Saturday, 18 May 2024

Maruchan spicy chicken and prawn instant noodle review

Maruchan is an internationally popular instant noodle brand, and you’ll find both cup/pot noodle products and packet noodle offerings from them. Their logo of a circle with a small child’s smiling face captures their name perfectly, as “maru” means a round, happy child's face, and “chan” is added to the end of words to show affection.  I was fascinated to discover that Toyo Suisan, Maruchan’s parent company, found that their business as seafood processing company meant the factory had nothing to do in the cold Winter months. Diversifying into instant ramen meant the factory could run all year round. [Please see: The history and unknown story of Maruchan: https://piece-of-japan.com/investing/instant-noodle/maruchan.html

 

Maruchan is very popular across Central and South America. Mexico is the biggest market, but I have also seen a noodle stand at the Brazilian side of Iguacu Falls where you can get a pot of Maruchan Instant Lunch made up for you to refuel while exploring this wonder of the natural world. These Latin American Maruchan products are made in the USA at one of four factories.

I was fascinated to read about how Maruchan noodles are eaten in Mexico. Isami Romero writes: “It should be noted that Mexicans completely changed how the noodles are eaten. To begin with, they eat the noodles soggy. In fact, noodle soups are always eaten at that consistency in Mexico—a thought that would surely make the Japanese shudder. Moreover, Mexicans use a fork instead of chopsticks. In Mexico the noodles are cut short, unlike the long noodles in Japan. Mexicans also do not slurp or make a noise when eating like the Japanese do. Finally, although Maruchan noodles are already flavored (shrimp, chicken, or pork), Mexicans further add lemon and plenty of hot sauce.” [Please see: Isami Romero: ” Mexican-Style Maruchan: Japanese Food Overseas as Seen Through the Success of an Instant Ramen Brand”: https://www.nippon.com/en/column/g00287/ ]

I will be more conventional in my road test, preferring al dente noodles with some soup. I will try the noodles and soup “as is” and then add toppings to make them up into more of a meal. 

Maruchan spicy chicken and prawn noodle review

The product

I road tested two Maruchan products, made in their American factory for sale in Central and South American markets, as shown by the Spanish text on the packets. I bought them on holiday in Argentina at a supermarket. These are not the premium quality lines; Maruchan Gold is the premium product in America, and there are other products which are higher in the market available in the UK via the Japan Centre. These are the basic level product, which were inexpensive.

 

The first was described as spicy chicken flavour, and the second prawn flavour. Interestingly the health warnings are not just for high sodium. I'm not getting food snobby about instant noodles; they give a quick, easy meal solution, which is warming, fills you up and provided you don't have them too often (because of the high salt content) and you ensure your diet is balanced, convenience foods like this have their place.


 

What’s Inside

Inside each packet is a cake of dried noodles and a flavour soup packet. The instructions say to make the noodles in 500ml of boiling water. 


 

When I made the first packet (spicy chicken flavour), I followed the instruction and used 500ml of water. However, the amount of soup resulting was far too large. I therefore reduced the amount for the second packet (prawn flavour)

What does it taste like

I found the spicy chicken flavour noodles seemed to come out with a slightly firmer texture than the prawn, for reasons I cannot explain. The firmer noodles were much nicer. I usually soak instant noodles for exactly 4 minutes in boiling water, as it gives the best results. I have tried boiling them in water, which gives soggy noodles and very starch water.

The spicy chicken had a pleasant soup, rather salty, but tasting like chicken stock. There was a low hint of heat, and small bits of dried chilli in the soup. You don’t need to be able to eat hot food to eat these noodles, they are nothing like the Korean Shin Ramyun, which are incendiary. 


 

The prawn flavour soup was bland. Sorry to be blunt, but there was no real flavour. This was disappointing, I must say. 


 

As you can see, I modded my noods. Instant noodles become more than just convenience food with some modifications. The spicy chicken had Pho inspired accoutrements: coriander leaf, beansprouts, spring onion, and fresh mint. The prawn noodles had freshly toasted sesame seeds and spring onion.

I use Gingey Bites’ rating system for my noodles. For Alex’s scoring method and an index of all of her instant noodle reviews, please see: https://gingeybites.com/guide-to-instant-noodles

Maruchan Spicy Chicken noodles:

Texture 7/10

Flavour 7/10

Ease of making 8/10

Maruchan Prawn noodles:

Texture 6/10

Flavour 5/10

Ease of making 8/10

Would I buy them again: no. Sorry! 

I will give Maruchan’s more premium products a try, but there are other simple inexpensive instant noodle products which are better than this.

You can read my previous instant noodle review (for Nissin brand’s collaboration Cup Noodle with Shoryu) here: https://snigskitchen.blogspot.com/2024/01/nissin-x-shoryu-ramen-masters-cup.html

This review represents the genuine opinions of Snigdha, who has received no incentive to write this review, and who purchased the product with her own money.

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