My Page
My Cookbooks
  • Main Cookbook
    Premium Members can have more than one cookbook in this list. They can keep private cookbooks just for organizing their recipes, or share them publicly with friends or the world. Learn more
My Account

Add this recipe to your:

Send this recipe:

Nutrition Facts

Serving Size 1 (798g)

Recipe makes 6 servings

The following items or measurements are not included below:

9 ounces fresh udon noodles

Calories 482
Calories from Fat 160 (33%)
Amount Per Serving %DV
Total Fat 17.8g 27%
Saturated Fat 6.1g 30%
Monounsaturated Fat 7.3g
Polyunsaturated Fat 1.4g
Trans Fat 0.0g
Cholesterol 190mg 63%
Sodium 1596mg 66%
Potassium 1096mg 31%
Total Carbohydrate 8.5g 2%
Dietary Fiber 1.9g 7%
Sugars 2.4g
Protein 70.4g 140%

detailed view...

how is this calculated?

Chinese Cinnamon Beef Noodle Soup

Recipe #133034 | 2 hours | 20 min prep | add private note

By: Mom4Life
Aug 10, 2005

This was published in a Fine Cooking magazine a couple of years ago. I was so excited to have found a relatively easy yet very flavorful noodle soup for my family. My husband (the ultimate food critic) loves this and doesn't mind eating it for days. He says it reminds him of when he was in Taiwan. High praise, indeed! Packaged stewing beef is often made up of irregularly shaped pieces from different cuts, so I cut my own stew meat using a boneless chuck roast or two 3/4 inch thick chuck steaks.

SERVES 6 -8 (change servings and units)

Ingredients

Directions

  1. 1
    Cut beef chuck into 3/4 in thick chunks if you did not purchase precut stewing beef.
  2. 2
    Heat the oil in a heavy soup pot or Dutch oven over medium heat. When very hot, add the cinnamon, scallions, garlic, ginger, anise seeds, and chile paste; cook, stirring, for 1 minute.
  3. 3
    Add the water, broth, soy sauce, and vinegar; bring to boil over high heat.
  4. 4
    Add the meat and bring to vigorous simmer. Lower the heat to maintain a gentle simmer and cook, partially covered, until the meat is very tender, about 1 1/2 hours, checking to be sure that the soup doesn''t boil or stop simmering.
  5. 5
    Shortly before the soup is done, bring a large pot of water to boil. Cook the noodles according to package directions until just tender. Drain and rinse under cold water.
  6. 6
    When the meat is tender, remove the cinnamon sticks. Add the bok choy to the soup and simmer until the stalks are crisp-tender and the greens are very tender, 5 to 10 minutes. Stir in the noodles and let them warm through. Serve immediately, garnished with the cilantro leaves.
  7. 7
    I'm guessing on the serving size as I no longer follow the recipe. I use the ingredient list as a guide.

Questions about this recipe?

Spot an error in this recipe?

is this recipe not exactly what you are looking for?

Try other Chinese Cinnamon Beef Noodle Soup recipes

Ask the community

Browse similar recipes by category

Featured Reviews for This Recipe

From: Sackville

On Nov 30, 2005

A lovely soup that does indeed taste like what we had while visiting Japan. The sweet taste from the cinnamon and sour from the vinegar and soy sauce works very well with the beef. I used a topside roast, which I got on sale half price. The meat turned out very tender and we've reheated it a few times now with great success. I didn't have cinnamon sticks to hand so added a little powdered cinnamon at the start when frying up the garlic and onions. I did find this soup a bit salty and next time might use a low sodium soy sauce or just a bit less of the regular soy sauce.

3 people found this review helpful

  • Was this review helpful to you? YES | NO
  • Read all 1 reviews

    Sister Sites: Food Network | HGTV | HGTVPro | DIY | Fine Living | Great American Country | FrontDoor.com Real Estate | Ecologue

    Comparison Shop for Kitchen Appliances & Utensils at Shopzilla & BizRate

    UpMyStreet and uSwitch.com provide UK comparison services for Energy, Home Phone, Broadband, Credit Cards, Loans, Mobile Phones and Car Insurance

    © 2008 Scripps Networks, Inc. All rights reserved