Best 4 Samgyetang Ginseng Chicken Soup Recipes

facebook share image   twitter share image   pinterest share image   E-Mail share image

**Samgyetang: A Korean Ginseng Chicken Soup to Nourish Your Body and Soul**

Samgyetang, a traditional Korean ginseng chicken soup consisting of a whole young chicken stuffed with glutinous rice, ginseng, garlic, jujube berries, and various other herbs and spices, is a nourishing and flavorful dish perfect for any occasion. This hearty soup is believed to have many health benefits, including boosting the immune system, reducing stress, and improving overall well-being. In this article, we'll provide you with two delicious Samgyetang recipes – one for a classic version and another for a spicy variation using gochujang paste. Both recipes are easy to follow and can be enjoyed by people of all ages. So, let's dive in and explore the wonderful world of Samgyetang!

Check out the recipes below so you can choose the best recipe for yourself!

SAMGYETANG (GINSENG CHICKEN SOUP)



Samgyetang (Ginseng Chicken Soup) image

How to Make Samgyetang (Korean Ginseng Chicken Soup)

Provided by Sue | My Korean Kitchen

Categories     Main

Time 55m

Number Of Ingredients 11

1.2 kg whole chicken
1.5 liter water
1/4 cup sweet rice ((mochi rice or sticky rice), soaked in water for 2 hours (this can be done overnight and kept in the fridge))
1 ginseng (, dried or fresh Korean ginseng or American ginseng (I used 15 g of dried ginseng))
4 whole garlic cloves (, peeled)
5 dried jujube
4 ginkgo nuts ((optional), peeled if not already)
4 chest nuts ((optional), fresh or frozen, peeled if not already)
1 Tbsp green onion (, thinly sliced)
fine sea salt (, to taste)
ground black pepper (, to taste)

Steps:

  • Wash the chicken (including the cavity) thoroughly under running cold water.
  • Stuff the chicken cavity with sweet rice, ginseng, garlic cloves, jujube, gingko nuts, and chest nuts. Cross the chicken legs and tie them with a cotton tie. Alternatively, you can make a slit on one side of the chicken thigh skin and put the other leg through it. (It sounds difficult but it's not!) This is to minimise the stuffed ingredients falling out.
  • Pour the water into a large pot and add the stuffed chicken. Boil the pot over medium high heat, covered, for 20 mins. Reduce the heat to medium to medium low and boil further until the chicken is fully cooked (about 30 mins further). Also, make sure the stuffed sweet rice is fully cooked too. Skim off any scum as desired.
  • Transfer the chicken and the soup into a serving bowl. Garnish with the green onion and serve. Also, serve a small plate of salt and black pepper mixture (one plate per person). You can dip your chicken pieces into this sauce or add to your soup as desired. (Finally, don't forget to serve some Kimchi too!)

Nutrition Facts : Calories 372 kcal, Carbohydrate 13 g, Protein 27 g, Fat 21 g, SaturatedFat 6 g, Cholesterol 108 mg, Sodium 120 mg, ServingSize 1 serving

SAMGYETANG (GINSENG CHICKEN SOUP)



Samgyetang (Ginseng Chicken Soup) image

A classic Korean chicken soup made with a small, whole chicken and ginseng.

Provided by Hyosun

Categories     Main Course

Number Of Ingredients 10

1 Cornish hen (about 1.5 pounds)
1 fresh ginseng root (or dried ginseng, rehydrated) (See note 1)
3 tablespoons sweet rice (2 to 3 tablespoons more to boil with liquid if desired)
5 - 6 plump garlic cloves
2 thin ginger slices (about 1 inch)
2 to 3 jujubes, daechu (λŒ€μΆ”)
1 scallion white part
5 to 6 cups of water (or good quality chicken stock)
2 scallions (finely chopped, to garnish)
salt and pepper to taste

Steps:

  • Clean the chicken. Do not cut off the neck and/or tail, if they are still attached. They help keep the rice inside the cavity. Place the cleaned chicken on a cutting board or a large plate. Clean the inside of the cavity with a paper towel to remove any blood. Fold the attached neck into the cavity to close the hole.
  • Stuff the cavity with the sweet rice and a couple of garlic cloves, leaving room (about 1/4 of the cavity) for the rice to expand as it cooks. You can also cut off some offshoots of the ginseng and add to the cavity if you like.
  • To keep the rice inside the cavity while being cooked, use of one of these two methods: (1) Make a small cut through the thick skin part between one thigh and the cavity opening, but not too close to the edge. Then, use your finger to expand the hole enough to fit the end part of a leg. Bring the other leg over, and insert the end part through the hole to keep the legs crossed together, tucking the tail in to close the opening (see the photos above); or (2) Simply cross the legs and tie together with kitchen twine. Tightly close the cavity with a toothpick if necessary.
  • In a medium size pot, place the chicken and add 5 to 6 cups (or enough to cover most of the chicken) of water or chicken stock. Add the garlic, ginger, jujubes, and ginseng. If the chicken came with the neck that's been cut off, add to the pot. Also add the extra sweet rice to thicken the soup or in a herb bag to cook separately, if desired.
  • Bring it to a boil over medium high heat. Skim off the foam on top. Cover, and boil for 15 minutes. You can add more water/broth if needed. Reduce the heat to medium low and boil, covered, for about 25 minutes, depending on the size of the chicken. Turn the heat off and rest the chicken in the pot for about 10 minutes. See note 3.
  • Serve piping hot with the chopped scallions and salt and pepper on the side so each person can season to taste.

SAMGYETANG (GINSENG CHICKEN SOUP)



Samgyetang (Ginseng Chicken Soup) image

This is a traditional Korean soup consumed on the hottest days of summer. Fancier Korean restaurants will often add extra medicinal herbs and aromatics, but the home-cooked, mom-approved samgyetang that Koreans know best has six indispensable ingredients: chicken, garlic, scallions, glutinous rice, ginseng (fresh is preferred) and dried red dates (jujubes). The last three items may be hard to find, but every Korean grocery stocks them. Many shops even sell samgyetang-stuffing kits, which come with a small packet of rice, a couple of dried jujubes and a nub of dried ginseng, with some brands offering additional, often arcanely named aromatics (like milkvetch root or acanthopanax) to fortify the broth. The soup is normally prepared for one, with a single small chicken or Cornish hen served whole in boiling broth. We doubled the recipe to feed two, but it can be easily halved.

Provided by Dave Kim

Categories     for two, soups and stews, main course

Time 1h15m

Yield 2 servings

Number Of Ingredients 7

1/2 cup glutinous (sweet) rice
2 ginseng roots (fresh or dried)
4 small dried red dates (jujubes), pitted
2 Cornish hens, 1 to 1 1/2 pounds each
1 teaspoon coarse kosher salt, more to taste
8 cloves garlic, peeled
4 scallions, white parts sliced, green parts finely chopped

Steps:

  • Rinse the rice, then cover it with water and soak for at least 2 hours, or overnight. At the same time, soak the ginseng (if using dried; there's no need to soak fresh) and the red dates, separately.
  • When rice, dried ginseng and jujubes have finished soaking, drain and rinse them. Remove the giblets from the hens and rub about 1/2 teaspoon coarse salt all over each, inside the cavity and underneath the skin.
  • Put a couple of spoonfuls of soaked rice into each cavity, then add the ginseng root, jujubes and garlic, and finish stuffing with more rice. Some cooks truss the birds, but the rice will expand during cooking and keep most of the stuffing inside the cavity.
  • Place the two hens and any remaining rice in a pot just big enough to hold them both. Add the white parts of the scallions. Fill the pot with 8 cups water or more, if needed, to cover most of the chicken.
  • Cover, bring to a boil, then lower heat and simmer gently for 1 hour, until the meat falls easily off the bone.
  • Transfer each chicken to a large soup bowl and add the broth. Sprinkle chopped green scallions on top, and salt to taste at the table.

KOREAN CHICKEN AND GINGER SOUP



Korean Chicken and Ginger Soup image

Reminiscent of the ginseng chicken soup known as samgyetang, this recipe calls for stuffing a Cornish game hen with rice and then simmering it in an aromatic broth. Like samgyetang, it can be used to "fight fire with fire," the Korean custom of consuming hot foods at the height of summer to balance body heat with the season's steamy temperatures.

Provided by Food Network Kitchen

Categories     main-dish

Time 1h

Yield 4 servings

Number Of Ingredients 17

1 cup cooked white rice, cooled
1 tablespoon toasted sesame oil
4 cloves garlic (2 minced, 2 smashed and peeled)
Kosher salt
Two 1 1/2-pound Cornish game hens, wingtips and giblets removed and discarded
4 cups low-sodium chicken broth
4 shallots, peeled and halved
One 3-inch piece of fresh ginger, cut into 3 pieces and bruised with flat blade of a knife
6 scallions, white and light green parts left whole and reserved, green tops finely sliced for serving
1 teaspoon sugar
3 tablespoons soy sauce
1 tablespoon white vinegar
4 teaspoons sesame seeds (white or black)
2 tablespoons toasted sesame oil
1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
1 package seaweed snacks, thinly sliced
1 cup kimchi, chopped

Steps:

  • Put the cooked rice in a medium bowl. Heat the sesame oil in a large pot over medium-high heat until shimmering. Add the minced garlic and cook, stirring often, until the garlic is toasted and golden brown, 1 minute. Remove the pot from the heat and pour the garlic and sesame oil over the rice. Set the pot aside. Season the rice with 1/4 teaspoon salt and stir with a fork until combined, breaking up any lumps.
  • Stuff the cavity of each hen with 1/2 cup of the rice mixture. Overlap the skin flaps to enclose the rice inside the hens, fold the legs closed and tie with kitchen twine.
  • Place the hens breast-side down in the reserved pot and add the chicken broth, 2 cups water, shallots, ginger, scallion whites, smashed garlic cloves, sugar and 1 teaspoon salt. Bring to a boil over high heat, skimming the foam that rises to the top. Partially cover the pot and reduce the heat to maintain a steady simmer. Cook for 15 minutes, then use a spatula and a spoon to gently turn the hens breast-side up, being careful not to break the skin (they will float). Continue to simmer, partially-covered, until the hen breasts are firm and a thermometer inserted into the thickest part of the thigh registers 165 degrees F, 15 to 20 minutes more.
  • Meanwhile, make the sauces. Combine the soy sauce and vinegar in a small bowl and set aside. Combine the sesame oil, sesame seeds, 1/4 teaspoon salt and 1/4 teaspoon pepper in another small bowl and set aside.
  • Using a slotted spoon and tongs, remove the hens from the liquid, place them on a cutting board and remove the kitchen twine. Slice along the top of the breastbone to cut each hen into 2 halves, keeping the rice inside the cavity. Strain the broth through a sieve. Place each hen half in a wide, shallow bowl (rice side down) and divide the soup among the bowls. Garnish the soup with scallion greens and serve with the sesame sauce, soy-vinegar sauce, kimchi and seaweed.

Tips:

  • Choose the right chicken: Use a young chicken for the best flavor. A 3-4 pound chicken is a good size.
  • Clean the chicken thoroughly: Remove the giblets and rinse the chicken inside and out. Pat the chicken dry with paper towels.
  • Stuff the chicken with the right ingredients: Use a combination of glutinous rice, ginseng, jujubes, garlic, and ginger. You can also add other ingredients like chestnuts, pine nuts, or goji berries.
  • Simmer the chicken slowly: Bring the chicken to a boil, then reduce the heat to low and simmer for at least 2 hours. This will allow the flavors to develop.
  • Serve the chicken with a variety of side dishes: Samgyetang is traditionally served with rice, kimchi, and a variety of other side dishes. You can also serve it with a dipping sauce made from soy sauce, vinegar, and sesame oil.

Conclusion:

Samgyetang is a delicious and nutritious soup that is perfect for a cold day. It is also a popular dish to serve during special occasions, such as birthdays and anniversaries. If you are looking for a new and exciting dish to try, samgyetang is a great option. With its flavorful broth, tender chicken, and variety of healthy ingredients, samgyetang is sure to please everyone at your table.

Related Topics