ramen final four

Ah, spring. Time for flowers to bloom, little birdies chirping, and brighter, longer days. Time for college basketball…and RAMEN! Prompted by the idea of saving up for a $110 bowl of ramen and the stereotype that college students and instant ramen go hand in hand (and these days, who doesn’t have the budget of a “starving college student”?), we present our very own Instant Ramen Final Four!

We have three major rivals, each with their own contenders for the championship title. Let’s meet them:

Top Ramen. The original. The innovator. Nissin Foods, maker of Top Ramen, was founded by Momofuku Ando, the inventor of instant ramen, in 1948 and introduced Top Ramen to the U.S. in 1970. They are the oldest producer of instant ramen in the world. Does this powerhouse still have what it takes to make it all the way?

Maruchan. This upstart opened their first U.S. plant in 1978 in Irvine, CA, where they’re still located. They compete head-on with Top Ramen, and in 1994, became America’s best selling instant ramen. Today, they produce 3.6 billion packages a year, enough to reach from Earth to Mars and back if you string all the noodles together. NASA, are you listening? Who needs a space elevator? We can attach satellites to strung-together instant noodles!

Sapporo Ichiban. Sapporo Ichiban is the dark horse of the instant ramen world. There’re usually only one or two flavors of Sapporo Ichiban instant ramen available, but they’re sold just about everywhere you look. Top Ramen and Maruchan get the supermarket shelf space, and Sapporo Ichiban lurks in the background. They’ve been operating in stealth mode, quietly infiltrating supermarkets across the U.S, waiting for their day in the sun.

Follow the rest of the competition:
Sweet 16: Midwest
Sweet 16: West
Sweet 16: East
Sweet 16: South
Intermission
Elite Eight – part 1
Elite Eight – part 2
Final Four
The bracket so far
Championship Game

3 thoughts on “instant ramen final four”

  1. I personally would take Sapporo Ichiban any day. Something about the flavors that complement cooked along with veggies. “hakusai, shiiteke, niiinnjin.. kisetsu no oyasai ikaga desu…” That cm song is stuck in my head forever, haha

  2. @Dennis: You’ll just have to stick around to see how Sapporo Ichiban plays out. Heh heh.

    @Cam: Sorry, I couldn’t find chicken Ichiban in my local supermarkets. I think I’ve seen it at Japanese markets, so maybe there’ll be a seperate review in the future!

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