Shapers of Japanese History

Andō Momofuku: An Inventor Who Used His Noodle to Change Global Food Culture

Culture

Instant ramen: just add hot water and you have a meal in a few minutes, anytime, anywhere. The product had its beginnings with Chicken Ramen by Nissin Foods, invented by Andō Momofuku in a backyard workshop. National broadcaster NHK’s morning serial Manpuku, slated for broadcast beginning in autumn 2018, recounts the ups and downs of Andō’s life and his indomitable originality.

A Spark of an Idea That Changed the World

Thirteen years after launching Chicken Ramen, Andō once again surprised the world with Cup Noodle, the first prepackaged noodles to come in their own cup container. The move away from noodles packaged in bags may seem like a small change, but this was the first step in propagating made-in-Japan noodles to the whole world.

A standard Cup Noodle lineup today. The excellent package design and logo have remained virtually unchanged since the product’s launch.

Andō got the idea for his new product on a 1966 sales trip to the United States. He was promoting Chicken Ramen to local buyers, but since there were no bowls or chopsticks at hand, he had no means of eating it right away to demonstrate. Seeing this, the supermarket buyer he was dealing with took out a paper cup, broke the noodles in half, poured in hot water and started eating them with a fork. This made Andō realize that taking local food customs into account was the key to conquering global markets. Putting all his ingenuity to work in five years of trial and error, Andō launched Cup Noodle in a disposable container in 1971.

Product development began with choosing a package for the noodles that would also serve as the preparation container and dining dish. This photo shows the cup’s inner structure; suspending the noodles above the base improves the cup’s durability.

But there were still hurdles to overcome. Priced slightly higher than bagged noodles, Cup Noodle didn’t move that well. Initially it was a niche product sold to people like police officers, firefighters, and others working night shifts or outdoors. But Andō persisted in his sales efforts. His big break came the next year, when the nation was transfixed by the Asama-Sansō incident, a hostage crisis and police siege in February 1972. In weather cold enough to freeze bentō box lunches solid, police spent more than a week attempting to force student radicals from a mountain lodge where they had taken the innkeeper’s wife hostage. The sight of them on nationwide TV hungrily slurping steaming cups of Cup Noodle gave the product a big boost among the public.

TV commercials boosted Cup Noodle’s popularity, as did the development of vending machines that also provided boiling water to prepare the product.

Space Noodles, the Next Frontier

The moment that Cup Noodles became a hit, rival makers entered the market, and the new product category of instant ramen spread worldwide. Andō, who believed that competition and friendly rivalry within the industry would help his own company grow, never sought to patent his invention, licensing it instead. This was a major factor behind the growth of the huge market for instant noodles—and one that ultimately contributed to the expansion of Nissin Foods itself.

Andō remained actively interested in developing new ideas throughout his life. In 2001, at the age of 91, he declared that he would develop space food. Leading his development team, he began working on ramen that could be eaten even in outer space. This led to his achievement of “Space Ram,” featuring a thickened soup to prevent splattering in a weightless environment. Andō’s creation made it into space in July 2005 together with Japanese astronaut Noguchi Sōichi and his crewmates on the space shuttle Discovery. Andō expressed pure delight and felt vindicated in his belief that “in life, it’s never too late” to do things.

“Space Ram” was produced in four flavors—soy sauce, curry, tonkotsu (pork broth), and miso—and featured various adaptations like bite-size noodle bunches.

Andō shaking hands with astronaut Noguchi after his space mission.

Entrepreneurial Spirit Lives On

Andō died on January 5, 2007, aged 96, the day after he had presented his thoughts at the Nissin Foods New Year ceremony. His demise was reported around the world, and the New York Times ran an editorial expressing gratitude to “Mr. Noodles.”

Andō lived by the motto that “food brings peace.” He was honored for his social contributions through food and for promoting the development of food culture, including local culinary traditions in Japan.

Throughout his long life, Andō never ceased to come up with creative ideas or to bring tenacity to his endeavors. Many recall that when he was chairman of the company, there was a food preparation area adjoining his office where he could tinker with various food ideas. He was famous for aphorisms, one of the best remembered being: “If you fall, don’t just get up. Pick up some dirt while you’re at it.”

Those words— earthy, tough, and warm, and encapsulating a hard life of hurdles overcome—resonated with the public during Andō’s life. To this day, they serve to encourage anyone setting off on a new venture.

The Cup Noodles Museum in the city of Ikeda, Osaka, features a kitchen where visitors can experience preparing Chicken Ramen, the inspiration for Andō’s inventions.

(Originally written in Japanese. With thanks to Nissin Foods Holdings for photos and interview material. Reporting and text by Yamaguchi Noriko. Photos by Yamazaki Yoshinori.)

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