How to separate meat from vegetables in a soup?
I love to make a nice chicken soup.
I take some chicken legs, carrots, leak and celery, a few herbs and of course salt and pepper, and I just let it boil for like 4 hours. I then sift the soup to take out all the vegetables, skin, bones and meat. This way I get somewhat of a clear soup. Then I take the chicken and put in all the chicken meat back in to the soup. The thing is, I often have a hard time separating the chicken and vegetable "mash".
My question: is there an easier way to do this? I was thinking about putting the chicken in some kind of net, but couldn't find cooking nets online.
Are they maybe called different?
Is it an option to do half/half? Boil the chicken in 1 pan and the vegetables in a second one?
Best Answer
Since the intermingling of the flavors is what your soup is about, and you want to remove only some of the solids (the chicken), a metal insert or colander might be too cumbersome.
Boil bags are what I’d suggest - cheap, disposable, and will allow everything to simmer together nicely.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B071RJTTXH/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_8SdHCbFWV2C0R
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Quick Answer about "How to separate meat from vegetables in a soup?"
You can use a colander (ideally stainless) or even a coarse sieve to suspend the chicken in the soup, but if you're buying something there's a better option: a saucepan with a steamer insert (a rather deep one if possible), but not used for steaming.How do you separate meat and soup?
By CookistCan soup be separated?
Separation in CookingWhen making soup, recipes encourage cooks to begin with cold water that is brought to a long, slow simmer. This process allows fats to stay separate from the broth, rising to the top for skimming throughout the cooking. If the water comes to a boil, the fat will melt, becoming inseparable.What order do you put vegetables in soup?
Usually the root vegetables are added all together at the start before bringing the soup up to the boil, with leeks then greens (if used) left until last. Again it depends on cooking temperature and size of vegetable chunks, but a steady simmer is preferable to a rollicking boil as it develops the flavours more.Do you add meat or veggies first?
Meat first, then vegetables \u2013 If you want meat or seafood in your stir fry, cook it first then scoop it out onto a separate plate before cooking the vegetables. You'll add the meat back in at the end. 5. Don't crowd the pan \u2013 If you have too much in your pan, the vegetables will steam instead of staying crisp.Recipe: Split Pea Soup
More answers regarding how to separate meat from vegetables in a soup?
Answer 2
Several companies make steel saucepan divider sets, such as this one. You might have to shop around a bit to get the best size for your pan.
Answer 3
Some good ideas in other answers, but I think I would simply go 'old school' and tie up the veggies and herbs in cheesecloth. Simply cook as you normally do and when done lift the packet out.
Answer 4
You can use a colander (ideally stainless) or even a coarse sieve to suspend the chicken in the soup, but if you're buying something there's a better option: a saucepan with a steamer insert (a rather deep one if possible), but not used for steaming. Instead the liquid should be deep enough to cover the chicken in the steamer basket. This works better than the colander because the lid should fit better, allowing less steam to escape.
Answer 5
Meat used to make soup should probably be discarded after making the soup.
Suggestion:
Roast chicken.
Remove the good meaty chunks from the chicken before you make the soup.
Make soup using bones, gristle, backs and chicken parts with small bits of meat attached. And vegetables, of course.
Remove all that when soup is done.
Put chunks of meat you have reserved in soup, together with fresh vegetables (e.g. peas, carrots).
The thing about the meat you make soup with is that it gets cooked a lot in the course of making the soup. As a result it is boiled tasting and flavorless. When making soup you can extract the flavor from parts of the chicken you can't really eat. Then put non-overcooked nice pieces of meat in the soup when you are done, together with any non-overcooked vegetables you might want in your finished soup.
Answer 6
I remove as much chicken from the carcass that I can, then boil it up with other bones and bits I have saved in the freezer. I add parsley stems, peppercorns, bay leaf, an onion cut up, celery cut up and carrots.I pour it into a colander and may use some of the meat (but usually not) if there is any and it looks good, but I do use the carrots. When I add the carrots for the stock, I just wash them, cut off the ends and cut them into 1 inch logs with the peel intact. Then when the stock is done I remove these and easily remove the peel with a paring knife and cut them up. They are not mushy or tasteless this way and you are good to go carrot-wise without having to cook the soup and reduce the stock too much. When I make the soup I put in the saved chicken, the carrots, noodles or leftover rice and/or vegetables and spinach. Sometimes for the carb depending on time and available carb leftovers I use a pack of the prepared "microwave 90 seconds" rice with whatever (just out of package).
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