Dec 31
2009
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I have a confession to make: I don't really like traditional turkey (or chicken) noodle soup. It can be good if you eat it right away but in my experience everything tends to go soggy fairly quickly. The flavours are still good and all that, but I can never quite get past the soggy noodles and veg. This version is about as unsoggy as you can get and still be soup.
I have a book of Japanese home cooking for North Americans and I love the soups in it. They are all the kind where you cook up some stock, season it, and then pour it over a bowl of cooked noodles, meat or tofu and veggies. We often make beef noodle soup this way* and it is always good. Fresh but still warming. I thought I'd try it out with turkey.
The stock was from our freezer, a delicious consequence of hosting Thanksgiving dinner in October. The vermicelli noodles were in the cupboard. The carrots are the last of the ones we grew this summer (still very crunchy); I steamed them first to make sure they would be cooked completely but still crisp. The turkey was two slices of breast meat with a little delicious, salty skin still attached; I tore it into largish pieces.
I cooked the noodles in the broth then scooped them into two bowls. I topped the noodles with the turkey and carrots and poured the broth over everything. I added some chives, clipped from our kitchen "garden", and a sprinkle of dried cilantro for good measure.
We ate our soup with chopsticks** and some crusty bread.
*Cover the outside of a nice steak with ground pepper. Sear it quickly then cut into thin slices. When you pour the hot broth over everything the slices will cook to perfection.
**I don't know why but I love to eat soup with chopsticks.
***I also really like footnotes.