Sopita de Fideo, what home feels like.

Sopa de Fideo

  

History:

Sopa de fideo or sopita de fideo, as my family refers to this bowl of deliciousness, is a staple dish for most Mexican families. No matter how old you are or think you are, sopita de fideo is the ultimate comfort food. It’s a soup that is made with fideo pasta and a tomato broth. It may not sound like much but the simplicity of it makes it special. There has been research conducted to confirm that this is a traditional Mexican food and just as common as frijoles (Smith-Morris, 2016). It is very similar to the chicken noodle soup but so much better and is both a lunch and dinner dish. This dish is a big hit with children, but definitely satisfies the mature palate of adults (Smith-Morris, 2016). Additionally, sopita de fideo is extremely affordable as well as flavorful.

It’s been really interesting to learn now, at my unknown age, that people enjoy sopita de fideo with a variation of ingredients and that there are recipes that are different and original that include adding ground beef. At work, someone shared with me that they add shredded cheese to theirs and that their kids actually enjoy it with a bit of mayonnaise. I think this adds to the significance and greatness of this dish. It is so flexible and adaptable that it can be tailored to fit anyone’s specific preferences or diet needs.

Brief Disclaimer:

You’ll have to forgive me, although the Sopa de Fideo recipe has been passed down from generation to generation in my family it has never been written down onto any paper. I, like everyone else in my family, was taught in person, practicing hands on and conducting many many taste tests. Therefore, there are no exact measurements and I am no chef. I am a mom who cooks for her family. In this recipe you will have to bear with me because my instructions will not be technical nor fancy, they will be in laymen’s terms and as straightforward as possible.

So, with all this said, this recipe is not the original that my great- great- great grandmother once made but that is the great thing about it, it’s flexible and there is really no wrong way. You can improvise and just add any ingredient or remove the ingredients that you don’t care for and enjoy it.

Ingredients:

Fideo Pasta

Onion

Garlic Cloves

Knorr Chicken Bouillon

Cilantro

Tomatoes

Chicken Broth

Cooking oil – for frying

Additional Ingredients:

This list of ingredients can be added to make this soup even more satisfying and filling.

Chicken

Carrots

Potatoes

Squash

And you will not want to skip on having lemons, tortillas, and avocadoes on hand.

Preparation/Instructions: (Makes 5- 6 servings)

Fill the pot you usually use for making soup about halfway with water. Place on the stove with medium heat. Add in one-fourth onion, one clove of garlic and about 2-3 pinches of salt.

Wash your chicken, I like using leg and thighs but use any of your favorite pieces. Only four to five pieces are needed. At this time, I wash all my vegetables that I will be using. Since you are already at the sink it just makes the process flow easily.

Now go ahead and place the washed chicken inside the pot you prepared above. Cook until chicken is cooked, removing dark suds or foam from the top of the water. The dark suds are said to be bad toxins that the chicken released at the time of death. I don’t know if this has any truth to it or if it has been scientifically proven but I choose not to take my chances and try to remove as much of it as possible. This can also apply to other types of meat.

Meanwhile your chicken is cooking, you can prepare the sauce that will be the base of your sopita. Begin by chopping two to three tomatoes into fourths, the more tomatoes the richer the red color of the broth. If I’m making it as a main dish, I like to make it a bit redder than if I’m making it as a side dish. You will also chop about half of an onion and grab two garlic cloves. Blend these three ingredients into a puree. No need to add salt because the chicken is cooking with salt and you will be adding chicken bouillon later.

Since the chicken will take about 30- 40 minutes to cook start slicing all the vegetables you decided on. I don’t like them to small, so I slice them into medium sized pieces. This goes for potatoes, squash, and carrots. I do not chop the cilantro; I leave it whole even with the stems. This will give it a little more flavor and it will be easy to take out if you have a picky eater.

Now right about here, you have about twenty minutes to do something else or get some other stuff done around the house. Check your phone, check on the kids or guest, bathroom break, put the clothes in the dryer or whatever it is that you need to do.

Back to work… grab a deep-frying pan and put in four teaspoons of oil. Let the oil heat for about two minutes then add the entire bag of fideo. Stir it around to make sure all the fideo is covered with the oil and continue stirring until brown. Be careful, the fideo should be turning brown but do not let it burn. Once the fideo has fully cooked, grab colander and your blender that contains the pureed tomato, garlic, and onion. Use the colander to pour the puree into the pan with the cooked fideo. To make it easier, slowly poor the chicken broth from your cooked chicken over the colander.

The aromas of the puree and the chicken broth meeting the fried fideo are so pleasing and appetizing. At this step, you will usually have your family come into the kitchen and inquire what your making and how much longer it will take to be done.

After pouring it all in to the pan, add the sliced vegetables into the soup and roughly two tablespoons of the chicken bouillon. Add in more bouillon if needed, it will depend on the amount of broth. Lower the flame and let it cook for about ten minutes. Meanwhile shred the cooked chicken and add it, along with the cilantro into the fideo. Stick a fork into the vegetables to check that they are cooked, if so, turn the heat off. You are done.

As an entrée:

Sopita de fideo can be very filling and presented or served as the main dish especially by adding from the list of healthy ingredients above. This dish can stand on its own and satisfy any size appetite. Just adding in chicken and vegetables like squash, potatoes, carrots and chicken, sopita de fideo is wholesome and hearty.

As a side dish:

Just like the common American soups, chicken noodle or tomato, the sopita de fideo without the additional ingredient’s pairs perfectly with a sandwich or even a salad. But my favorite combination is carne asada. Serve a nice hot bowl of sopita de fideo, grab a warm tortilla, put the carne asada, a couple slices of avocado, salsa or hot sauce, and squeeze some lemon on top and bite. Then top it off with a spoonful of sopita. All the flavors will blend together in your mouth to create something so humble and savory.

Nutrition:

Sopita de fideo is very nutritious. In fact, this is often made for children who are not interested in eating because they can’t sit still or are finicky eaters. It can be packed with a bunch of important nutrients and vitamins either way you make it, simple or elaborate. Although, since fideo is pasta it is not keto friendly because of the carbs.  Even though, authentically homemade is always the best route, if your pressed for time or haven’t gone to the market sopita de fideo can be made with minimal ingredients and you can substitute things like real fresh tomatoes for tomato sauce and garlic salt instead of fresh garlic but their will be a loss of the good vitamins and nutrients.

Memories:

My connection to this dish started before I was born, I truly believe. This came about because the one craving that my mom had the very first three months of her pregnancy with me was sopita de fideo. She explained to me that it was the only thing that would stay down through her morning sickness. My great grandmother and my other family members would make it for her every other day or so. They laughed when they would tell me the story and said they had to do it so that I wouldn’t come out looking like fideo. This is a myth that is common amongst Mexicans… if you don’t give a pregnant person what they want to eat then the baby will look like whatever that particular food was. So, my appreciation and love for this soup was fate. As soon as I could start eating solids, I was eating sopita de fideo.

As a child, this was a dish that I could not and would not refuse. The smell of sopita de fideo filling the air was enough to get me away from anything that I was doing. Even if I was playing barbies, coloring, or watching television. This soup was and is my favorite. Even back when I couldn’t record the show I was watching on the DVR. If I missed it that was it there was no rewind or pausing like there is now. But it didn’t matter, on top of that, I had to eat at the dinner table away from the T.V. The soup warmed up my belly and hugged me to my core as it has for so many years.

Sopita de fideo holds a special place in heart and I know it might sound silly to some because it’s just food. But this soup has helped to strengthen relationships and bonds, it has made me feel better when I’ve been sick, it gave me peace and comfort when I needed it, it has nourished my body, and it brings back wonderful memories of people that I care deeply about but are no longer here with me in the physical world. I’m thankful that I get to share these memories with those closest to me.

Sopita de fideo now brings joy to my immediate family too. It brings my children to the kitchen even when there busy doing other things. It starts great conversations around the dinner table. I am able to feed it to my family with confidence knowing that it has so much good stuff in it for our bodies. Even more so, it has helped us when we have struggled financially or just needed to make it for a couple of days before payday. This dish reminds me and my family to be humble and grateful for each other and everything we have. I plan to continue sharing sopita de fideo with those I treasure and love the most.

 

Fruta Picada

Fruta picada is a basic fruit salad that is eaten as a snack or dessert. However, what makes fruta picada special to me and gives it a little kick is adding lemon and chile powder. In Los Angeles, it is very common to see it sold by street vendors all over town.

Fruta picada originates from Mexico where it is served with a chile powder called “Chile de Arbol” that is much more spicier than what is used here in L.A. which is Tajin and has a hint of lemon flavor. I learned this the hard way as a child during a summer trip to Mexico. Although, burning my mouth didn’t stop me from continuing to enjoy this treat since then. Growing up I would often take family trips to cities in Mexico like Tijuana, Rosarito, Mexico City and Guadalajara, to visit family that still lives there, and this is where my love for fruta picada started. Fruta picada to me is always delicious but when you get it in Mexico it tastes so much better because of the fruit, there are so many to choose from. Typically, fruta picada consists of sliced watermelon, cucumber, mango, jicama, pineapple, orange, a good squeeze of lemon and a sprinkle of chile powder to taste but in Mexico they offer other fruits that are distinctive from the region like papaya, mamey, tuna, pitaya, guanabana, and cherimoya. I could go into what each one of these unique fruits are but for the sake of time I’d ask you just to google them if you are really interested.

I grew up in the 80’s and 90’s and my mom would take us almost every weekend to the swapmeet or “Callejones,” fruta picada was a treat that was a must to have no matter what especially since going to Mexico was something we would do only during school vacations. We’d get there really early in the morning but by midday I knew that a sweet, sour, and spicy treat was going to be a reward for waking up that morning.

We always made this in our house too, I can remember walking around the fruit stands in the market with my mom as she guided me to picking the best of the best out of the pile. Making sure to pick each fruit up and look at it for any bruises, squeeze it for firmness, paying attention to the color, and smelling it to guess the sweetness. This technique that I have now shared with my 16 year old daughter and 6 year old son. Even though lemon is added to the fruit once its all cut it is still very important to get the tastiest juiciest sweetest fruit so that you can get a burst of flavor in your mouth.

I remember sitting around the dinner table with my mom, aunts, and sisters everyone grabbing whatever fruit was around and a knife and preparing fruta picada while telling stories of the past or giving someone relationship advice, cracking jokes, sometimes crying but nevertheless sharing our time together as women.

It wasn’t until this assignment that I realized how special fruta picada means to me. It was hard for me to decide what dish to share and present on because I’m not a cook, I cook for my family, but they eat what I make only because they don’t really have a choice. But recently like a regular duty of mine, I was cutting fruit up with my daughter and mother-in-law, and it hit me the smell of fresh cut fruit and lemons really takes me somewhere and puts me in a great mood. Not to mention all the nutritional benefits that come along with this treat and the fact that it’s not a problem if you have a picky eater on your hands because you can use any fruit to make it. But the really great part is if you able to share your time with those you care about and allow it to be an experience that will give you meaningful memories that will stay with you forever.

Tacos? Yes Please

My name is Ann-Marie and I am in my senior year at CSUDH. I will be graduating in May of this year. I can honestly say I do not have a favorite food because I love all types of food from so many different counties of origin such as Italian, Chinese, Japanese, Thai, Indian, Middle eastern, Peruvian, Ecuadorian, Salvadorian, Mexican, and American. I enjoy trying new and different foods whenever I can. But no matter what I can always be found eating tacos. There are so many different types of tacos from hard to soft, various meats and toppings. Tacos are great because they are a finger food, filling, have many variations, and can be purchased or homemade easily. The food selfie that I am posting is from a lunch date with my husband at a hole in the wall place called, El Taco Man, in El Monte. We both work near by and once in a while meet there for lunch. We usually share our meals because of me… I have a hard time choosing what I want to eat. So here we ordered three items from the menu. First was 4 tacos of aside meat with some onion and cilantro toppings and red salsa and lemons. We also ordered 3 potato tacos that are topped with cabbage and queso fresco. Lastly, we ordered a torta (Mexican sandwhich) of asada that comes layered with refried beans, lettuce, and tomato. We shared all three, they were so satisfying and delicious. I know that not everyone is into sharing their food but it’s really great to share because you can enjoy different items and don’t have to stick to just one.