Friday, February 18, 2011

Vegetarian Duck Noodle Soup

Pho (Vietnamese Rice Noodles) is popular in Seattle. You can get a good bowl of beef pho, but I have found that the vegetarian pho always sucks, maybe because they think that vegetables are substantial enough for a meal? Why isn't there a choice to add wheat gluten, instead of let's say just vegetables or tofu? I like tofu every now and then, don't get me wrong. It just seems as if vegetarian noodles are an afterthought. Here
is my version.

Vegetarian Duck Noodle Soup


Vegetarian Duck Noodle Soup
2 teaspoons vegetarian chicken bouillon
1 piece of star anise (with 8 points)
1 cinnamon stick (or cassia)
1/2 teaspoon of sugar
1/4 medium onion
1 green onion
1 slice of lime
1/2 can of mock duck
3 or 4 oz of rice noodles

Optional:
handful of mung bean sprounts
a few sprigs of cilantro
Sriracha sauce
Hoisin sauce
Thai basil

Bring to bowl 2 cups of water. Add the bouillon, star anise, cinnamon, ginger, onion, sugar and mock duck. Simmer for ten minutes or so. If you want to simmer longer, that's fine. Don't let the water reduce too much. You can always water back. Meanwhile, chop up the green onion. Remove the star anise, ginger and cinnamon. Prepare the noodles per instructions on the package. Pour the noodle and the broth into a bowl, top with the green onions. If using, serve with lime, mung bean sprouts, Sriracha sauce and hoisin sauce. Serves 1 (21 grams of protein).

Wheat Gluten 'duck' and vegetarian bouillon.
If you are not a fan of vegetarian chicken bouillon, you can make a mushroom soup base with Chinese black mushrooms. Soak 6 dried mushrooms until soft and remove stem. Add mushrooms to boiling water and simmer for thirty minutes then follow the rest of the directions.

I'm not a fan of too much cilantro, but normally, I would add mung bean sprouts. I just didn't have any in the fridge. I'd add maybe a squirt of Sriracha. I never use hoisin sauce in my noodles. My friend in Los Angeles likes to mix the hoisin with a plate of raw onions and eat it with the noodles. He's Korean and he says that it's a Korean thing.

And if you want to come over and have some, let me know ahead of time and I'll make extra!

1 comment:

  1. never knew they had that kind of "duck" in a can. It doesn't look bad; I'll have to try it next time.

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