For the first post about this noodle, click here . I adapted this recipe . Let me just get this out of the way: this was bad. It was so bad that I rinsed off the noodles and ate them with soba broth instead. It was inedible. That being said, I would possibly try this again with alterations. I think the issue was the lime and cayenne did not work well with the other flavors. If I were to do this again, I would eliminate the cayenne altogether and add hot sauce after tasting. More likely I will go searching for another miso recipe. I made significant adaptations on the original recipe. I made these noodles after a very long day of meal prepping, so I did not measure carefully or use the exact ingredients asked. I used white miso because that is what they had at my grocery store and I usually prefer less salty flavors. Instead of fresh ginger, I used ginger powder. This is a common adaptation for me because I find fresh ginger very overpowering and not to my t...
Type: fresh Size: 14 oz. Price: $2.19 Price per oz.: $0.16 For this noodle, I adapted Joshua Weismann's The Cheapest Noodle Dish Ever (Chicken Chow Mein). Alterations: Instead of hoisin sauce or oyster sauce, I used mushroom based vegetarian oyster sauce. Instead of fresh garlic, I used jarred (the fresh garlic I bought had sprouted significantly in the few days since I bought it.) Instead of chicken, I used tofu. Instead of celery and bean sprouts, I doubled the carrots and green onions. This was just alright. I don't think it was enough sauce, and the noodles were very very dry. I would try this again with different brand noodles and I'd use 1.5x sauce (hopefully with fresh garlic!) I think the fault mostly lies with the noodles. Luckily, I made the full package of noodles (had leftovers for lunch for a week), and now I don't need to find a way to use them again.