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Post by Sanji Himura on Jan 8, 2007 12:34:49 GMT -5
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Post by herringchoker on Jan 8, 2007 14:28:54 GMT -5
May he rest in peace.
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Post by allezcuisine on Jan 8, 2007 14:31:00 GMT -5
Sad news. Rest in peace, Momofuku Ando.
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Post by Arrianna on Jan 9, 2007 11:19:52 GMT -5
I heard about this through my husband. I thought, isn't it interesting how the death of the man who invented Ramen is being reported in the same vein as the death of a president and James Brown. Yes, food is that important.
Long live Ramen!
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Post by eiko on Jan 9, 2007 18:44:03 GMT -5
NPR did an obit on him yesterday. The reporter went around NYC briefly while his Cup Noodles were cooking back at the studios. He noted, somewhat tongue in cheek, that Instant Noodles are among the most important and influential inventions of the 20th century. They feed the poor starving graduate students in college who are doing all the hard research that make all our lives better. (not quite those words, but that sentiment)
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Post by mickster on Jan 13, 2007 21:38:16 GMT -5
WOW. Well, he had a long life. I ate those noodles regularly when I was in college. He probably saved lots of people from starvation.
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Post by Man Alive! on Jan 14, 2007 22:12:10 GMT -5
Wow. I bet he never would have thought his invention would change so many lives. Rest in peace!
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Post by Arrianna on Jan 16, 2007 15:42:37 GMT -5
Would you believe I have a 101 Ramen Recipes cookbook my son (7yrs old) uses?
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Post by allezcuisine on Jan 17, 2007 10:36:15 GMT -5
Seven years old?
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Post by Arrianna on Jan 17, 2007 11:50:05 GMT -5
Start them young AC, start them young.
And Ramen tends to be the first thing kids learn to cook these days. lol (and anything else that doesn't require knives)
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Post by herringchoker on Jan 17, 2007 14:01:16 GMT -5
Good for you, Arrianna! There's no reason in the world why a 7 year old can't/shouldn't learn some cooking basics.
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