Karen Leibowitz —
About 4,000 of the 5,000 terrible cliches about instant ramen begin with starving college students. As Karen Leibowitz explains in Lucky Peach, Momofuku Ando didn't aim to stuff hungry co-eds with his creation—he wanted to end world hunger.
In the last hundred years, Japan has given the world a number of remarkable inventions — the Walkman, the bullet train, the digital camera, the fuel-efficient car, karaoke. But in a poll conducted in December 2000, the Japanese people chose instant ramen as the greatest Japanese innovation of the twentieth century.
Rest of article here:
http://gizmodo.com/5814099/the-humb...ng-world-hunger-to-space-noodles#viewcomments
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I have never had these noodles. Guess I'll try them. What about you?
In the last hundred years, Japan has given the world a number of remarkable inventions — the Walkman, the bullet train, the digital camera, the fuel-efficient car, karaoke. But in a poll conducted in December 2000, the Japanese people chose instant ramen as the greatest Japanese innovation of the twentieth century.
Rest of article here:
http://gizmodo.com/5814099/the-humb...ng-world-hunger-to-space-noodles#viewcomments
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I have never had these noodles. Guess I'll try them. What about you?