This is what I call my ‘short cut’ to chicken noodle soup.
My long version of this recipe involves me roasting a whole chicken for an
hour, boiling it with vegetables, straining it, and then letting the broth cool
and sit in the refrigerator overnight so I can skim the fat off of it. If you
don’t have 5 hours of cooking time to kill, plus the patience to wait for the
broth to cool, then I recommend just making this version of the soup. It’s just
as good, and takes maybe 2 hours total.
Ingredients
2 chicken breasts (with bone in)
3 carrots
3-4 celery stalks
1 onion
1 clove of garlic
3 32oz containers of Chicken stock
Medium egg noodles
Salt
Pepper
Celery salt (or celery seed)
Poultry seasoning
Olive oil
(Optional items)
1 bay leaf
Chicken Bouillon
Steps
Chop your carrots, celery, and onion into even pieces. I
tend to dice the onions smaller since I don’t want large onion chunks in my
soup. If you like that sort of thing, dice them how you feel. For the garlic,
use a garlic crusher.
Once you have mixed in some of the seasoning with your
vegetables, pour in two of the three containers of chicken stock and keep heat
low. If you are adding a bay leaf, this is when you'd add it.
Remove the skin and what fat you can from the two chicken
breasts and then add them to the chicken stock. Cover and let cook for one
hour.
After one hour, remove the chicken breasts from the stock and, with two forks, pull off the cooked chicken meat into a bowl. Place the bones back into the stock and let them cook while the meat cools until you can touch it.
In a separate pot, cook your pasta. I usually cook 2 to 3
handfuls of pasta for a large pot like this. I do not salt the water for this
kind of pasta.
Once the pasta has cooked, I strain the pasta and run cold
water over the noodles until they are cold to the touch.
The chicken breast meat is usually cool enough to handle once
the pasta is finished, so you can then tear the meat into bite sized pieces.
Remove the bones (and the bay leaf if added) from the stock. Add in your chicken breast
meat and season to taste. You may need to add more celery salt, pepper, or a
touch of cayenne pepper if you like. If you want, add in one tea spoon of the
bouillon I use – I only add this if the broth tastes watery. I rarely need to
use it with this recipe.
Add in pasta. The last box of broth is added if the soup is
too thick – I tend to end up adding the third box of chicken stock after adding
the pasta because I like a lot of broth with my soup.
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