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Home Soups

Creamy chicken noodle soup with mini croutons

By Nagi Maehashi
130 Comments
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Published23 Jul '24 Updated25 Jun '25
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Recipe

This creamy chicken noodle soup is a homemade version of instant cup-a-soup. Except, well….it’s made with real ingredients! 🙂 Plus croutons and crispy bits of bacon. Hearty, cosy and surprisingly healthy (no cream!).

Pot of Creamy chicken noodle soup

Creamy chicken noodle soup

This is a nice wholesome soup that’s got everything you need for a complete meal: a good amount of vegetables, protein, starch and a bit of fun (crunchy croutons and crispy bacon bits!).

No cream. No preservatives!

So comparing it to the instant “just add water” powdered soups is a bit undermining, actually. Besides the fact that you won’t need to google any ingredients in this recipe (hands up if you know what maltodextrin, hydrolysed corn protein and potassium chloride is!), this homemade one is much heartier, filled with lots of (real!) chicken, (real!) fresh vegetables and lots of noodles (well, pasta).

Creamy chicken noodle soup in bowls

Ingredients in creamy chicken noodle soup

Here’s what you need to make this soup. Starting with bacon and raw chicken cooked in the pot makes a tastier soup broth because the golden bits left on the base of the pot – ie fond – adds extra free flavour into the soup broth. But in the event of an emergency, you could shortcut this with pre-cooked shredded chicken and store bought cooked bacon bits. Still better than a packet of powdered soup! 🙂

The chicken and bacon

  • Chicken – I use chicken breast, cut in half to form 2 thin steaks which take just a few minutes to cook. It’s then diced into small pieces (easy to eat with a spoon). You could also make this with boneless thighs. It’s a bit wonky to split in half horizontally so just cook them whole.

  • Bacon – Use streaky bacon, for a tastier result! It’s called streaky bacon because it’s streaked with fat, and fat = flavour. The bacon will cook in its own fat then we will use it to cook the chicken.

    Lean bacon options – I get it, sometimes we need to make healthier choices. So if you have lean bacon, use a smidge of oil to cook the bacon (else it will just burn).


The vegetables

I recommend keeping the onion, garlic, carrot and celery as these form the flavour base for the broth (it’s called a soffritto). But feel free to switch the corn and peas with diced vegetables of choice. You could even reduce the pasta and use more vegetables instead.

  • Peas – I use frozen peas for convenience. Just add them into the soup, frozen. Because they are already cooked, they just need to be heated through.

  • Corn – As with peas, I use frozen corn. Canned is fine too, just drain first.

Alternatives: Capsicum/bell peppers, zucchini, celeriac or other root vegetables, green beans (chopped). Or stir through baby spinach, chopped English spinach or kale at the end.

Making Creamy chicken noodle soup
The simple step of sautéing onion, carrots, celery, garlic and thyme sprigs together is our beautiful aromatic soffritto for this soup that gives the broth extra flavour, almost like using a homemade vegetable stock.

the creamy broth and pasta

Here’s what you need for the creamy chicken soup broth.

  • Pasta – I like to use short cut angel hair pasta (featured in the video) which is literally just short broken pieces of angel hair pasta (sold alongside regular pasta, the same price). I like it because it cooks quickly (less than 5 minutes) and is easy to scoop up with a spoon. Alternatively, just break angel hair pasta or spaghetti by hand (I used spaghetti in the photos), or other small pasta like risoni/orzo, ditalini, star shaped pasta etc. Just be prepared to cook a little longer if you use a thicker pasta.

  • Milk – Use full fat if you can, though low fat works fine too. Non-dairy neutral flavoured milks will work fine too, as long as they don’t split when simmered on the stove (I haven’t tried so can’t say with certainty which will and won’t work).

  • Flour – Just plain / all-purpose flour. This, plus the starch in the pasta, is what thickens the soup to make it a bit creamy. We don’t need cream. I promise you won’t miss it in this soup!

  • Butter – We need this to cook the vegetables and so there is enough fat to make a roux (fat + flour) which is what thickens the soup. If you don’t have enough fat when making a roux, you will end up with gazillions of pesky little flour lumps in your soup.

  • Chicken stock/broth – This is the cooking liquid to make the soup broth. We also use some water. You will be surprised how much liquid is absorbed by the pasta! So we need to start the soup with a lot of liquid to end up with the right amount and soup thickness at the end.

Broken angel hair pasta for Creamy chicken noodle soup
Don’t worry if you can’t find short cut angel hair pasta. Just break regular long strand angel hair pasta, or use spaghetti or small pasta like risoni/orzo, ditalini, star shaped pasta etc.

crunchy mini croutons

You can use any bread for croutons. Lighter bread, such as regular sandwich bread, makes croutons that are a little more delicate so they will lose crunchiness faster once sprinkled onto soups than croutons made from sturdier, chewier bread like sourdough. The bread shown below is a stone-baked loaf from the grocery store that falls between these two types.

The oil is to make the croutons crunchy and just a pinch of salt is essential!


How to make creamy chicken noodle soup

As mentioned above, we start by cooking bacon in the pot then the chicken in the bacon fat, then the broth benefits from the fond (ie golden stuff) left on the base of the pot. This is what makes this an extra great soup recipe!

1. Crunchy mini croutons

I get the croutons in the oven first then I start cooking the bacon and chicken while the croutons are baking.

  1. Croutons – Toss the bread cubes in a little oil and salt. Then bake for 8 – 10 minutes at 180°C/3450°F (160°C fan-forced) until golden and fully crisp. Note: sandwich bread will toast faster, chewier breads like sourdough can take a little longer to go fully crisp.

  2. Baked and crunchy!


2. CRISPY BACON BITS

You don’t need oil to cook bacon if you use streaky bacon (ie streaked with fat). Then you can use the fat to cook the chicken – free flavour!

  1. Cook bacon – Place the bacon in an un-heated pot over medium high heat. As the pot heats up, it will melt the bacon fat. Initially, the bacon may get a bit stuck to the pot but once golden it will self-release.

  2. Chop bacon – Let the bacon drain on paper towels. It will crisp up as it cools. Chop it up then set aside (we’re garnishing the soup with it).


3. BACON-FAT SEARED CHICKEN

Don’t worry if the chicken is a bit undercooked when you chop it up. The small pieces of chicken will finish cooking in a flash when it’s added back into the hot soup broth.

  1. Cook the chicken in the bacon fat for 1 1/2 minutes on each side.

  2. Chop – Remove, cool for a few minutes then chop into small cubes. (Think – spoon scooping size).


4. THE CREAMY NOODLE SOUP

OK, croutons, chicken and bacon done. Now onto the soup!

  1. Soup broth flavour base – Melt the butter and cook the onion, carrot, celery and thyme sprigs for 5 minutes or until the carrot is soft and sweet. These vegetables form the flavour base for this soup broth so don’t shortcut or skip this step!

  2. Creamy broth – Add the flour and cook for 1 minute (removes the flouriness). Then while stirring, slowly pour the milk in (this technique prevents lumps). Next, add the chicken stock, water, corn and salt. Simmer for 5 minutes to let the flavours meld.

  1. Pasta – Add the broken angel hair pasta and cook for 5 minutes. (Note: the packet will likely say the cook time is 2 minutes, but it takes longer in this creamy broth. Also, another note, it doesn’t seem like much pasta but don’t be tempted to add more else you will end up with a soup that’s too thick. I keep making this mistake – don’t fall for it!).

    If using another type of pasta, just simmer for the time it takes for the pasta to cook, whether it’s 5 minutes or 15 minutes. If you lose too much soup broth or it thickens too much, just add a splash of extra milk or water towards the end.

    Add the corn in with the pasta, then the chopped chicken and peas about halfway through the pasta cook time (including any chicken juices pooled in the bowl). Peas and corn are pre-cooked so just need to be reheated.

  2. Serve! Once the pasta is soft, ladle the soup into bowls. Sprinkle with the croutons and bacon, plus a pinch of parsley if you’re feeling fancy. Then devour!

Serving Creamy chicken noodle soup

After taking the photos you see in this post, I took leftovers to the team at RecipeTin Meals (RTM, my food bank) for their lunch. That’s our Chef JB in the photo below, slurping down the soup before he cracked the whip to get us back to packing 500 meals for the day!

Creamy chicken noodle soup at RecipeTin Meals
Me with the RecipeTin boss Chef JB at RecipeTin Meals (our food bank) enjoying this soup for lunch!
RTM Nagi JB packing car
Loading up the car for delivery of meals

We probably won’t make this soup as one of our meals at RTM because pasta bloats when left in the soup, and it’s logistically challenging to keep the pasta separated from the broth in a single container, as well as having little sachets for the bacon and croutons. Most of the meals we make are delivered cold, intended for re-heating at home. Our containers are even oven proof – and they are made from recycled material too, even the lids!

On the topic of transportation of this soup, leftovers and making ahead, see the FAQ section below in the snazzy new collapsable section. Thought it was a nice way of adding extra information into posts without cluttering it up with excessive detail, what do you think? – Nagi x

Creamy chicken noodle soup FAQ

Pour the soup into a colander to separate the broth from the pasta, chicken and vegetables. Then store the broth in a separate container from the pasta etc. Why? Because pasta sitting in liquid bloats and becomes overly soft because it continues to absorb liquid. And as a result, you also end up with less soup broth.

I know it’s annoying (more mess to wash up!😤), but it really is the best way if you want the soup to still be really good tomorrow (up to 3 days later!). I’ve done the thinking and tried alternatives, like cooking the pasta separately – see point below.

Cooking the pasta in the flavoured soup broth is something that makes this soup so tasty! This is because:

  • the pasta absorbs the flavour of the broth; and

  • the starch released by the pasta as it cooks thickens the soup broth to the perfect creamy consistency, without any help needed from our calorie-laden friend, cream.

If you cook the pasta separately, the broth will be thinner than ideal and the pasta itself won’t have flavour.

Once the broth is separated from the pasta etc, they can be stored in the fridge for 3 to 4 days, or even freezer for 3 months.

I recommend keeping the garlic, onion, carrot and celery as they are aromatics that form the flavour base for the soup broth. However, you can substitute the corn and peas with other diced cook-able vegetables (capsicum/bell peppers, zucchini, broccoli, cauliflower, celeriac or other root vegetables, and green beans come to mind). Or even frozen diced vegetable mix.

You could also stir through baby spinach, chopped English spinach or kale at the end.

Yes, any protein that is fairly thin and can be pan fried like the chicken can be used. Pork chops come to mind. Beef and lamb will also work but they wouldn’t be my first choice for a creamy white sauce like in this soup.

Chicken mince (ground chicken) would also work! Cook it up after cooking the bacon (add a little extra salt and pepper) then remove before proceeding with the recipe, adding it back later at the end (so it doesn’t overcook). I would probably also fry up the chicken mince with some herbs and spices, like 1/2 tsp of onion or garlic powder plus 1/2 tsp dried oregano or thyme (just to get extra flavour into the crumbly mince bits).


Watch how to make it

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Creamy chicken noodle soup in bowls

Creamy chicken noodle soup with mini croutons

Author: Nagi
Prep: 15 minutes mins
Cook: 25 minutes mins
Soup
Western
4.96 from 25 votes
Servings5
Tap or hover to scale
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Recipe video above. A homemade version of instant cup-a-noodle-soup! Except, well, you know. It's made with real ingredients. 🙂
This is hearty, wholesome, cosy and surprisingly healthy. Creamy, but no cream!

Ingredients

  • 400g/10oz chicken breast (2 small), cut in half horizontally to form 2 thin steaks (sub boneless thighs)
  • 1/4 tsp cooking salt / kosher salt
  • 1/4 tbsp black pepper

Soup:

  • 4 strips streaky bacon (enough to cover base of pot)
  • 30g/ 2 tbsp unsalted butter
  • 1/2 onion , finely diced
  • 2 garlic cloves , finely minced
  • 2 sprigs thyme or 1/2 tsp dried thyme (optional)
  • 2 celery stalks , chopped (~0.5 x 1.2 cm / 1/5 x 1/2″ pieces)
  • 1 carrot , chopped (0.5 x 1 cm / 1/5 x 1/2″ pieces)
  • 3/4 cup corn kernels (frozen thawed or canned drained)
  • 4 tbsp flour
  • 3 cups milk , full fat best but low fat ok (non-dairy ok too)
  • 2 cups low sodium chicken stock/broth
  • 2 cups water
  • 1 tsp cooking salt
  • 1 1/3 cups (100g) broken angel hair pasta OR angel hair pasta / spaghetti broken into 6 pieces, or other small, spoon-able pasta
  • 3/4 cup frozen peas
  • 1/2 tsp finely chopped parsley , optional

Mini croutons:

  • 1 cup bread (crustless) cut into 7mm / 1/4″ cubes – sourdough type is crunchier, regular sandwich bread is fine too
  • 2 tsp olive oil
  • Pinch cooking salt / kosher salt
Prevent screen from sleeping

Instructions

Croutons & crispy bacon

  • Croutons – Preheat the oven to 180°C/3450°F (160°C fan-forced). Toss the bread with the oil and salt. Bake for 8 to 10 minutes, tossing halfway, until golden and fully crisp (some breads take longer eg sourdough). Cool on the tray, set aside.
  • Season chicken – Sprinkle both sides of the chicken with the salt and pepper.
  • Crispy bacon – Place the bacon in a single layer in an un-heated, large pot. Turn the heat onto medium high then cook the bacon until golden on both sides (~2-3 minutes first side, 1 1/2 minutes second side). (Note 2). Remove bacon (leave fat in pot), drain on paper towels. It will crisp as it cools. Finely chop, set aside for garnish.

The soup

  • Cook chicken – Using the same pot, still hot, cook the chicken in the tasty bacon fat for 1 1/2 minutes on each side until light golden. Remove onto a plate. Once cool enough to handle, chop into small 8 mm / 1/3" cubes.
  • Broth – Lower heat to medium high. In the same pot, melt the butter. Add the onion, garlic, celery, carrot, thyme sprigs. Cook 5 minutes until the carrot is softened, stirring regularly (don’t let the onion brown). Add flour and stir for 1 minute. While stirring, slowly pour the milk in. Once the flour is dissolved, add the stock, water and salt, then stir.
  • Simmer – Turn the heat up to high and bring to a simmer, then lower the heat and simmer gently for 5 minutes, stirring every now and then. (The soup will seem thin, it thickens as the pasta cooks. Trust!)
  • Pasta – Turn the heat back up to high. Add the pasta and corn. Cook for 5 minutes or until pasta is soft, adding the peas and chicken (including any juices pooled) for the last 2 minutes of cook time.
  • Serve – Ladle into bowls, sprinkle with bacon, croutons and a pinch of parsley. Eat!

Recipe Notes:

1. Short cut angel hair pasta – angel hair pasta cut into 3cm / 1.2″ long pieces, sold I’m bags. Cooks fast (pack will say 2 minutes, takes 4 – 5 minutes in a creamy broth in this recipe) and ideal soup-scooping size. Find it in the pasta aisle of regular Australian grocery stores. Can’t find it? Break angel hair, spaghetti, fettuccini etc by hand (will take longer to cook). Other small pasta like risoni, star shaped pasta, ditalini, alphabet pasta etc also ideal!
2. Cooking bacon – If you are using streaky bacon (ie bacon streaked with fat) you won’t need oil. As the pot heats up, the fat will melt so it cooks in its own fat. If you are using lean bacon, you’ll need a bit of oil.
3.  Other vegetables – Feel free to substitute the corn and peas with other vegetables.
4. Making ahead / storing leftovers – Use colander to separate pasta, chicken and veg from the broth (pasta bloats and absorbs soup broth if left overnight). Once separated, keeps 3-4 days in the fridge, 3 months in the freezer. Don’t be tempted to cook pasta separately (read in post for why).
Nutrition per serving assuming 5 servings.

Nutrition Information:

Calories: 462cal (23%)Carbohydrates: 42g (14%)Protein: 28g (56%)Fat: 20g (31%)Saturated Fat: 9g (56%)Polyunsaturated Fat: 2gMonounsaturated Fat: 7gTrans Fat: 0.2gCholesterol: 78mg (26%)Sodium: 956mg (42%)Potassium: 774mg (22%)Fiber: 4g (17%)Sugar: 12g (13%)Vitamin A: 2628IU (53%)Vitamin C: 12mg (15%)Calcium: 228mg (23%)Iron: 2mg (11%)
Keywords: creamy noodle soup
Did you make this recipe?I love hearing how you went with my recipes! Tag me on Instagram at @recipe_tin.

The last five soups I’ve made this winter

Pot of freshly made Creamy Tuscan Chicken Soup
Creamy Tuscan Chicken Soup
A chickpea soup exploding with flavour! Tastes like Chicken Shawarma in soup form with lamb, quick to make, nutritious and filling. recipetineats.com
Lamb Shawarma Chickpea Soup
3 bowls of Immunity Boosting Green Goddess Soup
Immunity-boosting Green Goddess Soup (delish!)
Bowl of Spicy Korean noodle soup
15 minute Spicy Korean Noodle Soup
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Creamy Tomato Bean Soup
Soups

Life of Dozer

He was showered yesterday and just felt uncomfortably clean. So he dealt with it on a patch of duck poo. As you do. (And so enthusiastically too!)

On a serious note though, he is doing so well! I’m finally in a comfortable(ish) routine making his new seniors food and about to get his blood tested to make sure he’s not lacking in any nutrition (I include a vitamin mix called Complete Me which helps fill gaps in his limited diet, recommended to me by SASH). That’s my biggest concern with homemade dog food – ensuring he has all the vitamins and minerals he needs.

He is used to his new routine of 30 minutes on his inclined digestion bed after each meal. Looking rather alert in the photo below, normally he is just snoozing (and who here would complain about a 30 minute nap after every meal! Not me!).

With his old-man condition, he is set on an incline after each meal to let gravity help food get down to his stomach.

His energy levels and strength is a good sign that we’re on the right path! Here he is, last weekend at Bayview dog beach. 12 years old and going strong!

He’s wearing his Outward Hound Granby Splash dog life jacket – extra buoyant for an extra large dog! Love the front neck float for added support to keep his head above the water (he is at higher risk of water, food etc getting in his lungs due to his medical condition). Just gives me a peace of mind even if he swims far off shore!

Thank you as always for the up-beat and positive messages about Dozer. And to those who confess to only reading the Dozer section and not bothering with the recipe – I LOVE YOUR PRIORITIES!!! 😂 – Nagi x

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130 Comments

  1. Jackie Greenfield says

    July 23, 2024 at 10:48 pm

    Thanks, Nagi, for your many delicious recipes and for your generosity in feeding the hungry. God bless you!
    My three golden retrievers and I love Life of of Dozer and wish him continued health.

    Reply
  2. Annabel says

    July 23, 2024 at 10:26 pm

    Nagi, how on earth do you get Dozer to stay on the inclined digestion bed for 30 minutes! Amazing.
    Love sweet corn in soup.

    Reply
  3. Sadie Mac says

    July 23, 2024 at 10:05 pm

    Wow, you must have a sun in your oven! What is the correct temp to bake the croutons (in F) because mine doesn’t get up to 3450 degrees! This sounds/looks delish!!

    Reply
  4. Gena says

    July 23, 2024 at 10:04 pm

    Great FAQ section. Keep it. Very easy to read and does keep it less cluttered. Will try the recipe when our weather cools. Hugs from Wisconsin:)
    Love the pictures of Dozer! Glad he is doing well.

    Reply
  5. Kathy says

    July 23, 2024 at 9:47 pm

    This soup sounds delicious! Can’t wait to try it. Love the collapsible FAQ section, what a smart idea! Keep up the excellent job Nagi! We won’t go hungry following you. 😊

    Reply
  6. Stony says

    July 23, 2024 at 9:34 pm

    Southern hemisphere baloney , I could eat this soup once a week, always great time for chicken noodle soup, 👍

    Reply
  7. Cathy says

    July 23, 2024 at 8:50 pm

    I haven’t commented to you directly before – but I have to say I absolutely LOVE your recipes – and have shown your book around the office which resulted in many more purchases.

    However – your darling Dozer – he is just divine. I lost my darling Hunter just before you messaged about Dozer. I can relate – but grief is so personal. I hope you get many more wonderful memories with Dozer. He is a character!!!!

    Cathy

    Reply
  8. Chris Treadwell says

    July 23, 2024 at 8:14 pm

    I am married to a lady from South East China and came to your site, originally, for Asian recipes. Along with the people that you mentioned, I now go straight to the Dozer section before returning to the recipe. Best wished to Dozer (and you), Chris (North Wales)

    Reply
  9. Ian Whyte says

    July 23, 2024 at 8:11 pm

    Hi Nagi,
    One millilitre is one 1,000th of a litre and since the correct SI abbreviation for litre is “L” (capital), the correct abbreviation for millilitre (singular or plural) is “mL” (upper case L), not “ml” (lower case l).
    I’m sure everyone who reads your excellent recipes (many of which are my all-time favourites) will know what you mean as almost everyone uses the incorrect abbreviation, but if you want to be absolutely correct, use “mL” as your abbreviation for millilitre(s).

    Reply
    • Natalie White says

      July 23, 2024 at 10:35 pm

      Not strictly true, it depends on what country you’re from. In America, Canada and Australia the abbreviated form is mL or L. However, in the UK and most of europe it is acceptable to use ml and l and mL and L, the the former is used more and not incorrect. Source: UK Metric Association.

      Reply
      • Ian Whyte says

        July 24, 2024 at 2:57 pm

        Thanks Natalie, I was not aware that those countries have gone back to preferring l and ml. I say gone back as they seem to have forgotten their history. “The litre and the symbol, lower-case l, were adopted by the CIPM in 1879 (PV, 1879, 41). The alternative symbol, capital L, was adopted by the 16th CGPM (1979, Resolution 6; CR, 101 and
        Metrologia, 1980, 16, 56-57) in order to avoid the risk of confusion between the letter l (el) and the
        numeral 1 (one).”
        In fairness, you are quite correct. They are both acceptable alternatives with l and L suggested in that order. In fact, L is an exception to the rule that unit symbols “are printed in lower-case letters unless they are derived from a proper name”. https://www.bipm.org/en/publications/si-brochure/.
        I shall have to go to l and ml now as modern typefaces make the distinction from 1 much easier.

        Reply
  10. Carolyn Bovingdon says

    July 23, 2024 at 8:02 pm

    5 stars
    Can I ask you, what is wrong with Dozer?
    I know it’s something to do with his digestion, and what was his operation for?

    Reply
    • Erin says

      July 24, 2024 at 6:32 am

      https://promotown.info/a-dozer-update/%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E

      Reply
  11. Carol says

    July 23, 2024 at 7:26 pm

    Uh-oh you caught me! Actually I do glance at your recipe as I quickly scroll to the bottom to find Dozer. Love your recipes but love Dozer more 😂

    Reply
  12. Kerry says

    July 23, 2024 at 7:02 pm

    Love the new addition didnt know i would want to ask but when i seen it was well there you go.
    Good on you and Mr Dozer
    love you both heaps and so excited to have regular emails again.

    Reply
  13. Mike says

    July 23, 2024 at 6:16 pm

    This looks lovely Nagi. However I have to admit I will be adding a lovely big tablespoon of curry powder to it 🙂
    So stoked to see Dozer doing well – your update bought a lump to my throat.

    Reply
  14. robert gibbard says

    July 23, 2024 at 6:13 pm

    I have your 1st book, but i dont cook over it. Or my lap top, I copy, print & put the paper in a plastic sleeve. Im a messy cook. But lately no heart? So do I sacrifice the lap top or book? Need 1 on the counter!

    Reply
    • A says

      July 23, 2024 at 9:21 pm

      Hello Robert.
      Go with the book. It’s the sign of a well-loved cookbook to have ‘splashes’ on your favourite pages. 🙂

      Reply
  15. Jo Jackson says

    July 23, 2024 at 6:08 pm

    So happy to see Dozer living the good life. He looks like he knows how good life is for him.
    PS: I love your recipe too and will be making it this week !

    Reply
  16. Lana says

    July 23, 2024 at 5:49 pm

    I’m so happy Dozer is doing well😃keep up with the good recipes Nagi, you’re a doll

    Reply
  17. Deirdre says

    July 23, 2024 at 5:37 pm

    Hi Nagi. Really looking forward to making this here in wintry Melbourne!
    Have I missed something – I can’t seem to find the heart symbol on the website to add to my recipe collection😏

    Reply
    • Mel says

      July 23, 2024 at 6:34 pm

      I wanted to save this one too!
      I think this is related to the Crowdstrike global issue last week.
      Lots of weird platform/software issues everywhere since.

      Reply
    • Nagi says

      July 23, 2024 at 5:52 pm

      Hi Deirdre! I was just complaining to my IT man about this 🙂 He’s on it! N x

      Reply
      • Megsy says

        July 23, 2024 at 6:41 pm

        Was just coming to ask about that 🤣❤️ This looks soooo good!

        Reply
  18. Cooper says

    July 23, 2024 at 5:33 pm

    For a child that is anaphylactic to dairy can you use soy milk for this recipe?

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      July 23, 2024 at 5:34 pm

      Yes, absolutely. Let me update the recipe. N x

      Reply
  19. Janny J says

    July 23, 2024 at 5:12 pm

    Hi Nagi, it looks so yummy, I will try this weekend. My soup has been “famous” for decades with fam and friends 🤣 but I’m a bit over it ….Dozer is looking great, and I have a new 6 yr old doggy same colour, 6 mths after my Daisy Mae passed x🐶

    Reply
  20. sam says

    July 23, 2024 at 4:48 pm

    Hi Nagi,
    Thank you once again for these wonderful recipes.

    Reply
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Hi, I'm Nagi!

I believe you can make great food with everyday ingredients even if you’re short on time and cost conscious. You just need to cook clever and get creative! Read More

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