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I really dont know. i have never heard of such a thing.

2006-08-31 14:31:34 · 19 answers · asked by Valkyrie 4 in Food & Drink Cooking & Recipes

19 answers

Any grocery store. Cheap carbo food like .25 a pack. You can add vegtables and meat to it to make it taste better.

2006-08-31 14:42:49 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Ramen noodles are really cheap noodles that are even cheaper if you find them on sale. You can usually pick them up at any grocery store on the soup aisle. If you have trouble finding them, just look for the trashiest person with a couple of dirty kids with them or lots of facial piercings and follow them until they lead you to the noodles. If you need fish sticks or oleo you can also use the stalk the redneck tecnique....

2006-08-31 22:07:06 · answer #2 · answered by hipichick777 4 · 0 0

Ramen noodles are disgusting cheap noodles which are purchased by poor college students or loafers without jobs. You can pick up a package at any grocery store for about $.25.

2006-08-31 21:47:54 · answer #3 · answered by jrollo76 4 · 0 0

You can buy Ramen Noodles in almost any grocery store in America. They come in different types of packages & number of servings.

The History of Ramen Noodles

Ramen noodles originated in China, where all noodles seem to have come from, and are called "Lo-Mein" in Chinese, which means boiled noodles.

"Ra-men" is the Japanese pronunciation of the Chinese Characters for Lo-Mein.

This Chinese-style noodle became such a great favorite in Sapporo, the capital of Japan's northernmost island of Hokkaido, that it is now considered to be their regional dish. Ramen is to Sapporo what baked beans are to Boston. In other countries, the word for Ramen may be different, too. For example, they are called “Maggi Mee” in Singapore.

The process for turning the traditional Ramen noodles into the now familiar instant, packaged noodles was pioneered by Momofuku Ando, the founder of Nissin Foods in Japan. In 1970, Nissin Foods introduced “Top Ramen” to the United States and, as the saying goes, the rest is history.

Many other companies introduced Top Ramen clones and even such industry giants such as Lipton and Campbell's began to experiment with Ramen-like products. Fierce competition notwithstanding, Nissin still controls slightly less than half of the U.S. Ramen market and fifteen percent of the world Ramen market of about ten billion dollars annually. At this writing, the average wholesale price for a package of Ramen in the U.S. is only twelve and a half cents.

Because of their enthusiastic acceptance in the market place, it wasn't long before instant Ramen skipped over national boundaries and became an international phenomena. Factories that make Ramen noodles can now be found not only in Japan and the U.S., but in Europe, Korea, China, Singapore, Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia.

Each country's Ramen noodles reflect their own particular flavor preferences. Korean Ramen is highly spiced and often contains packets of black bean sauce. China makes Ramen in Szechuan flavors. Thailand makes very thin, delicate noodles with very hotly spiced packets. Japan prefers the flavor of seafood and mild spices. In the U.S. they are usually available with meat flavors, mushroom flavors or mild spices often referred to as “Oriental flavor”.

2006-08-31 21:57:17 · answer #4 · answered by dlcarnall 4 · 0 0

Ramen noodles look like very thin spaghetti. They come in packages with a pouch of various ingredients to make whatever type of ramen noodle soup you desire. They are cheap and you can find them in just about any grocery store.

2006-08-31 21:46:11 · answer #5 · answered by expatmt 5 · 0 0

Ramen (ラーメン Rāmen, pronounced roughly ) is the Japanese version of the Chinese noodle soup dish lā miàn (拉麵, lit. "pulled noodles"). The original Chinese la mian is believed to have been served with sauce. Ramen has been firmly integrated into the Japanese culinary landscape, and many regional variations exist.

They sell them in the soup isle of the grocery store.

2006-08-31 21:43:40 · answer #6 · answered by Sky 5 · 0 0

They are dry noodles that come in a pack with seasoning. You just cook the noodles then add the seasoning. They have many flavors. You can get them at walmart or any grocery store. they are like 15cents

2006-08-31 21:45:34 · answer #7 · answered by Bug 3 · 0 0

Any grocery store and usually the dollar stores that sell food. They are just a little bag of noodles that you boil and there is a seasoning packet that you stir in to flavor them. Easy to fix, inexpensive to buy and really bad for your health. Loaded with sodium and not much else.

2006-08-31 21:45:03 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Ramen (ラーメン Rāmen, pronounced roughly ) is the Japanese version of the Chinese noodle soup dish lā miàn (拉麵, lit. "pulled noodles"). The original Chinese la mian is believed to have been served with sauce. Ramen has been firmly integrated into the Japanese culinary landscape, and many regional variations exist.

http://www.vitamins.com/vf/healthnotes/HN_live/Food_Guide/Ramen_Noodles.jpg

http://static.flickr.com/34/102873292_51492a0a54_m.jpg

And you can find them at most grocery stores.

2006-08-31 21:44:26 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

they are spagetti type noodles all squiggly and connected, dryed in a neat little rectangle. You cook these noodles in hot water, then drain and add the flavor packet that comes with it. They also make some killer pizza crust, picked that little nugget up in prison.

2006-08-31 22:42:30 · answer #10 · answered by me 4 · 0 0

you can find them in any grocery store they come in a little package, with a seasoning packet inside. they come in many different flavors you just add the noodles to boiling water, stir in flavoring, wait, and there you are a cup of hot flavored noodles for about .10cents. there not bad.

2006-08-31 21:51:12 · answer #11 · answered by susieq 3 · 0 0

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