Pheasant Noodle Soup

4.92 from 12 votes
Comment
Jump to Recipe

As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

Pheasant noodle soup recipe
Photo by Holly A. Heyser

Life is a series of hits and misses, ups and downs.

Hunting, as anyone who has ever done it knows, is an imperfect art. A pheasant, in an ideal world, should be shot cleanly in the head. A quick death, no meat loss. This, sadly, is the exception rather than the rule. All of us have, well, “pillowed” a rooster or two, catching the bird in the full pattern of pellets. It is disappointing. No roast pheasant with this rooster.

So what to do? Make pheasant soup.

Pheasant soup is, essentially, chicken soup, only with a wild ditch chicken instead of a yardbird. It is equally satisfying to body and soul, a tonic for your down days, or days when the icy chill of the world — whether emotional or physical — has cut a bit too deep. My recipe is one hardwired within me, a soup I have enjoyed virtually unchanged since I could remember being me.

I came by these pheasants as a gift; my friends Cory and Bryce had arrived from Utah bearing dead pheasants. We were headed out on a duck hunt the following day, so they skinned the birds and I set them in the fridge for later.

Cory and Bryce returned home, and Sunday came. It was a chilly day that became a day of disappointment. A powerful storm blew through the area, promising a rain of ducks in our blind. It did not happen. A mallard and a spoonie were all we had to show for hours of being soaked in the elements. Oh well. Such is hunting.

Back home, I turned to make this soup without conscious thought. Roast the carcasses of the pheasants with a little oil and salt, make a broth from them. Pick off the meat, strain the broth and add new vegetables, a little wine, and the obligatory egg noodles.

Chicken noodle soup must always have egg noodles, or at least mine must. I’ve eaten it this way for more than 40 years, and I am not about to change now. You might prefer rice, or orzo, or something else — and that is OK by me.

Next time you have an ahem, “well shot” pheasant, or grouse or even a turkey, make this soup. Make it for your down days, make it for your children. Watch them wrap their hands around the bowl and inhale the gift you have given them. Watch them eat one bowl, two. Three. Watch them file away this moment forever. And smile.

Pheasant noodle soup
4.92 from 12 votes

Pheasant Noodle Soup

This is my rendition of pheasant noodle soup. Everyone who makes this probably does something a little different. If you are short of pheasants, use any white meat. Turkey, rabbit, grouse, partridge or quail all spring to mind. You could even make this with fish if you were so inclined, but if you do, don't cook the broth more than 1 hour. Everything else is pretty easy to find. For me, this is a winter warmer, something to eat for lunch on a cold day. For a dinner, you might need only some bread and a salad to go with it.
Course: Soup
Cuisine: American
Servings: 8 people
Author: Hank Shaw
Prep Time: 3 hours
Cook Time: 30 minutes
Total Time: 3 hours 30 minutes

Ingredients 

BROTH

  • 2 Pheasants, breast meat removed
  • A little oil to coat the carcasses
  • Salt
  • 3 bay leaves
  • 2 celery stalks, chopped
  • 4 leeks or 1 onion, chopped
  • 2 carrots, peeled and sliced into discs
  • 1 garlic clove, mashed
  • 1 sprig rosemary
  • 2 star anise pods (optional)

SOUP

  • 3 tablespoons butter
  • White parts from the leeks or 1 chopped onion
  • 2 celery stalks, chopped
  • 2 carrots, peeled and sliced into discs
  • 1 bay leaf
  • 1/2 to 1 cup white vermouth or white wine
  • Salt and black pepper
  • 1 pound egg noodles, orzo or other soup pasta
  • 1/4 cup chopped parsley

Instructions 

  • Make the broth first. Coat the pheasants with some oil and salt well. Put them in a roasting pan and roast in the oven at 400°F for about 1 hour. Remove the pheasants and put into a stock pot and just barely cover with water. Set the heat to medium-high. Pour some water into the roasting pan and let that sit for a few minutes to loosen things up. Scrape any browned bits off the bottom of the roasting pan with a wooden spoon and pour that into the stock pot. As soon as the stock begins to simmer, drop the heat to low and let this cook very gently for 2 hours.
  • While this is simmering, drop the pheasant breasts into the broth and let them cook gently for 20 minutes. Remove them, shred the meat and set aside.
  • Fish out the pheasants and pick off all the meat from the legs, thighs, wings and carcass. Set this aside and return the bones to the stock pot. Add 2 stalks of celery, 2 carrots, the smashed garlic clove, rosemary, bay leaves and the star anise if using. Separate the light from dark parts of the leeks. Chop the dark green parts and add to the stock, and slice the white and light green parts and set aside for the soup. If you're using onions, just add 1 chopped onion now. Let the stock cook another 90 minutes.
  • When you're ready to make the soup, you can do one of two things: You can simply set up a fine mesh strainer over the pot you are going to make the soup in, or you can properly strain your stock and use that. To properly strain the stock, put a piece of paper towel in the strainer and set that over a big bowl or other large container. Ladle the stock from the stockpot through the strainer set-up into the big bowl. This will give you a nicer, clearer broth.
  • To finish the soup, heat the butter in a Dutch oven or other soup pot set over medium heat. Saute the white parts of the leeks (or the onion), the final 2 celery stalks and carrots until soft and translucent, but not browned. This should take about 5 to 8 minutes. Add the vermouth and let this boil a minute or two, then add the bay leaf and about 4 to 8 cups of the stock you just made. Let this simmer very gently.
  • To cook the noodles, you can do one of two things: You can just drop them into your soup, which is fine but it will make the broth cloudy. Or, you can boil your noodles in some salty water and add them later. I boil mine separately because I like clear broth.
  • While the noodles are cooking, return all the picked-over pheasant meat (and the shredded breast meat) to the soup. Add salt and black pepper to taste. When the noodles are ready, add the parsley and serve.

Notes

Note that prep time assumes you are making broth. Once made, the broth will keep a week in the fridge. If you want to have leftover soup ready to go, undercook the noodles so they are al dente when you first eat the soup. They'll absorb more broth in the fridge and still be nice a few days later.

Nutrition

Calories: 918kcal | Carbohydrates: 51g | Protein: 87g | Fat: 39g | Saturated Fat: 13g | Cholesterol: 301mg | Sodium: 233mg | Potassium: 1208mg | Fiber: 4g | Sugar: 5g | Vitamin A: 6855IU | Vitamin C: 28mg | Calcium: 111mg | Iron: 6mg

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

Tried this recipe? Tag me today!Mention @huntgathercook or tag #hankshaw!

You May Also Like

Wild Rice Salad

A fresh and bright wild rice salad recipe that mimics Crisp and Green’s “wild child” salad. I use grouse, wild rice and dried wild berries.

Spanish Quail with Paprika and Onions

A Spanish recipe for quail stewed with paprika and onions. You then strain off the liquid and serve that with pasta. it’s a great date night dish.

Green Chile Chicken Soup

A recipe for Southwestern style green chile chicken soup, with roasted green Hatch chiles, white beans, greens and a rich broth.

British Game Pie

How to make hand-raised pies with game. This one is a huntsman’s pie, an English classic hand pie made with a hot water crust.

About Hank Shaw

Hey there. Welcome to Hunter Angler Gardener Cook, the internet’s largest source of recipes and know-how for wild foods. I am a chef, author, and yes, hunter, angler, gardener, forager and cook. Follow me on Instagram and on Facebook.

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating




29 Comments

  1. I’d been wanting to make soup so I could use up the legs and not waste them. Found this recipe and made it for family Christmas a couple years ago. They loved it so much, it’s now part of our tradition!

  2. Hello Hank, This broth is hands down the best broth I have ever had. Whether I made it or someone else’s. And just forget store bought. My question is, you have other recipes for a duck broth, why not use this recipe and substitute duck, goose, chukar or chicken for the pheasant? Is there something about this recipe that would not work with the other birds?

    Thanks, Rob

  3. Absolutely amazing soup. Fabulous on a cold winter day. The broth alone is worth the effort. I may be slow in the kitchen, but plan on this taking most of the day to prepare. As for the 1 pound of noodles, that 1 pound of cooked noodles. I started with 1 pound of dry and that was just far too much.

  4. I’m excited to try this, but I need a little help: my husband brought back some pheasant breasts (bone in) from a hunting trip and that is all I have to work with. At what point should I cut off the breast meat? And how many should I use since I don’t have the legs, thighs, etc. Thanks for the help, I’m excited!

    1. Olivia: Cook them whole as you make the broth, and then after about 20 minutes of gentle simmering, pull off and shred the meat. Put it back when you are ready to eat. I’d use maybe four or five.

      1. Thanks! It turned out so tasty! I think next time I’ll add more water so it yields more broth, and I’ll go even less than 20 minutes since parts of the meat were dry. I’ll be making it again, thank you!

  5. I love this recipe. I’ve made it with pheasant per the recipe and have used one wild turkey leg (thigh and drum stick). The only modification I made for the turkey leg is I left the meat (on the bone) in the pot for step 2. It worked for me.

  6. I used 4 ‘breasted’ Illinois pheasants (breasts were used for a wonderful mushroom & wild rice dish from meateater.com. Followed Hank’s recipe & the soup turned out ridiculously well! Thank’s Hank.

  7. My wife and I made this recipe just about exactly as written, including making the stock as described. It was probably the best soup we’ve made, and we make soup a lot. Really outstanding flavor!

      1. This is my favorite recipe for pheasants, the family absolutely loves it. I have even been able to use this method of cooking the bird and making a stock to make some awesome pot pies!

        Shouldn’t the prep time be 4.5 hours though? 1 hour roasting pheasant, 2 hours boiling pheasant, 1.5 hour cooking broth with vegetables(pheasant meat removed)? Did I miss something?

  8. YUM!! My husband and I both finished a second serving for dinner tonight. I have to admit I didn’t make the broth from scratch (which I’m sure would have made it even better), but it was still amazing. I’ve never made a bad Hank Shaw recipe! Thanks for yet another great one!

  9. I like to use bow tie pasta in mine, yes it is a little fancy, but it is a visual / texture thing, along with a dark beer when the snow flakes fly!!!
    This is by far the best wild game website on the net, thank you!!!!

  10. Love this recipe! Exactly what I was looking for. I’m sick of chicken and want to try something different:) Thank you!

  11. Not just for shot up birds… We do almost verbatim the above recipe with leftover/ dark meat turkey at holiday time. I haven’t eaten a cold turkey sandwich in years! This is the true essence of comfort food! As mentioned above it’s also perfect for those days when the pickin’s are slim as happens more in my hunting experience than I would care to admit.

  12. With Chukar, would you roast stick to one hour in the first step? Also, why de-breasted? Do you prefer to use that meat for something else?

    Love you website, it’s an absolute gold mine.

    1. Todd: More or less. You want the carcasses nice and brown. And I de-breast them because I do indeed use the meat for something else. If you want, you can drop the breasts into the broth you are making for 20 minutes and then shred the meat to put into the finished soup.

  13. Yes! I just so happen to have three pheasants in my freezer from a hunt last year. Wasn’t sure what I was going to do with them because they were so shot up and I had to skin them. Definitely going to make this!