Will cooking chicken longer in soup make it less tough and stringy?

Will cooking chicken longer in soup make it less tough and stringy? - Top view of white bowl with yummy homemade noodles cooked in fresh delicious chicken broth and topped with green aromatic parsley placed on white marble table

I tried a new chicken soup technique and am not quite thrilled with the results. The point of this technique was to achieve flavorful, tender chicken. Well, the broth is tasty but the chicken is kinda tough and stringy-not awful - but I'm going for tender perfection.

I poached the cut-up whole chicken, starting with cold water, low simmer, etc. Then I removed it from the poaching water, removed the meat from the bone, tore it into small pieces, and refrigerated it. I added the bones and skin back to the poaching water with herbs, and the broth came out great.

The idea was to add the chicken pieces as needed to the broth before serving, but my first bowl reveals the aforementioned tough chicken. Researching chicken soup gives me conflicting answers; some say longer cooking will eventually make the chicken tender, and some say it will make it stringier and dryer.

So do I take some of the broth and simmer the heck out the chicken, or just deal with the toughness and try for something better next time?



Best Answer

There's several major reasons why meat and poultry can be tough:

  1. Collagen: muscles exist to impart a force between bones, when they contract there must be a connection between that muscle and the bone or the muscle would not be able to do work. Collagen is a strong protein that is distributed throughout a muscle and connects to a tendon, allowing the muscle to distribute its' force to the skeletal structure of the animal. The more load a muscle takes, the more collagen is needed to distribute the force, and the tougher the meat is.
  2. The animal was stressed before slaughter: if the animal was stressed before slaughter it will have lactic acid buildup resulting in tougher meat
  3. Poor treatment after slaughter: Once an animal dies chemical changes happen that toughen the meat, and the correct treatment is needed to allow the meat to relax again. If that isn't done right you'll get tough meat
  4. Freezing and thawing: freezing makes meat and poultry tougher

Collagen breaks down in the presence of heat and moisture, so a long stewing at low temperature could make your chicken tender. The collagen helps make your broth thicker and taster too! That would take a maximum of 2-3 hours on a low simmer. If it isn't tender by then it isn't tough because of collagen and there isn't much you can do. If you've got a chicken that was stressed, not processed correctly, and then frozen there's a limit to how tender you'll be able to get it. You can try cooking it a couple more hours, but if it isn't tender by then it never will be.




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Will cooking chicken longer in soup make it less tough and stringy? - White Ceramic Bowl With Noodles and Stainless Steel Spoon
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Will cooking chicken longer in soup make it less tough and stringy? - Grilled Meat on Black Charcoal Grill



Quick Answer about "Will cooking chicken longer in soup make it less tough and stringy?"

Collagen breaks down in the presence of heat and moisture, so a long stewing at low temperature could make your chicken tender. The collagen helps make your broth thicker and taster too!

How do you keep chicken from getting stringy in soup?

Don't cook the chicken pieces for so long. Add them ten or twenty minutes before serving. For that matter, I wouldn't simmer the aromatics for that long either. Do the long simmer and cooking to make the chicken stock, then strain the now-tasteless and mushy expended bits from the flavorful stock.

Will chicken get more tender the longer you cook it?

Does chicken get more tender the longer you boil it? Yes, chicken will continue to become more tender as you boil it. However, once the chicken reaches 165\xb0F, it is likely to turn rubbery if you continue to boil.

Can you overcook chicken in chicken soup?

Do not boil and do not overcook the chicken. If it is slightly underdone when you pull it out, it's fine \u2014 the chicken can continue to cook when it's added back to the soup later. 2. Remove the thighs from the broth, cool and pull the meat off the bones, discarding any of icky fat globules or veiny stuff; set aside.

Why is my chicken tough in my chicken soup?

By the time the legs, which consist of strong muscle fibers that take a long time to break down, are fall-apart tender, the delicate chicken breasts have gone too far, toughening up and drying out.



6 mistakes to avoid when cooking chicken!




Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

Images: Karolina Grabowska, Rachel Claire, Jess Loiterton, Mouktik Joshi