Chicken Noodle Soup
This is the weeknight-fast version of the classic sickday cure: golden broth loaded with tender shredded chicken, sweet carrots, and slippery wide egg noodles. Poaching boneless thighs whole right in the simmering broth keeps the meat juicy while deepening the flavor of store-bought stock, so the whole pot tastes long-simmered in under an hour. A squeeze of lemon and a handful of parsley at the end keep it bright instead of heavy.
Soften onion, carrots, and celery in olive oil and butter in a large soup pot, bloom garlic and dried thyme for a minute, then pour in 8 cups of low-sodium chicken broth with two bay leaves, salt, and pepper. Slip in whole boneless, skinless chicken thighs and poach at a gentle simmer for 15 minutes, lift them out to shred with two forks, and cook wide egg noodles directly in the simmering broth until just tender, 6 to 8 minutes. Stir the shredded chicken back in, finish with lemon juice and chopped parsley, taste for salt, and ladle it up hot.
- Poach the chicken whole in the broth — the thighs stay juicy and their drippings turn boxed broth into something that tastes homemade.
- Hold the pot at a gentle simmer, never a rolling boil, or the chicken turns rubbery and the broth goes cloudy.
- Expecting leftovers? Boil the noodles in a separate pot and add them to each bowl so they don't bloat and drink up all the broth.
Equipment
- Large Dutch oven or soup pot (5 to 6 quart)
- Chef's knife
- Cutting board
- Wooden spoon
- Tongs
- Two forks (for shredding)
- Ladle
Ingrediënten
Soup base
- 30 ml olive oil
- 14 g unsalted butter
- medium yellow onion, diced
- medium carrots, peeled and sliced into 1/2-inch (1 cm) coins
- celery stalks, sliced
- garlic cloves, minced
- 0.5 g dried thyme, or 4 sprigs fresh
- bay leaves
- 2 L low-sodium chicken broth
- 680 g boneless, skinless chicken thighs, breasts work too; see FAQs
- 5 g kosher salt, plus more to taste
- 1 g freshly ground black pepper
Noodles and finishing
- 140 g wide egg noodles, dry
- 15 ml fresh lemon juice, about half a lemon
- 10 g fresh flat-leaf parsley
Bereiding
- STAP01
Heat the olive oil and butter in a large Dutch oven or soup pot over medium heat. Add the onion, carrots, and celery with a pinch of salt and cook, stirring occasionally, until the onion is translucent and the vegetables have just started to soften, 6 to 8 minutes. Don't let them brown — you want a clean, golden broth.
- STAP02
Stir in the minced garlic and dried thyme and cook until fragrant, about 1 minute. Cooking the aromatics in fat for this short window wakes up their flavor before any liquid goes in.
- STAP03
Pour in the chicken broth and add the bay leaves, salt, and pepper. Raise the heat and bring the pot just to a boil, scraping up anything stuck to the bottom.
- STAP04
Lower the heat so the broth barely simmers — small bubbles, not a churn — and slip in the whole chicken thighs. Poach gently, uncovered, until the thickest piece registers 165°F (74°C) or is no longer pink inside, about 15 minutes.
- STAP05
Lift the chicken out with tongs onto a cutting board and let it sit while the noodles cook. Once it's cool enough to handle, pull it into bite-size shreds with two forks.
- STAP06
While the chicken rests, return the broth to a steady simmer and add the egg noodles. Cook, stirring once or twice, until just tender, 6 to 8 minutes — they'll keep softening in the hot soup, so pull them a shade early.
- STAP07
Fish out the bay leaves, stir the shredded chicken back in, and let it warm through for a minute. Turn off the heat and stir in the lemon juice and parsley. Taste — it will likely want another pinch of salt — then ladle into bowls and serve hot.
Make ahead
Make the soup base up to 2 days ahead: cook through shredding the chicken, stir the chicken back into the broth, and refrigerate. At dinnertime, bring the pot back to a simmer, cook the noodles right in the broth, and finish with the lemon and parsley. The flavor actually improves overnight — only the noodles need to be last-minute.
Storage
Refrigerate in an airtight container for up to 4 days. The noodles will keep absorbing broth as they sit, so expect a thicker, stew-like texture; loosen leftovers with a splash of broth or water when you reheat them gently on the stove. To freeze, portion the soup without the noodles (they turn mushy after thawing) and freeze for up to 3 months; thaw overnight in the fridge and add freshly cooked noodles when reheating.
Variations
Gluten-free
Skip the egg noodles and stir in 3 cups of cooked white rice at the end, or cook gluten-free fusilli or rice noodles in a separate pot of salted water and add them to each bowl. Confirm your broth is certified gluten-free, and swap the butter for another tablespoon of olive oil if you also need it dairy-free.
Creamy chicken noodle
After the noodles are cooked, reduce the heat to low and stir in 120 ml (1/2 cup) of heavy cream, or whisk 2 tablespoons of flour into the softened vegetables in step 2 before adding the broth for a silkier, chowder-adjacent pot. Skip the lemon juice or add it off the heat so the cream doesn't split.
Lemon-dill with a soft bite
Double the lemon juice, swap the parsley for 3 tablespoons of chopped fresh dill, and add a teaspoon of grated lemon zest with the garlic. It leans Greek avgolemono-adjacent without the egg tempering, and it's especially good with poached chicken breast.
Serve with
Nutrition per serving
Nutrition values are estimates based on the metric measurements. Adjust as needed.
Veelgestelde vragen
Can I use rotisserie chicken to make this easy chicken noodle soup even faster?
Yes — that's the fastest route of all. Skip the poaching step entirely: build the broth with the vegetables and seasonings, simmer 10 minutes, cook the noodles, then stir in about 3 cups of shredded rotisserie chicken during the last 2 minutes just to heat it through. Toss the carcass in the pot while the vegetables simmer (pull it before the noodles go in) for an extra layer of flavor.
Should I use chicken thighs or breasts?
Thighs are the forgiving choice — their extra fat keeps them tender even if the simmer runs a few minutes long, which is why an easy chicken noodle soup works so well with them. Breasts absolutely work: poach them whole at the same bare simmer for 12 to 15 minutes until they hit 165°F (74°C), and pull them the moment they're done, since they dry out faster.
Why did my noodles turn mushy?
Two usual culprits: they were cooked past al dente, or the soup sat before serving. Egg noodles keep absorbing hot broth even off the heat, so pull them when they still have a slight bite. If you're cooking for leftovers or a crowd that eats in shifts, boil the noodles separately in salted water and add a handful to each bowl before ladling the soup over.
Can I freeze chicken noodle soup?
The broth, vegetables, and chicken freeze beautifully for up to 3 months — it's the noodles that suffer, turning soft and blown-out after thawing. Freeze the soup base without them, then thaw overnight in the fridge, bring to a simmer, and cook fresh noodles right in the pot. It takes less than 10 extra minutes and tastes freshly made.
Is broth or stock better here, and does homemade matter?
Either works; low-sodium is the important part so you control the salt as the soup reduces. Stock (made with bones) brings more body, while broth is lighter and cleaner. Because the chicken thighs poach directly in the liquid, even a basic boxed broth picks up real depth by the end — that trick is what makes this version taste homemade without simmering a whole bird for hours.
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