Soup Fixings in a Bag
Soup Fixings in a Bag
This is a Thai thing and throughout Asia, and I am assuming a product like this is available in the US. Many village markets will have the 'fixings' in a bag, you add meat to make broth, add the contents of the bag, and you have a nice soup. Instead of buying the fixings separately, some vendors buy all the various ingredients, assemble the bags, and everything is used. They make stir fry bags the same way. And the beauty of these bags is the price, just 15 Baht (46 cents) or 25 Baht (78 cents) with the egg tofu tube.
Ingredients
- 1 bag soup fixings
- meat, of choice, pork, chicken, and fish is commonly used
- broth
- 1 tube egg tofu, optional (it may or may not be in the bag)
- salt, as desired, to taste
Instructions
The Soup Fixings
- This is a typical bag of soup fixings. This contains bok choi, carrot, pumpkin, mushrooms (Enoki, Oyster, or Ear Wood), bottle gourd, and winter melon. The ingredients vary by who is putting this together, many folks have their own types of flavors they add which makes soup bags different from village to village, or stall to stall in a market. Many of the bags will also contain a tube of egg tofu, which will increase the price of the bag by 10 Baht.
- Remove the tube of egg tofu from the soup fixings bag, and add the soup fixings to a colander and give that a quick rinse. To use the egg tofu, slice off one end of the tube and pinch the other end and the tofu will slide right out. Slice the tofu into about 1/2 inch slices, set that aside.
Using Chicken, Pork, or even Sausage
- For chicken, cut several breasts into cubes or even boneless thighs. For pork ribs, cut the ribs between each bone, for pork shoulder, just cut into cubes. Pork loin may be a bit to lean for a soup. For sausage, just slice into 1/2 - 3/4 inch pieces. Amount is up to you, 250-500 grams (1/2 - 1 lb) is a good choice.
- Add the meat to a pot and add 1 quart of water and more if needed to cover the meat by an inch or so. Bring the pot to a boil and hold that for about 2-3 minutes.
- When the water is boiling in the pot, there, you are making the soup broth, see, very easy, then add the rinsed soup fixings but not the tofu. Reduce heat to a simmer and cook until the carrot is tender and meat of your choice is cooked through.
Using Fish, Shrimp, and or Imitation Crab
- You can use any boneless skinless whitefish of your choice, cut into bite size pieces. For shrimp, peel, devein, and remove the tails. For imitation crab, just remove the packaging wrappers and cut into 1 inch pieces.
- Heat about a quart of water to a boil with two broth cubes, either vegetable or mushroom cubes work well.
- Once the water is at a boil, add the rinsed soup fixings, reduce to a simmer until the carrot is just tender, then add the fish, shrimp, and or imitation crab. Simmer until the fish flakes easily, just a few minutes. This can be served as a main dish as is, with rice on the side, or as a side dish.
Broth or Stock without Meat
- Simply add about a quart of broth or stock, chicken, pork, vegetable, mushroom, or even bean broth to a pot and bring to a boil.
- Once the water is at a boil, add the rinsed soup fixings, reduce to a simmer until the carrot is just tender. This can be served as a main dish as is, with rice on the side, or as a side dish.
Notes
Low cost per serving.
Commonly used throughout Thailand and Asia.
Couldn’t be any more simple to make. Would be happy to have this dish every week.
The Real Person!
The Real Person!
Thanks for the great review, Sammy, and I agree, simple, convenient, and very little prep time. I actually make a soup with these bags every couple of weeks for the family.
The Real Person!
The Real Person!
I made this on 25 Feb 2019 using mushroom broth, whitefish, and imitation crab, two bags of fixings, as well as 1/4 of a small pumpkin and 4 bunches of bok choi, as expected, perfect.