Willow and Hearth

  • Grow
  • Home
  • Style
  • Feast
CONTACT US
Close-up of a savory Japanese ramen bowl featuring noodles, egg, and toppings on a wooden table.
Trending

“I stopped eating them”: Miami woman boils Maruchan ramen — then something slithers out of the pack

Instant ramen is supposed to be the easiest comfort food on the planet: boil water, wait a few minutes, eat over the sink. For one Miami woman, that routine reportedly turned into a horror scene when she watched something slither out of her cup of Maruchan noodles. She says that moment was enough to make her swear off the brand entirely, and her story has since been passed around social feeds as a cautionary tale for anyone who lives on pantry staples.

Close-up of a savory Japanese ramen bowl featuring noodles, egg, and toppings on a wooden table.

Her experience taps into a very specific modern fear: that the cheap, familiar food people lean on might be hiding something they never signed up to eat. It is also part of a growing pile of viral posts about strange things turning up in processed products, from boxed cakes to other instant noodle brands, that are making shoppers look a lot harder at what is floating in their bowls.

From quick lunch to nightmare in a cup

The Miami woman at the center of this story was doing what millions of people do every week, boiling a cup of Maruchan ramen for a fast meal. According to a widely shared Facebook post, she watched as the noodles softened and then noticed something that did not look like seasoning or dehydrated vegetables. The post describes how, as the water bubbled, an unidentified object appeared to move and then seemed to slither out of the pack, turning a routine lunch into a scene she could not unsee, a moment captured in the captioned phrase, “I stopped eating them,” attached to the cup of ramen.

Another version of the same account, shared through a separate link to the same Facebook profile, spells out the core of her complaint in almost the same words, saying that a Miami woman boiled a cup of Maruchan noodles and that something slithered out of the pack, a detail that has become the shorthand for the entire episode. In that retelling, the post explicitly ties the moment to her decision to stop eating Maruchan, framing the incident as a personal breaking point rather than a one-off curiosity, and again centering the image of a cup of Maruchan in Miami as the scene of the shock.

The Facebook post that would not stay local

The story did not stay in a small circle of friends. A separate Facebook photo post, attributed to Lori Plyler, repeats the same core line, “Then something slithers out of the pack,” and tags it with “Source: The Mary Sue” and hashtags like “#Instagram” and “#Bacteria,” which helped push the image and caption into wider circulation. In that version, the wording again connects the Miami woman, the cup of Maruchan ramen noodles, and the moment when something emerged from the package, turning a private gross-out into a shareable warning that traveled far beyond the original kitchen where the noodles were boiled, as seen in the linked photo.

A related link to the same image and caption again highlights that something slithered out of the pack and repeats the reference to “Source: The Mary Sue,” along with the same “#Instagram” and “#Bacteria” tags and the line about a Miami woman boiling a cup of Maruchan ramen noodles. That repetition across posts, all pointing back to the same phrasing and hashtags, helped lock in the narrative that this was not just a random kitchen mishap but a story with a specific villain, a cup of noodles in Miami that allegedly produced something alive enough to be described as slithering, as reflected in the second upload.

Why this hits a nerve with instant noodle fans

Instant noodles are built on trust, the idea that a sealed pack of dried bricks and seasoning will behave the same way every time, so a story about something slithering out of a cup of Maruchan in Miami lands like a betrayal. The Facebook post that repeats the phrase “I stopped eating them” underscores that emotional break, presenting the decision to walk away from the brand as the only logical response once the cup of noodles produced an unwelcome surprise, a reaction captured in the linked caption.

That sense of betrayal is not limited to noodles. A separate food story that has circulated online describes a woman in Los Angeles who bought a cake from Ralph for her brother’s birthday and only discovered something shocking after she cut into it, a moment that was described as “actually insane” and framed as proof that it is not just her dealing with unexpected surprises in store-bought food. The Los Angeles cake incident, tied to a Ralph purchase and the stunned reaction when she finally sliced it open, shows how quickly a single bad experience can turn into a broader conversation about what people are really getting when they trust mass-produced food, as seen in the linked story.

Not just Maruchan: other noodle scares

The Miami cup of Maruchan is not the only instant noodle product to be dragged into viral contamination fears. A video shared online shows a girl opening a pack of Indomie instant noodles and pointing out what she says are worms inside, narrating the discovery as she films the contents of the package. The clip, which focuses on the Indomie branding and the moment she identifies the alleged worms in the noodles, has been circulated as another example of how even sealed, shelf-stable products can become the subject of food safety anxiety once a camera is rolling, as seen in the linked video.

These stories, from the Miami Maruchan cup to the Indomie pack, tend to follow the same pattern: a familiar brand name, a close-up of something that should not be there, and a narrator who vows never to eat the product again. Each new clip or post adds another layer to the collective suspicion around instant noodles, even when the exact cause of the contamination is not verified, and the repetition of brand names like Indomie and Maruchan in these contexts makes it harder for fans to shrug off the images and go back to boiling water as if nothing happened.

How social media turns one bowl into a movement

Part of what gives the Miami story its staying power is the way it has been packaged for social media, with short, punchy lines like “Then something slithers out of the pack” and “I stopped eating them” doing most of the work. One of the Facebook links that recirculates the account even includes a reference to “Sep” alongside the description of a Miami woman boiling a cup of Maruchan ramen noodles and watching something emerge, tying the anecdote to a specific moment in time and again crediting a “Source” and “The Mary” in the caption, which helps frame the post as part of a larger conversation rather than a lone complaint, as reflected in the linked post.

Another link that routes through a preview of the same Facebook content again highlights the Miami location, the Maruchan brand, and the moment when something slithered out of the pack, while also pointing back to a “Source” and “The Mary” in the description. By the time the story has bounced through multiple shares, each one repeating the same core details and tags, the original cup of noodles in Miami has been transformed into a kind of shorthand for everything that can go wrong with instant food, a transformation that is visible in the way the food tag and related posts keep resurfacing the same language.

More from Willow and Hearth:

  • 15 Homemade Gifts That Feel Thoughtful and Timeless
  • 13 Entryway Details That Make a Home Feel Welcoming
  • 11 Ways to Display Fresh Herbs Around the House
  • 13 Ways to Style a Bouquet Like a Florist
←Previous
Next→

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Search

Categories

  • Feast & Festivity
  • Gather & Grow
  • Home & Harmony
  • Style & Sanctuary
  • Trending
  • Uncategorized

Archives

  • January 2026
  • December 2025
  • November 2025
  • October 2025
  • July 2025
  • June 2025
  • March 2025

Latest Post

  • My Husband Keeps Letting His Mom “Help” With the House — and She Criticizes Everything I Do
  • My In-Laws Criticized My Home as “Unsafe for Kids” — Then Offered to “Take Over”
  • 6 Life Experiences Common Among Women Who Feel Disconnected From Friends

Willow and Hearth

Willow and Hearth is your trusted companion for creating a beautiful, welcoming home and garden. From inspired seasonal décor and elegant DIY projects to timeless gardening tips and comforting home recipes, our content blends style, practicality, and warmth. Whether you’re curating a cozy living space or nurturing a blooming backyard, we’re here to help you make every corner feel like home.

Contact us at:
[email protected]

Willow and Hearth
323 CRYSTAL LAKE LN
RED OAK, TX 75154

    • About
    • Blog
    • Contact Us
    • Editorial Policy
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions

© 2025 Willow and Hearth