Chicken Vegetable Soup with Noodles
Some meals feel like a warm blanket you can eat. Chicken vegetable soup with noodles is that meal in my house, the one that works when it’s Friday evening, and everyone’s hungry, and also when someone’s curled up on the couch with a tissue box and a sad little cup of tea. For another way to make chicken soup, try this instant pot chicken soup recipe.

I’ve made chicken soup so many different ways, but this veggie-loaded version is my favorite. This version is a real upgraded. Real vegetables are sauteed for maximum flavor, tender shredded chicken gives you protein in each bite , an incredibly flavorful broth, and noodles that don’t turn to mush by the time you eat it..
The small trick that changes everything is this: cook the noodles separately. It takes one extra pot, but it keeps the soup bright and the noodles springy. (And yes, it’s worth it.) You can prep lots of noodles in advance and freeze it separately too… but more on that shortly.


Chicken Vegetable Soup with Noodles, what makes this version so comforting
Comforting soup isn’t complicated, it’s just balanced. You want a broth that tastes like chicken, vegetables that soften without disappearing, and enough “stuff” in the bowl that it feels like dinner, not a snack. With protein, vegetable, and starch, this is a comforting meal in a bowl that’s hydrating and nourishing for when you’re sick, when it’s freezing outside, or any time you need comfort food.
This chicken vegetable soup with noodles hits that sweet spot because the flavors build in layers. Carrots bring a little sweetness, onion and celery add that savory base, and turnip gives a gentle earthy taste that reads “old-school soup” in the best way. Zucchini goes in near the end so it stays tender, not soggy.
Texture matters too. Shredded chicken is soft and easy to eat, which is exactly what you want on a sick day. It also feels a bit special for Shabbat, even though it’s a low cost recipe that’s incredibly healthy – and a fabulous spin on a Friday night classic.
And since the noodles stay separate until serving, the leftovers reheat like a dream. You don’t get that “the pot turned into chicken noodle casserole overnight” situation.
If you’re in the mood for a more traditional take, this Jewish Chicken Soup recipe is another cozy option to keep in your back pocket.


Best vegetables to use (and easy swaps)
The core veggies here are diced carrot, turnip, celery, onion, and zucchini. That mix gives you sweet, savory, and mild flavors all in one pot.
A few easy swaps, based on what you’ve got:
- Parsnip instead of turnip (a little sweeter and easier to dice).
- Sweet potato instead of carrot (warmer, slightly richer and much sweeter).
- A handful of spinach stirred in at the very end (great if you need “something green”).
- Frozen peas added right before serving (kid-friendly sweetness).
- Broccoli stalks for loads of fiber and a fabulous flavor (stalks stay intact better)
Everything is diced and sauteed in layers to really bring out the flavor, without having to let it simmer all day (like I do with a typical chicken soup).
Why cook the noodles separately
If you’ve ever made chicken noodle soup and felt proud, then checked the pot the next day and sighed, you already know the problem. Noodles keep soaking up broth, even after the heat is off. They swell, go soft, and steal liquid from the soup.
Cooking egg noodles separately fixes it fast. You boil them in salted water, drain, and then add them to each bowl as you serve. The soup stays brothy, the noodles stay bouncy, and leftovers don’t turn into a thick starch bomb.
You WILL want to make sure to warm up the noodles as well if cooking it in advance.


Tips for making Chicken Vegetable Soup with Noodles
This soup is forgiving, which is what we all need on busy days. Still, a few small habits make it taste better and store better.
Salt in stages: Add a little early, then taste again near the end. Broth brands (if using) vary a lot, and it’s easier to fix “needs more” than “too salty.” Even salt brands can vary in saltiness.
Keep the simmer gentle: A hard boil can make chicken feel dry and stringy and get you that cloudy finish. A soft simmer keeps it tender.
Taste for sweetness: If your carrots are very sweet (or you added sweet potato), you might want a touch more pepper or fresh herbs to balance it.
Want it extra soothing for sick days? Skip spicy add-ins, go easy on black pepper, and keep the broth clear and simple.
Can you freeze Chicken Vegetable Soup with Noodles
Yes, this soup freezes well. The texture of the vegetables might change slightly – cut them smaller if freezing so the change is less noticeable. Freeze the soup base without noodles for the best texture. Freeze the noodles separately.
Here’s the easy way to do it:
- Cool the soup quickly by moving it off the stove and stirring for a minute or two. The soup shouldn’t sit at room temperature or “warm” for long. If your pot is huge, you can set it in a sink with a little ice water around it (don’t splash water into the soup).
- Portion into freezer containers or zip-top freezer bags.
- Label with the date. Future-you will be grateful.
- If using bags, double-bag and freeze them flat on a sheet pan.
- Once frozen, you can rearrange them as you’d like.
- Freeze up to about 3 months for best flavor.
To serve, thaw overnight in the fridge – in a pan to catch drips if you used bags (or use a low simmer on the stove), then boil fresh egg noodles (or use frozen ones) and add them right before eating.
How long does Chicken Vegetable Soup with Noodles last in the fridge?
This keeps well in the fridge for 3 to 4 days when stored in a covered container. If you’re serving this for Friday night, it’s usually still great through Monday lunch.
A quick heads-up: if noodles sit in the soup, they’ll soften by day two. It’s not unsafe, it’s just a texture thing. If you want the best leftovers, store noodles separately and add them to each bowl.
For reheating, use a gentle simmer on the stove or short bursts in the microwave. If the soup thickened in the fridge or overboiled and got too rich (it happens), add a splash of water or broth and stir until it loosens up.


Ingredients and tools for an easy chicken vegetable soup with noodles
This is more “cozy weeknight soup” than fussy recipe. You don’t need a long ingredient list, you just need a solid base and enough vegetables to make the broth taste like something.
A large pot helps, and so does a sharp knife. Beyond that, you’re good.
Ingredient notes and tips (with simple options)
There are so many different ways you can do this. Here is the basic framework of the recipe with optional add-ins.
- Chicken breast: 1 to 2 breasts, cooked right in the broth, then shredded and returned.
- Carrots: diced.
- Turnip: diced (parsnip works too).
- Celery: diced (optional if you don’t love it, but it adds such a great savory flavors).
- Onion: diced. I put in two but more is yummy too.
- Zucchini: diced larger or half-moons (added later to avoid them dissolving).
- Garlic (optional): 1 to 3 cloves, minced, or a frozen garlic cube.
- Broth: chicken broth, or water plus bouillon. Or use water and just flavor it well.
- Bay leaf (optional): 1 to 2.
- Herbs (optional): parsley or dill, fresh or frozen.
- Salt and pepper: go easy on pepper if serving to kids or someone sick.
- Oil: a tablespoon for sautéing.
For the noodles:
- Egg noodles, cooked separately.
This is a naturally Kosher soup, suitable for meat meals.
Optional add-ins that stay “clean and classic”: peas, spinach, sweet potato, parsnip, or a teaspoon turmeric. I love to add in Hawaiij spice mix for that depth of flavor, but it’s optional. What I’d avoid if you want that pure chicken soup vibe: strong tomato flavors, lots of acid, or heavy spice blends.
I will provide you with an exact recipe below, but I almost always make it differently, so don’t be afraid to play around yourself and see how your family likes it best.
Prep tips that save time
Prep is where soup can feel annoying, so make it easier on yourself.
- Chop veggies ahead and store them in the fridge for up to 2 days.
- Use a food chopper if you have one, especially for onions.
- Keep a freezer bag of “soup vegetables” (carrot, celery, onion) and grab a handful whenever you’re making broth.
- I sometimes even prep everything in the pot the night before and start sauteeing the next morning.
How to make Chicken Vegetable Soup with Noodles, step by step recipe
This is the kind of recipe you can make while helping with homework, setting the table, or doing that last-minute Friday afternoon straighten-up. The timing is flexible, and the soup gets better as it sits.
Ingredients
- 1 T neutral oil (I usually use extra light olive oil)
- 3 large carrots, diced
- 1 turnip, diced
- 2 large yellow onions, diced
- 6 Stalks celery, diced
- 1 medium zucchini
- 1 large chicken breast
- Water or broth (to cover vegetables)
- 1 t. salt to start if using broth, or 1 T if using water
- 1 T onion powder
- 1 T garlic powder OR a few cloves garlic added at the sauteeing step.
- Optional: frozen ginger cubes – use 1-2. I love adding this when making this for sick people
- Optional: Bay Leaf
- Optional: 1 t. Turmeric
- Optional: Dill, Parsley
- Optional: 1 T Hawaiij soup seasoning
- Optional: additional vegetables like sweet potato, spinach, broccoli stalks, cauliflower stalks, etc
- 12-16 oz egg noodles (I prefer the thin variety)
Cook the vegetables and chicken in the broth
- Heat 1 tablespoon of oil in a large pot over medium heat.
- Add diced onion, carrot, and celery with a pinch of salt. Sautee, until the vegetables soften. I usually start the onion first, let it get started as I prep the celery, and then same with the carrots.
- Add diced turnip (or parsnip). Let that soften as well. Add the zucchini and let it go for another couple of minutes to bring out the flavor.
- Pour in broth (or water) and seasoning until everything is well covered, with room for simmering.
- Add bay leaf if using, then slide in the chicken breasts.
- Bring the pot up to a light boil, then immediately lower it to a gentle simmer. If you see foam on top, skim it off with a spoon. (Not mandatory, but it keeps the broth prettier.) Avoid letting it boil.
- Simmer for about an hour or so until the broth is rich, the vegetables are soft, and the chicken is cooked through.
Shred the chicken and finish the soup
- Use tongs to lift the chicken breasts onto a plate.
- Let them rest 5 minutes, then shred with two forks.
- Return the shredded chicken to the pot and stir.
- Taste the broth and adjust salt and pepper.
- Stir in chopped parsley or dill right at the end for a fresh finish. If using dried herbs, you can just add it at the seasoning stage.
Boil egg noodles separately and combine for serving
- Bring a separate pot of salted water to a boil.
- Cook egg noodles until just tender (a little firm is perfect). Follow the package timing, then start checking a minute early.
- Drain well. If you’re storing noodles separately, toss them with a tiny bit of oil so they don’t stick.
- Serve using one of these two methods:
- Best for leftovers: Add noodles to each bowl, then ladle soup over top.
- Best for right now: Stir noodles into the soup pot only if you’ll finish it pretty quickly.

If you want another cozy soup for cold nights, this Roasted Butternut Squash Soup with Farro is hearty in a totally different way, and it feels a little special without extra stress.
Chicken vegetable soup with noodles is comfort you can count on. You get tender shredded chicken, real vegetables, and that cozy broth that makes the whole kitchen smell like you’ve been taking care of people all day. Best part, the noodles stay just right because you cook them separately.
Make it with turnip, swap in parsnip, add peas, or keep it simple and classic. This soup doesn’t judge, it just shows up for you. Save it for Friday night, double it for leftovers, and tell me what veggies you used, because I’m always looking for new twists on a favorite.
Sauteed Veggie Shredded Chicken Soup with Noodles
This chicken noodle soup is comfort in a bowl! It's loaded with nutrition and makes for a full meal. Update it with different vegetables if you wish and prep it in advance to freeze. Sauteeing the vegetables first makes the soup extra flavorful and it's easy to scale up and food prep.
Ingredients
- 1 T neutral oil (I usually use extra light olive oil)
- 3 large carrots, diced
- 1 turnip, diced
- 2 large yellow onions, diced
- 6 Stalks celery, diced
- 1 medium zucchini
- 1 large chicken breast
- Water or broth (to cover vegetables - about 8 cups)
- 1 t. salt to start if using broth, or 1 T if using water
- 1 T onion powder
- 1 T garlic powder OR a few cloves garlic added at the sauteeing step.
- Optional: frozen ginger cubes - use 1-2. I love adding this when making this for sick people
- Optional: Bay Leaf
- Optional: 1 t. Turmeric
- Optional: Dill, Parsley - a few sprigs of fresh or 1 T dry
- Optional: 1 T Hawaiij soup seasoning
- Optional: additional vegetables like sweet potato, spinach, broccoli stalks, cauliflower stalks, etc
- 12-16 oz egg noodles (I prefer the thin variety)
Instructions
- Heat 1 tablespoon of oil in a large pot over medium heat.
- Add diced onion, carrot, and celery with a pinch of salt. Sautee, until the vegetables soften. I usually start the onion first, let it get started as I prep the celery, and then same with the carrots.
- Add diced turnip (or parsnip). Let that soften as well. Add the zucchini and let it go for another couple of minutes to bring out the flavor.
- Pour in broth (or water) and seasoning until everything is well covered, with room for simmering.
- Add bay leaf if using, then slide in the chicken breasts.
- Bring the pot up to a light boil, then immediately lower it to a gentle simmer. If you see foam on top, skim it off with a spoon. (Not mandatory, but it keeps the broth prettier.) Avoid letting it boil.
- Simmer for about an hour or so until the broth is rich, the vegetables are soft, and the chicken is cooked through.
- Use tongs to lift the chicken breasts onto a plate.
- Let them rest 5 minutes, then shred with two forks.
- Return the shredded chicken to the pot and stir.
- Taste the broth and adjust salt and pepper.
- Stir in chopped parsley or dill right at the end for a fresh finish. If using dried herbs, you can just add it at the seasoning stage.
- Bring a separate pot of salted water to a boil.
- Cook egg noodles until just tender (a little firm is perfect). Follow the package timing, then start checking a minute early.
- Drain well. If you’re storing noodles separately, toss them with a tiny bit of oil so they don’t stick.
- Serve using one of these two methods - Best for leftovers: Add noodles to each bowl, then ladle soup over top. Best for right now: Stir noodles into the soup pot only if you’ll finish it pretty quickly.
Notes
- Cook noodles separately to avoid mushiness and making your soup starchy and cloudy.
- This soup freezes well. Texture of vegetables might change slightly - cut them smaller if freezing so the change is less noticeable.
- Freeze in containers or large freezer bags. If using bags, double-bag and freeze them flat on a sheet pan.
- Once frozen, you can rearrange them as you'd like.
- Freeze up to about 3 months for best flavor.
- Defrost in a 9x13 pan to catch drips.

