Skip to content
Capilano Courier
Menu
  • Home
  • Sections
    • News
    • Features & The Profile
    • Arts & Culture
    • Letters
    • Humour
    • Video Production
  • About
    • Advertise
    • Contribute
  • Meet the Crew
  • Online Issues
  • Events
  • EIC Election
Menu

The Starving Artist

Posted on September 6, 2023September 8, 2023 by Sara Brinkac

The Starving Artist

Broke-ass student recipes

Sara Brinkac // Columns Editor
Tricia Tang // Illustrator

Hello all you lovely broke souls. It’s me, Sara, The Starving Artist. I’m both a starving artist and someone who sees the beauty in the weird meals we make when broke and especially tired. We all have one, the strange concoction from the back of the cupboards, something we take an odd satisfaction in eating and an even odder particularity in how that meal should be prepared.  As The Starving Artist, I am making it my mission to supply you, my faithful readers, with an accurate recording of these recipes. For you and future generations these secret recipes will be protected to pass the torch of oddities and keep the human race from the brink of extinction. You’re welcome.

Speaking of oddities, boy do I have an odd recipe for you this month. This weird little meal comes from my weird little roommate, Sofia. She holds this recipe very dear. Many a time have I slandered this meal, and many a time has she staunchly advocated for it. I don’t know if I love it, but after talking to her more about the process, I must say, I certainly do respect it. Buckle in for a wild and tasty (?) recipe y’all.

 

 The Post 16 Hour Shift

Cost of Meal: $1.27 and your pride

1 Pack of cheap spicy ramen

500 ml of water to cook the ramen in? I don’t know, you figure it out

1–1 ½ heaping Tbsp of the fattest thickest sour cream you got

Directions

  1. Grab a pot. One of those good pots for cooking ramen in and eating out of. You’re tired, you’re hungry, of course you’re going to be eating out of it. 
  1. Put enough water in that pot to boil ramen in. I am upset that you would expect me to know how much water that is.
  1. When the water starts boiling, get excited because it’s ramen time. Crack open that bag of the cheapest, spiciest (within your tolerance) ramen you have and toss that hunk o’ noodles in the bubbling water.
  1. Alright, time has passed, you’ve pulled the ramen apart with a fork and really made yourself feel like you’re actively cooking something. Great. One thing though. You’ve just worked a 16 hour shift and you’re starving. There’s no time to wait around for these noodles to fully cook. Shut the stove off, say the noodles are al dente, not undercooked and head on down to step 5.
  1. Turn heat to low, remove pot from the stove and drain all the water out of the pot. I know what you’re thinking. “Drain all the water out of the pot? But this is ramen! It requires water for broth!” Hey kid, I didn’t ask for your opinion. Just drain the water out of the pot.
  1. Place said pot back on the element. Next, grab a heaping tablespoon of thick sour cream and plop that in your dry noodle mass. Allow that low heat to really warm the sour cream, mmm yummy, so warm and creamy. Hey, y’know what? If you’re feeling extra creamy get another half tablespoon in there, you only live once #treatyourself #yolo #:P
  1. Alright, now it’s time for the spicy mix. Shake that packet in and get all those flavours melding. Be sure to mix it fast. Real fact: the faster you stir the more the flavour is activated. Stirring faster also results in you thinking less about that thing fucking Cary said during your shift. 
  1. Grab the pot off the stove, let it and your temper cool down, then, get this, eat the food. Don’t make me explain that part just thank me for the cool new recipe you have that’s super awesome. You could also thank my roommate Sofia since it’s her weird little recipe — but hey — I’m the one who typed it, give me all the credit, why don’t ya? 

 

Bjorn Appletini!

—The Starving Artist

Category: Columns

Post navigation

← Jingling of Keys
The Relentless Return of Wildfires →

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

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

Upcoming Tabling Hours: Thursdays, 12:00 p.m. to 2:00 p.m., at either the Learning Commons entrance (LB 126) or Birch Cafeteria.

Latest News

  • CapU Community Questions Administration’s Neutrality as Chancellor’s Campaign Contradicts University’s Stated Values
    Chancellor carrying forward the university’s reconciliation commitments. B.C. Conservative leadership candidate vowing to repeal […]
  • Presidents’ Dinner Raises over $270,000 for Student Housing After Last-Minute Rename
    Student brings housing crisis to center stage at Capilano University event Asmi Toor Sogi (she/her) // Contributor What is usually known as […]
  • CapU Students to Monitor FIFA Impacts in New Summer Course
    Five instructors, a conference with global participation and publication of findings with the Capilano Courier Laura Morales Padilla […]
  • CSU President and VP Finance Removed from Office Due to Alleged Misconduct
    “Improper use” of in camera proceedings led to two executives being removed five days later Laura Morales Padilla (she/her) // EIC In the […]
  • Meet CapU’s New President
    An interview with Dr. Jason Dewling Ben Taylor // Crew Writer (he/him)  Capilano Courier: Questions for President March 11, 2026   […]
  • Yuri Fulmer Pt. 2
    Students reactions to the political aspirations of CapU’s chancellor Ben Taylor // Crew Writer (he/him) Andrei Gueco (he/him) // […]
Video Production
On Friday 17, we hosted the Capilano Courier Awards with a very special guest speaker—Irwin Oostindie, former Courier crew member and winner of the 2025 CapU Alumni Awards! He shared about his journey as a student organizer and activist in the late 1980s, the role of print and media in knowledge mobilization, and what we can do as a student publication to join existing efforts to build Vancouver as an inclusive city.

In this episode, listen to Irwin talk about journalism, witnessing, and how to mobilize communities through storytelling and media.
Irwin Oostindie on Journalism and Witnessing | The Capilano Courier Awards
Subscribe
What even is a Zine? Mia shows us a behind the scene of how this little publication comes together, the vision behind it, and how to become a paid contributor of the C.C. Crumb!
Indigenous power means something different to every student, but it always begins with voice, community, and truth. Hear what CapU students had to say.
What does campus clean-up day look like?
© 2026 Capilano Courier | Powered by Minimalist Blog WordPress Theme