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Quick and Easy Chinese Noodle Soup

Published 1 month ago4 minute read

Chinese Noodle Soup recipe

Make this quick and easy Chinese Noodle Soup recipe with pantry ingredients, water, and a few items from the fridge. 

Grab an egg, tomato, and some pre-washed spinach. From the pantry, you just need dried noodles and some seasonings, and you’ll have a fast mid-week dinner, a quick lunch while working at home, or a tasty warming breakfast for your kids before they hop on the school bus. 

We have many delicious noodle soup recipes on the blog, from Kaitlin’s Taiwanese Beef Noodle Soup to Vietnamese Pho and Laksa. These recipes are very achievable to make—and perhaps even easier than you think—but they do require time and a decent number of ingredients to make. 

Even us food bloggers need fast non-recipe recipes that you can whip together in a few minutes with items you already have. This is just that—no meat to de-frost, not even much cooking! All you have to do is boil the dried noodles/veggies and fry an egg. This recipe requires little to no kitchen skill. 

It can be hard to cook for one, and this Chinese noodle soup recipe helps solve that dilemma while still being completely satisfied with your meal. This recipe is as easy to make as a single serving as it is for a larger group. 

bowl of chinese noodle soup with tomato, egg, watercress

You may be wondering where the flavor of this noodle soup comes from. The seasonings—light soy sauce, sesame oil, black vinegar, white pepper, and salt create a surprisingly flavorful base. 

Tomatoes add freshness and umami (see our post on how to create umami with plant-based ingredients). If you keep in-season tomatoes in the freezer, you can enjoy flavorful tomatoes in your cooking all year round! (We freeze tomatoes from our garden every summer.) 

A garnish of scallion or cilantro also adds flavor! (We keep these in our freezer as well—see our post on how to freeze herbs and aromatics.)

An optional ingredient that adds even more flavor here is dried shrimp flakes, or xiāpí (虾皮). They add a little salty bite and savory complexity. Leaving them out keeps this recipe vegetarian.

This recipe takes about 15 minutes from start to finish. If you’re searching for an easy, warming meal with minimal cooking, this one is for you! 

Put the chopped tomato, salt, white pepper powder, light soy sauce, sesame oil, black vinegar, dried shrimp flakes (if using), and scallion (or cilantro) into your noodle bowl.

chopped tomato in bowl
seasoning ingredients and tomato in large bowl
chinese noodle soup base ingredients in bowl

Pre-heat a pan or wok until it starts to smoke, and spread the oil around to coat. Fry the egg to your liking, dish it up, and set aside.

cooking over easy egg in wok
frying egg in wok

Boil the water in a medium pot (or your wok), and add the noodles.

adding noodles to boiling water in wok

When the noodles are almost done cooking, transfer 1½ cups of the noodle cooking water to the noodle bowl.

ladling cooking water into measuring cup
adding cooking water to bowl

Add the leafy greens to the pot/wok with the noodles. Once the noodles and greens are cooked, add them to the bowl.

adding noodles to bowl with soup

Top with the fried egg, and enjoy.

Chinese noodle soup recipe
Bowl of Chinese Noodle Soup with Egg and Watercress

Prep: 5 minutes

Cook: 10 minutes

Total: 15 minutes

  • Boil the water in a medium pot (or your wok), and add the noodles. When the noodles are almost done cooking, transfer 1½ cups of the noodle cooking water to the noodle bowl. Add the leafy greens to the pot/wok with the noodles. Once the noodles and greens are cooked, add them to the bowl. Top with the fried egg, and enjoy.

Calories: 492kcal (25%) Carbohydrates: 61g (20%) Protein: 21g (42%) Fat: 21g (32%) Saturated Fat: 3g (15%) Polyunsaturated Fat: 6g Monounsaturated Fat: 11g Trans Fat: 0.1g Cholesterol: 192mg (64%) Sodium: 978mg (41%) Potassium: 589mg (17%) Fiber: 2g (8%) Sugar: 2g (2%) Vitamin A: 2979IU (60%) Vitamin C: 17mg (21%) Calcium: 152mg (15%) Iron: 4mg (22%)

nutritional info disclaimer

TheWoksofLife.com is written and produced for informational purposes only. While we do our best to provide nutritional information as a general guideline to our readers, we are not certified nutritionists, and the values provided should be considered estimates. Factors such as brands purchased, natural variations in fresh ingredients, etc. will change the nutritional information in any recipe. Various online calculators also provide different results, depending on their sources. To obtain accurate nutritional information for a recipe, use your preferred nutrition calculator to determine nutritional information with the actual ingredients and quantities used.

Judy

About Judy

Judy is the mom of The Woks of Life family. Born in Shanghai, she arrived in the U.S. at age 16. Fluent in both English and three separate Chinese dialects, she's our professional menu translator when we're eating our way through China. Dedicated to preserving disappearing recipes and traditions, her specialty is all things traditional, from mooncakes to home-style stir-fries.

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