Bright green cilantro, Chinese celery, and chili oil cuts through the richness, making for an excellent bowl of noodles. 

INSPIRED BY A TRIP TO XI’AN

This dish is actually a riff of of 羊肉泡饃 (yángròu pàomó). Paomo is a dish served with torn bits of unleavened bread. Usually, you tear the bread yourself, and send the bowl of bread bits back to the kitchen to be cooked. After cooking, they have a chewy texture. They also sometimes come with thin clear vermicelli noodles in the soup. We ate this on a trip to Xi’an several years back, and it took us a second to realize what we should do with the piece of bread they gave us! We had to watch what everyone else around us was doing and follow suit!  Note that you may have also heard of a dish called ròu jiā mó (肉夹馍), which comes from the same region. That is what some translate as a “Chinese hamburger,” in which stewed meat is sandwiched in bread. Check out our Rou Jia Mo recipe!

Nourishing and Life-affirming in Fall and Winter 

If you’re spending your days in the chilly fall or winter air, this soup is a wonderful meal that gives you plenty of energy to make it through. Rather than the bread, we use thicker sweet potato glass noodles, but you could also use thinner mung bean vermicelli. Either would be delicious. 

An Easy, Milky Chinese Lamb Broth

The best part of this noodle soup is that there’s no pre-boiling or need for a finicky “simmer,” which can mean a lot of things depending on who you are talking to! My mom is the resident expert on getting perfectly clear soups and stocks with patience and finesse.  If you’ve been following us regularly, you know that patience/finesse is NOT my style, or my forté.  This recipe is much more my speed. You simply soak the lamb shanks in cold water for 20 minutes, brown them in oil, and then toss in water and a bunch of spices and simmer the heck out of it until the broth is cloudy and the meat is tender. The goal is to release the milky goodness from the marrow and sinew of the lamb meat and bones.  If you forget it, and it creeps above an energetic simmer at various points, there’s no reason for kitchen tears. It’s a very forgiving noodle soup in the grand dynasty of Chinese noodle soups. Ok, on to the recipe!

Chinese Lamb Noodle Soup Recipe Instructions

For this recipe, you can use either just 3 pounds of lamb shanks, or a mix of lamb shanks (2 pounds) and lamb neck bones (1 pound). Lamb neck bones usually have labels that say “for stewing” at grocery stores, but these can be relatively hard to come by. If using only lamb shanks, ask your butcher to cut 1-2 shanks into three pieces each, to expose more of the bone and the marrow for a richer stock. Let the meat soak in a pot of cold water for 20 minutes. Rinse the bones off and pat dry with a paper towel.   Rinse out the pot, and then place over high heat. Once any residual water in the pot has dried off, add the oil to the pot, along with the ginger slices and the thicker white and light green parts of the scallions. Cook for 1 minute. Add the lamb. Brown on all sides until lightly golden.  After browning the lamb, add the water. Also add the garlic, green parts of the scallions, and the spices (dried chili peppers, cardamom pods, star anise, bay leaves, sand ginger, cinnamon, black cardamom, coriander seeds, sichuan peppercorns, white peppercorns, and fennel seeds).  Cover and simmer over medium-high heat for 30 minutes. Then reduce heat to medium, and simmer for 1 additional hour. The broth should turn cloudy and milky within the first 20 minutes of simmering.  Add the dried wood ears (be sure to rinse them of any dirt/debris first) and salt.
Cook for another 30 minutes over low heat, for a total of 2 hours of cooking.  When you’re ready to eat, boil the noodles per the package instructions.  Transfer the lamb shanks to a cutting board. Debone them, and chop the meat roughly.  Serve each bowl with 2-3 ladlefuls of broth, poured through a fine-meshed strainer.  Top with a healthy pinch or two of chopped Chinese celery leaves and cilantro, and serve with chili oil, Chinese black vinegar, and white pepper as optional condiments.

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