Low-FODMAP Chicken Soup Recipe

Low-FODMAP Chicken Soup is nearly impossible to find in stores, so why not make your own with this recipe?

Your search is over!  Here is a low-FODMAP version of my mom’s chicken soup that can be eaten as a meal or used as an ingredient in recipes.

When following the elimination phase of the low-FODMAP diet, you may find yourself searching the shelves of your local grocery store or adapting recipes to fit your temporary restrictions.  One ingredient that has been most difficult to find is chicken soup or broth.  I have yet to find a low-FODMAP chicken soup in the markets.  Even in a powdered form, I have only found one available by Fody Foods.*

In order to prepare for the upcoming holidays – and possible sick days –  I created a low-FODMAP Chicken Soup recipe that I adapted from my mother’s recipe that she has been serving for decades.  It’s delicious and fills the house with a nostalgic aroma.  I didn’t want to lose that flavor and trip down memory lane when I make soup this season, but I also didn’t want to experience my Irritable Bowel Syndrome symptoms from all of the high-FODMAP ingredients that are usually, and unknowingly, included in chicken soup recipes.

I did a little substituting and I think it’s a close second to my mother’s Chicken Soup recipe. I’m glad to have a low-FODMAP chicken soup that’s safe to eat as a soup and use in place of high-FODMAP broth in my every-day cooking.

Low-FODMAP Chicken Soup Recipe

Just like my mother's but without the high-FODMAP ingredients to ruin the experience.

Ingredients

  • 4-5 lbs whole chicken organ bag removed
  • 1 lb baby carrots
  • 1 stalk celery or 2 tsp celery seeds
  • 6 scallions white bulbs removed
  • 3 bay leaves
  • 1 turnip
  • 1 parsnip
  • 1 large bunch of dill tied with twine
  • salt and pepper to taste
  • 6 quarts water approximately

Instructions

  1. In a large pot, combine all ingredients and fill with water to 1 inch above the chicken (about 6 quarts).

  2. Bring to a boil, cover and simmer for about an hour or until chicken is falling off the bone. Add salt and pepper to taste once the chicken reaches 165F tested with a meat thermometer.

  3. For more intense flavor, boil uncovered to reduce the liquid.

  4. Remove from heat and cool before separating the broth from the chicken and veggies for storage. See below in the post for serving suggestions.

After preparing this recipe, you have a few options:

  1. Remove the dill bunch, the turnip, and the parsnip and shred the chicken meat into the soup and eat it.
  2. Separate the vegetables from the chicken and the broth.  Use the chicken in other recipes or add it to some of the soup, and then purée the vegetables with some of the broth to have a vegetable-flavored stock in addition to the chicken broth.
  3. Separate the broth and continue to boil it so that the flavors are even more concentrated.
  4. Separate the broth into one-cup containers and freeze for future use in other recipes.

However you choose to use this low-FODMAP Chicken Soup recipe, I hope you enjoy!

 

 

 

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Beth Rosen

Eating Attitudes™ & Gut Expert

Beth Rosen, MS, RD, CDN is a Registered Dietitian and owner of Beth Rosen Nutrition. She practices a non-diet philosophy and is a Health at Every Size" practitioner. Her goal is to end the pain of diet culture, one person at a time. Beth's techniques and programs empower chronic dieters, and those who consider themselves emotional and /or stress eaters, to ditch the vicious cycle of dieting, eat fearlessly by removing Food and diet rules, and mend their relationship with food and their bodies. Beth's works face-to-face with clients in Southbury, CT, and virtually with clients, worldwide.

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