Chick-fil-A-Style Chicken Noodle Soup

Servings: 7 Total Time: 1 hr 30 mins Difficulty: Easy
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I make Chick-fil-A-Style Chicken Noodle Soup when I want a big pot of chicken, vegetables, broth, and egg noodles. It is not a fussy recipe, but it rewards paying attention to the small things: the feel of the dough, the thickness of the sauce, or the moment the center stops looking wet. I wrote this version the way I actually cook it, with the little checkpoints I use in my own kitchen.

I keep the quantities, pan sizes, oven temperatures, chilling times, and serving count clear because guessing is where home recipes get frustrating. When an old card or a copied note leaves out a detail, I would rather fix it before I am standing at the counter with sticky hands.

My favorite part of this chicken noodle soup is the way the whole chicken gives the broth body before the noodles go in. I do not need a special occasion for it. I need a clear counter, the ingredients measured before I get distracted, and enough patience to let the finished dish rest when the instructions say to rest it.

Why I keep this recipe in rotation

  • It uses familiar ingredients, so I am not hunting for one odd item at the last minute.
  • The timing is realistic; I can start it, clean as I go, and still serve it without feeling rushed.
  • The flavor is balanced instead of flat: sweet recipes get salt, savory recipes get acidity, and sauces get time to come together.
  • It gives me clear visual cues, which I trust more than the clock alone.
  • Leftovers hold up well when I store them the way I describe below.
  • It is flexible enough for small swaps, but the base recipe still has a dependable structure.

What you need and what each ingredient does

  • 1 whole chicken.5-6 lbs.
  • 3 cloves garlic, minced.
  • 4 celery stalks celery, diced.
  • 12 cups water.
  • 2 chicken bouillon cubes.
  • 4 tablespoons fresh parsley.
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt.plus more to taste. I never skip it; even sweet recipes taste dull without a small amount.
  • 1/4 teaspoon pepper.plus more to taste.
  • 3 tablespoons olive oil.
  • 1 onion, minced.
  • 4 large carrots, diced.
  • 2 bay leaves bay leaves.
  • 2 1/2 cups egg noodles.It binds the mixture and gives the finished bake a little structure.

How I make it

Step 1 — Start the vegetables

Heat the olive oil in a large deep pot over medium heat.

Step 2 — Saute until soft

Add garlic, onion, celery, and carrots with the salt and pepper. Saute 5-6 minutes, until the vegetables begin to soften.

Step 3 — Simmer the chicken

Add the whole chicken and 12 cups water, making sure the chicken is covered. Bring the pot to a boil, then reduce the heat and simmer 2 hours.

Step 4 — Shred the meat

Remove the chicken and let it cool until you can handle it. Pull the meat from the bones, discarding bones, cartilage, and skin, then cut the meat into small pieces.

Step 5 — Season the broth

Return the chicken meat to the pot. Add bouillon cubes, bay leaves, and parsley, then bring the soup back to a boil.

Step 6 — Cook the noodles

Reduce the heat to low, add 2 1/2 cups egg noodles, and simmer 30 minutes. Taste and adjust salt and pepper before serving.

Tips from my kitchen

  • Use a deep pot.A whole chicken and 12 cups water need more room than a standard saucepan.
  • Simmer, do not rage-boil.A gentle simmer gives clearer broth and tender meat.
  • Cool before pulling.I wait until the chicken is safe to handle so I can remove bones carefully.
  • Taste at the end.Bouillon adds salt, so final seasoning matters more than early seasoning.

Variations I have actually tried

  • More herbs:Add thyme with the bay leaves.
  • Extra noodles:Cook extra noodles separately and add to bowls.
  • More vegetables:Add peas near the end.
  • Lemon finish:Add a squeeze of lemon to each bowl.
  • Rice version:Use cooked rice instead of noodles for leftovers.

Storing, reheating, and making ahead

I refrigerate cooled soup in covered containers for up to 4 days. The noodles keep absorbing broth, so I add a splash of water or stock when reheating.

For the best make-ahead version, I cook the soup through the shredded chicken step and add noodles the day I serve it. That keeps them from getting too soft.

What I serve with it

I serve this with crackers, soft rolls, or a simple sandwich. It is filling on its own because the broth starts with a whole chicken.

Small details I watch

I pay attention to texture more than anything with Chick-fil-A-Style Chicken Noodle Soup. If the mixture looks too loose, I give it the rest time the recipe calls for instead of immediately changing the ingredients. If it looks too thick, I check whether I packed a dry ingredient too firmly or let something chill longer than planned. Those tiny checks have saved more batches for me than any fancy tool.

I also taste when it is safe and sensible to taste. Sauces need a spoon check, fillings need a sweetness check, and cookie dough or brownie batter needs visual cues when raw eggs are involved. I keep a clean spatula nearby, scrape the bowl well, and use the clock as a guide rather than a command.

For this chicken noodle soup, I set the pan, tray, pot, or storage container out before I start. It sounds minor, but it keeps me from leaving hot food in a skillet too long or scrambling for parchment with sticky hands. I also clear a landing spot for the finished batch so cooling is part of the plan instead of an afterthought.

I write those details down because most recipe problems happen between the official steps. A burner runs hotter than expected, fruit gives off more juice, a cookie sheet is still warm from the last round, or the first slice is cut before the filling has settled. Slowing down at those points is what makes the recipe feel dependable.

When I cook chicken noodle soup again, I check my last batch in my head before I begin. If it was too sweet, I plan a tangier topping or a smaller serving. If it was dry, I watch the bake or simmer more closely. That kind of ordinary kitchen memory is what I want these notes to preserve.

I also label leftovers before I put them away. The date, the best reheating method, and one quick note about texture help me enjoy the second serving instead of treating it like an afterthought.

Frequently asked questions

Can I use chicken pieces instead of a whole chicken?

Yes, but the broth may be lighter. Bone-in thighs and breasts are the closest swap.

Why cook the chicken for 2 hours?

That long simmer flavors the water and gives the meat time to become tender enough to pull from the bones.

Can I add the noodles earlier?

I do not. Thirty minutes at the end is already generous, and earlier noodles can turn mushy.

Can I freeze it?

Yes, but noodles soften after freezing. I freeze the broth and chicken, then add fresh noodles when reheating.

Is this an exact restaurant copycat?

It is a home version built around a whole chicken, vegetables, bouillon, and egg noodles. I focus on a comforting bowl rather than claiming a commercial formula.

If you make this chicken noodle soup, leave a comment with the small adjustment that worked in your kitchen. I read those notes because they always give me one more practical idea to test.

Chick-fil-A-Style Chicken Noodle Soup

Prep Time 30 mins Cook Time 60 mins Total Time 1 hr 30 mins Difficulty: Easy Servings: 7 Calories: 54 kcal Dietary:
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Description

I make Chick-fil-A-Style Chicken Noodle Soup with clear steps and the little kitchen cues that keep the batch on track. Expect practical notes for mixing, cooking, cooling, storing, and serving.

Ingredients You’ll Need

Instructions

  1. Heat the olive oil in a large deep pot over medium heat.
  2. Add garlic, onion, celery, and carrots with the salt and pepper. Saute 5-6 minutes, until the vegetables begin to soften.
  3. Add the whole chicken and 12 cups water, making sure the chicken is covered. Bring the pot to a boil, then reduce the heat and simmer 2 hours.
  4. Remove the chicken and let it cool until you can handle it. Pull the meat from the bones, discarding bones, cartilage, and skin, then cut the meat into small pieces.
  5. Return the chicken meat to the pot. Add bouillon cubes, bay leaves, and parsley, then bring the soup back to a boil.
  6. Reduce the heat to low, add 2 1/2 cups egg noodles, and simmer 30 minutes. Taste and adjust salt and pepper before serving.

Nutrition Facts

Servings 7


Amount Per Serving
Calories 54kcal
% Daily Value *
Total Fat 6g10%
Saturated Fat 1g5%
Trans Fat 0.0g
Sodium 73mg4%
Potassium 49mg2%
Total Carbohydrate 1g1%

Calcium 13 mg
Iron 0.6 mg

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.

Note

Use a deep pot. A whole chicken and 12 cups water need more room than a standard saucepan.

Simmer, do not rage-boil. A gentle simmer gives clearer broth and tender meat.

Cool before pulling. I wait until the chicken is safe to handle so I can remove bones carefully.

Taste at the end. Bouillon adds salt, so final seasoning matters more than early seasoning.

Keywords: chick-fil-a chicken noodle soup, chicken noodle soup, whole chicken soup, egg noodles, copycat soup, comfort food

Frequently Asked Questions

Expand All:
Can I use chicken pieces instead of a whole chicken?

Yes, but the broth may be lighter. Bone-in thighs and breasts are the closest swap.

Why cook the chicken for 2 hours?

That long simmer flavors the water and gives the meat time to become tender enough to pull from the bones.

Can I add the noodles earlier?

I do not. Thirty minutes at the end is already generous, and earlier noodles can turn mushy.

Can I freeze it?

Yes, but noodles soften after freezing. I freeze the broth and chicken, then add fresh noodles when reheating.

Is this an exact restaurant copycat?

It is a home version built around a whole chicken, vegetables, bouillon, and egg noodles. I focus on a comforting bowl rather than claiming a commercial formula.

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