Make-It-Your-Own Udon Noodle Soup

- Total Time
- 30 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 5ounces dried udon (⅔ of an 8-ounce package) or 2 7-ounce packages fresh or frozen noodles (spaghetti or bucatini also work)
- 1teaspoon sesame, olive, vegetable or canola oil
- 1tablespoon olive oil
- Fresh ginger, about 1-inch, peeled and finely minced, or grated on the smallest holes of a box grater
- 2 to 4garlic cloves, peeled and finely minced, or grated on the smallest holes of a box grater
- 3cups low-sodium vegetable or chicken broth
- 2cups, total, fresh or frozen vegetables, like thinly sliced carrots, bok choy, mushrooms, snow or snap peas, green beans, baby corn, corn kernels, peas, edamame, fresh spinach
- ½cup cubed firm tofu, precooked chicken, pork or beef (optional)
- 1tablespoon white miso paste or 3 to 4 tablespoons soy sauce, plus more soy sauce as needed
Preparation
- Step 1
Prepare noodles according to package directions, and drain. Toss with a teaspoon of sesame, olive, vegetable or canola oil to prevent them from sticking together, and set aside.
- Step 2
In a medium saucepan over medium heat, heat 1 tablespoon of olive oil until it shimmers, and sauté the grated ginger and garlic until you smell it (less than a minute). Do your best not to burn it. Add 2 cups of stock to the pot. Be careful – it might splatter.
- Step 3
Bring the stock to a boil, and lower the heat to a simmer (about medium-low). Add carrots (or any hard, root vegetables, if using), and cook until they are crisp-tender, about 1 to 2 minutes. Add tofu or any vegetables (except spinach), and cook until tender but still bright in color, about 1 to 2 minutes. Turn off heat, and cover to keep warm.
- Step 4
In a small pot, heat the remaining 1 cup of stock until it steams. Remove from the heat, and whisk in the miso paste until the miso is completely dissolved, then pour the entire miso mixture into the pot with the soup. (If using soy sauce instead of miso, skip this part and add the rest of the stock and soy sauce.) Stir in the cooked noodles and fresh spinach, if using, and heat through over medium-low, if necessary. Do not bring the soup to a boil with the miso: Some cooks believe this can ruin the miso's delicate flavor. Top as desired and season additionally, if desired, with soy sauce.
Private Notes
Comments
This one's a keeper! We make it often, switching up the ingredients every time. House favorites are mushrooms, bok choy, carrots, snap peas, spinach, scallions and a hard boiled egg--works well with whatever we throw in. Easy to customize with more or less ginger, garlic, soy...the recipe may have come from the kids edition but both kids and the adults who serve them (soup and otherwise) love it.
Made this twice. First time there wasn’t enough soup base so doubled up and cooked slowly careful to get it up to a boil then simmer. Also left the noodles out till the end and placed the noodles in the bowl first .. covered with soup base and veg and then topped with a separately cooked fried egg and toasted sesame seeds. Delicious ... kids love it.
This is amazing with salmon poached in the miso broth, yummmmmm!
I made this soup and followed the recipe closely. I used more vegetables than the two cups listed in the recipe so I increased the broth to 4 cups rather than 3. The vegetables I used are one bunch bok choy , 4 mushrooms sliced, 1/8 of a small head of cabbage, 1 broccoli crown and 2 carrots. I also added 12 jumbo shrimp. I used white miso paste ($$). This soup is easy and delicious! My husband loved this soup!
This was delicious, although a bit bland. I would triple the amount of garlic and ginger and also triple the amount of broth since there wasn’t much and there was an abundance of vegetables. Also added shrimp at the end, which was tasty and served it with Thai noodles because of the gluten in udon. Another suggestion would be to add chili garlic sauce. Also, if you’re going to double the broth, make sure that you double or triple the miso.
Fantastic --easy recipe. Added dinosaur kale, bok choy, and sweet miso, and added some sriracha for extra spice. Played with proportions a bit: 4 cups unsalted chicken broth. Between the miso and low-sodium soy sauce, there was plenty of flavor. Extra udon noodles--stored separately, will add in after reheating the leftover broth.
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