three styles in one. I think you can do soup, stir fry, or just season them and eat them dry like crisps.

It's a texture thing. After a few handfuls it's like eating popcorn.

I used to buy one specific ramen noodle brand which had the best noodles ever. They were made from already spiced dough and were extra crunchy. Those were called "Mi Kim Chi" and I haven't seen them for a long time (EU).

Sometimes you just want to eat dry food and noodles is a cheap way to do that and is always around.

I no longer do this.

Not because it's not delicious (it is), but because it's a super cheap and easy way to eat 300-400 calories of straight carbs

I'd say don't knock it until you try it, but just put in a slight effort and snack healthier

Not quite dry, but we combine the dry ones with some coleslaw mix, the flavor packet, some sugar, and some apple cider vinegar. Turns out crunchy and delicious.

Edit: Oh and also oil

Similar recipe:

Chop nappa cabbage
Couple of packs or ramen broken up.
Ramen seasoning powder.
Chopped or slivver almond
Sesame seeds.
Green onion / scallion
rice vinegar to taste

It's deep fried and crunchy. I can't see zhe issue.

It's basically extremely cheap chips. Throw some Valentina in the bag for some amazing flavor

When you get the munchies but all the cupboards are seemingly empty one tends to get innovative.

Was supremely broke. Lived off the damned things long enough that I completely lost taste sensitivity from the salt content in the packets. Finally one day just said screw it, I can't taste em anyways and I want some crunch.

I never cared for it myself, but they're deep fried, so it makes sense that people enjoy it. Fat is satisfying.

Yummy crunch. Throw in some peanuts for extra flavor, texture and actual nutrition.

I only did it a couple times in elementary school. It wasn't bad but it's not worth the effort in eating it that way.

If you go to an international food store, you're likely to see dry Ramen noodles as snacks for sale.