1) Add a package of ramen noodles (not the sauce!) to a can of Campbell's Chicken Noodle Soup. It stretches the canned soup to three or four decent-sized servings, and the ramen soaks up the Campbell-y goodness quite nicely.
2) Add a raw egg to a pot of Ramen while it's "cooking". (Be quick though, as you've only got the three magical minutes.) The egg will cook and break apart, and in the end, you'll have a fairly reasonable facsimile of Egg Drop Soup.
3) Add some chopped green onions and some of those tasty Chun King crispy fried noodle things that come in a can to the top of a 12 cent bowl of ramen. Eat them with chopsticks. If you're on an all-nighter, you might even trick yourself into thinking you've got some mediocre Chinese takeout there. (well...ok. Extremely mediocre.)
I am no longer a starving college student, but I buy Ramen by the dozens because I really, really like it.
These are the steps one must take to prepare an optimal bowl of Chicken Sesame ramen:
That's it. Ramen is all you need.
OK, I love starch and fat -- but it's far better than it sounds. Try it once, you will be converted. Mixing your cultures is one of the best ways to make food fresh and exciting. Put refried beans on your lefse! Dip your french fries in mayo! Eat Jell-o with chopsticks!
When I was in college I ate far too much Ramen and like many others I now loathe it. For a long time I just ate it with the flavor packet and water, then one day I happened across some recipes at a little web site called jerky.net and ended up obsessing over one of them.
This is that recipe. I believe jerky.net no longer serves the Ramen page, but I have a copy and will node the other recipes from it if there is any demand.
According to legend, this dish was first made after a large snowstorm, after waking up at 3:00 pm to a naturally drab day.
Ingredients
Prepare Ramen normally, without flavoring and drain the water. Add all other ingredients. Mix together.
Mmm.... grilled ramen.
You can keep the flavoring packet for a nice addition to any salad you serve.
This is the way I generally prefer to eat ramen, it's very spicy.
Boil some ramen noodles in water, without stock or anything, and while it's cooking, put these things in a big bowl:
Enjoy.
Last-ditch-effort-at-emptying-freezer Ramen
When you cook them this way you only have to use about a quarter to half of the flavoring packet, which is nice, because it cuts down on the saltiness of the noodles and makes them generally healthier.
Another perk to cooking them this way is, if you have a favorite flavor of Ramen (say, Shrimp), and the store is all out of that kind, but you have a whole bunch of half-full(or half-empty) flavor packets at home, you can put that in with the noodles from any packet and have your Shrimp-flavored Ramen.
Good luck, and enjoy!
First of all, raamen (ラーメン) in their current form are essentially a Japanese invention, although egg noodles in soup are certainly known throughout Asia. The word comes from Chinese 撈麺 (Mandarin lao1mian4), literally just "handmade noodles", and has been known in Japan since at least 1665. Things didn't change much until instant ramen was invented by Momofuku Ando of Nissin in 1958. While the original soup hasn't made too many inroads beyond Korea, the instant variety propagated throughout Asia in the blink of an eye, and to the college dorms of America and Europe only a moment later.
Enough lecturing, on with the show... the following recipe serves 4 and should be consumed immediately.
The "Big Three" Japanese styles are:
Etiquette notes
Ramen should be con