She ordered in her sleep — and woke up sauced.
Miranda Knowles was stunned to find an $8 DoorDash charge on her phone for food she had zero memory of ordering — and no trace of it in her home.
“I was so confused because I didn’t see any bag in the picture so I ran down the stairs and was baffled to see the little sauce,” the British Columbia woman told Newsweek in a recent interview.
The only clue? A single, lonely packet of A&W honey mustard lying at her doorstep like a greasy breadcrumb.
Knowles, 39, quickly realized she had once again fallen victim to her lifelong habit: sleepwalking.
“It started as a young child and still happens, up to 10 times a month,” she told the outlet.
“I have cleaned, put Christmas decorations away, crafted items, prepared food, bathed, and done laundry. Nothing too crazy but I can get a lot done while asleep.”
Her latest sleep stunt? Ordering a condiment courier service for the cost of a fancy latte.
Using her Ring doorbell footage and DoorDash receipts, Knowles pieced together the mystery: she’d paid someone $8 to deliver just the sauce.
“I do like A&W honey mustard but I’m not sure why I would order it alone!”
Knowles later posted the hilarious delivery video to TikTok under her handle @onewithwater on June 22, where it’s already racked up over 4 million views.
The caption read, “Apologies to the dasher who delivered a single sauce to my door at 1 am.”
Sleep tight — and maybe hide your delivery apps?
In other DoorDash drama dished up on TikTok, a brazen influencer cooked up controversy after bragging about scamming a free meal.
As The Post previously reported, user @twinzmomma2 — real name Keke — shamelessly told her followers she lied about a missing order to snag a $50 credit, then urged others to do the same. “It came — but I said it didn’t,” she gloated in the now-viral and now-deleted clip.
She didn’t say what she ordered — but made one thing crystal clear: no remorse, no shame.
“I’m about to order me some dinner,” she announced, before proudly sharing her so-called “hack” with followers.
But while Keke was busy basking in her refund glory, real delivery drivers were fuming — and the backlash came quicker than a spilled milkshake.
Turns out, the only thing faster than a late-night DoorDash is internet karma served cold.
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