As you might have noticed from my blog name, I do not follow a typical diet and I eat almost everything. However lately I’ve started to cook more vegetarian meals because I really want to lose some weight and eat healthier. Back in Beijing I lived with my parents. My mom, although far from being a tiger mom, is very strict about many things, including my weight. For example, sometimes when I wanted more rice, my mom would refuse to let me eat more. Our family meals are extremely healthy; sometimes too healthy that I felt like I rarely got enough food to eat. After moving to the US in late 2015, I started a frantic overeating episode that lasted more than a year. Dunkin’ Donuts and Shake Shack became my new best friends and I ate fast food every week. I also started to cook a lot more meals with meat and carbs, finished up with a tub of Ben & Jerry’s. In 2016 I enrolled in a professional culinary program for half a year. During that time I cooked way more food than anyone should eat… a pumpkin pie, a chocolate tart, and a pot roast in a week! I gained 20 pounds in a year. All of my Chinese friends greeted me with “You got fat!” when I traveled back to China a few months ago. Now I finally admit that my mom’s strict food regulation does make sense, so more vegetable dishes on my dinner table from now on.

My schedule for this month got a bit out of control and I finally came down with a cold. I know that if I told my mom about my cold, she’d say that I’ve been eating too much meat. It happens every time I’ve caught a cold in the past. This might sound funny, but in traditional Chinese medicine it actually makes sense. Like I mentioned in my Detox Herbal Broth post, traditional Chinese medicine suggests that when a person accumulates too much heat in their system, it causes symptoms such as sore throat and lower immunity. It might eventually lead to a cold when combined with external elements, such as pressure or cold weather. Eating too much meat is one of the main reasons for accumulating heat, and the best cure is to eat vegetables that have a cooling effect to balance your system.

In my world, the most comforting form of a detox dish is vegetarian noodle soup. It is one of the easiest of meals that you can put together in 20 minutes. All you need is some broth, a few types of veggies, and noodles. Unlike Western soup that usually starts with sautéeing the mirepoix, Chinese soup uses the simple boiling approach to cook everything in one pot. As long as you add fresh aromatics (in most cases ginger and green onions) with a few drops of soy sauce and sesame oil, you’ll get a pot of hearty soup in no time. I enjoy my noodle soup with the Detoxing Herbal Broth to achieve better healing results; however a packaged vegetable broth will work just well for this recipe. I hope you enjoy the dish as much as I do! Happy cooking 🙂

More delicious noodle soups:

Easy Soy Sauce Noodles (阳春面) Chinese Beef Noodle Soup (红烧牛肉面) Tomato Noodle Soup – The Ultimate Comfort Food Cantonese Wonton Noodle Soup (港式云吞面)

If you give this recipe a try, let us know! Leave a comment, rate it (once you’ve tried it), take a picture and tag it @omnivorescookbook on Instagram! I’d love to see what you come up with.  

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