Can confirm. Mixed one pack of Buldak (67% daily recommended sodium) and one pack of Neoguri (80% daily recommended sodium) today. Fortunately we only do this like once or twice a month.
At my store, a 12-pack of Maruchan is $6 - $3.57/pound. Store brand spaghetti is $0.90/pound and chicken bouillon is $2.50 for a half pound. Ramen is convenient and fast, not cheap.
I eat soylent cacao every day for breakfast and lunch, then have a dinner that isn't soylent. Been doing this since early 2020, including at one point, while bulking, eating an entire bag of it (2000 calories) every day, which was kind of a lot.
Compared to instant noodles, yes.
Cooking rice takes like 15 minutes at most. Potatoes can take like an hour tops with the peeling but you can boil a bunch or cook them in an over and reheat them in a microwave later.
The price win is definitely worth it IMHO though. Instant noodles are like 1.90 euros per meal while a kg of rice or potatoes is about 1 euro and lasts for days, not just one meal. Also rice and potatoes get cheaper the more you buy at once.
Yeah and soon they'll make up a reason to raise ramen prices too. We've seen eggs, one cheap source of food skyrocket. I don't think ramen is off the table.
They don't need to make up an excuse they'll just whip out the Chicago econ book and say "increased demand, must increase prices! It's The Economic Law™!"
Where I am, cheap rice and cheap pasta are about the same - something around $1/pound, $2/kg. Ramen is decidedly not cheap at $3-4/pound. Even the 'fancy' pasta brands are only $2-2.50/pound.
Rice. At least there's healthy rice alternatives, there's a lot of dishes that can be done with rice. Far more than what fewer options there are for ramen.
Ramen can come into all sorts of flavors but the flavors are only supported by the packets with them or the sauce packets with them. In general, they're just generally unhealthy and you can do so little with them.
I just like them <.< particularly the cheesy ones, and pork (both Maruchan; there are not many options in general for me... though sometimes Yakisoba is available, which is nice). Dunno if there's any actual meat in there. Could just be salt with salt flavouring in salt sauce. I don't add any salt.