Mom's Best Recipes
Recipe

Classic Chicken Soup

A cozy, golden, clear-ish chicken soup with tender chicken, carrots, celery, and noodles. Simple ingredients, big comfort, and plenty of room to improvise.

Author By Matt Campbell
4.8
A steaming bowl of homemade chicken noodle soup with carrots, celery, shredded chicken, and fresh herbs on a wooden table

Some recipes are basically a warm blanket with better PR, and homemade chicken soup is one of them. This is the classic version I come back to when the weather is rude, my schedule is rude, or I just need dinner to be kind to me for once.

We build the broth the smart way: sauté aromatics first, simmer chicken for a flavorful stock, then add the carrots, celery, and noodles toward the end so they stay pleasantly tender instead of sliding into mush territory. It is comforting, bright, and deeply savory, with that little pause mid-bite that says, “Okay wow, this is the good stuff.”

A large pot of chicken soup gently simmering on a stovetop with visible carrots and celery

Why It Works

  • Flavor fast, not fussy: Sautéing onion and garlic first builds a sweeter, deeper base than just boiling everything together.
  • Golden, clean-tasting broth: A gentle simmer (not a rolling boil) keeps the broth tasting cleaner and the chicken tender.
  • Perfect texture: Carrots and celery go in after the chicken is cooked, and noodles cook last so they stay springy.
  • Bright finish: A squeeze of lemon and fresh herbs wake up the whole pot and keep it from tasting flat.

Storage Tips

Refrigerate: Cool soup quickly, then store in airtight containers for up to 4 days.

Keep noodles separate (best move): Store the broth with the chicken and vegetables together, and keep noodles in a separate container if you can. They drink broth like it is their job. Reheat noodles by dunking them in hot soup for a minute.

Freeze: Freeze soup without noodles for best texture, up to 3 months. Thaw overnight in the fridge, then reheat gently on the stove and add fresh-cooked noodles or rice.

Reheat: Warm over medium heat until steaming. Add a splash of water or broth if it thickens. Taste and re-salt at the end.

Common Questions

Can I use rotisserie chicken?

Yes. Use 8 cups low-sodium chicken broth. Sauté the onion and garlic in a little olive oil, then add the broth, bay leaves, thyme, and carrots and celery. Simmer until the vegetables are as tender as you like (I aim for crisp-tender), then add 2 to 3 cups shredded rotisserie chicken just to warm through. Cook the noodles in the soup (or separately if you are planning leftovers), then finish with lemon and herbs.

How do I keep the broth from tasting bland?

Three things: sauté the aromatics, salt in layers (go easy at first if your broth is salty, adjust at the end), and finish with acid. Lemon juice makes chicken soup taste like itself, but louder.

What noodles work best?

Egg noodles are classic. Ditalini, orzo, small shells, or broken spaghetti also work. Cook just until tender and serve right away, or cook separately for leftovers so they do not soak up all the broth.

Can I make it gluten-free?

Absolutely. Swap in gluten-free pasta, rice, or potatoes. If using rice, add cooked rice to bowls so it does not overthicken the whole pot.

Why is my soup cloudy?

Usually the simmer was too vigorous, or the pot got stirred a lot while the chicken cooked. It will still taste great. Next time, keep it at a gentle simmer, skim any foam early on, and strain the broth if you want it clearer.

I started making chicken soup as a “responsible adult” meal, then realized it is secretly a kitchen magic trick: you take a few humble vegetables, a chicken situation, and some noodles, and suddenly your whole home smells like someone has their life together. This is also my favorite midnight-leftover upgrade. Cold soup becomes hot soup. Hot soup becomes “I meant to do this.” Add lemon, add herbs, stand at the stove with a spoon, and pretend you are in a movie where everything is going to be fine.