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The BEST Gut Healing Chicken Soup – Healthy Recipe

Gut health doesn’t have to be complicated!  Fix your leaky gut and heal your immune system with this delicious gut-healing soup!

Contrary to popular belief, healing a leaky gut (aka SIBO and/or SIFO) doesn’t have to cost an arm and a leg.  But not healing it will cost you more than an arm and a leg, it will cost you your generalized health/quality of life and years of your life!  I’m 35 with 5 kids so far and working on healing my leaky gut and secondary autoimmune issues now.  But this isn’t my first rodeo.

Over 10 years ago when I was a younger, new mom – I healed my gut using simple foods like slow-roasted meats, broth, easy-to-digest fruit and veggies, herbs, and healing spices.  I did not have extra money for supplements or gadgets like red lights.  I just had to work within a limited budget and stay disciplined with simple, gut-healing foods and basic ferments + probiotics.  It worked!  

I was able to heal my gut…

…and live symptom-free at an effortlessly healthy weight + body composition with a stellar immune system for several years.  Then, in 2020, I took a position working the night shift in LTAC (long-term ICU).  I did this so we could work on paying off debt.  But it came at the cost of my health due to working nights, letting my diet and exercise slip, and having a root canal against my better judgment because I needed the tooth fixed and was sleep-deprived.


So, my life goes like this: sick as a kid and teen, sick and overweight as a young adult due to being a sick kid + living a party lifestyle.  Had my first baby, had my first autoimmune flare postpartum, then made my mind up to heal naturally.  Healed myself over a couple of years with simple, whole foods.  Enjoyed perfect health for many years.  Made poor choices to pay off debt, got sick again (autoimmune, weight gain, etc.).  Quit the stressful job and thought I’d get better.  Didn’t get better and continued having postpartum autoimmune flares after baby #4 and #5.  Now, at 35, I’m healing myself again, and it’s working like a charm again!  So I’m sharing the process on my YouTube channel, Instagram, and with recipes here on the blog.

This gut-healing soup recipe is something I came up with many years ago.  Each ingredient is purposeful and I eat this soup at least once a day for an extended period of time until all of my symptoms are gone and I feel great every day.  Soup season or not – sick people do well on soup!  And if you have chronic symptoms, you’re sick – trust me, that’s not fun to hear, I know first hand!

I may receive a small commission for items purchased through affiliate links in this post at no additional cost to you.

Why You’ll Love This Recipe

What You’ll Need

INGREDIENTS

ROASTED WHOLE CHICKEN + BROTH

GUT HEALING SOUP

TOOLS

Ingredient Breakdown

I chose all of the ingredients in this soup intentionally to correct SIBO and/or SIFO.  Let’s discuss:

Butter or Olive Oil?

Onions, Leeks, and Garlic (Alliums)

Carrots, Celery, and Fresh Parsley (Umbellifers)

Split Peas

Oregano, Thyme, and Sage (Culinary herbs in the Lamiaceae or Mint family)

Salt

Turmeric

Whole Chicken (Pastured Organic if possible)

Gut-Healing Bone Broth

Step-By-Step Instructions

Roast a whole chicken

  1. Mix olive oil and seasoning in a small bowl.  Wash and pat dry a whole chicken then pour/rub the seasoned oil all over the chicken.  Roast in a roasting pan or dutch oven at 375 until the internal temperature is 165F.  
  2. Allow the chicken to cool, remove all of the meat, and set aside.  Save the carcass with skin to make bone/carcass broth.

Make bone broth

  1. Add the carcass, skin, and drippings from the roasted chicken to a large pot or dutch oven (or just use the one you used for roasting), fill it with water, bring to a boil, then turn the heat down and simmer for 1 hour for low histamine broth or up to 24 hours.  
  2. Remove from heat and strain the broth.  Use it to make this soup or save for later use.

Make Gut Healing Soup

  1. Chop and prep all veggies and herbs.
  2. Heat butter or olive oil in a large pot over medium heat, then add chopped veggies, split peas, herbs, and spices (salt and turmeric).  Let everything “sweat” over medium heat for 15-20 minutes.
  3. Add the broth and chopped, cooked chicken from the whole roasted chicken, cover, and simmer on medium-low heat for at least 30 minutes or up to an hour.
  4. Serve hot or store in the fridge in an airtight container for up to 5 days or in the freezer for up to 3 months.  

FAQ

  1. Can I use vegetable broth instead of bone broth?
    • Yes, you can use vegetable broth to make gut healing soup but you will be missing out on many healing and nutritious properties of bone broth.
  2. Can I use other spices like black pepper or curry powder instead of turmeric?
    • Yes, you can add other spices to this soup, but do not remove the turmeric if you’re hoping for optimal healing because of the healing, anti-inflammatory properties of turmeric.
  3. Is this soup safe for pregnancy and breastfeeding?
    • Yes, I made this recipe with pregnant and breastfeeding women in mind, even though it is great for all people in all seasons of life.  Turmeric can be unsafe during pregnancy when taken in very high doses in supplement form, but when used as a culinary spice it is just fine and beneficial.  Turmeric is a staple spice in many parts of the world where women eat it daily and have many healthy children.  I do not take a turmeric supplement while pregnant or breastfeeding, I just get my daily “dose” of turmeric by eating a bowl of this soup.
  4. Can I add fermented foods like sauerkraut to my gut healing soup?
    • I would recommend waiting until you are a few weeks into healing your gut to add ferments.  Around 4 weeks in, I do drop a teaspoon of homemade sauerkraut on top of my soup before I eat it – adding ferments to the pot of soup while its coking would kill the cultures which is why I just drop some on top of my soup when I’m ready to eat.

Tips

Storage

Gut Healing soup can be stored in the fridge for up to 5 days or in the freezer in an airtight container for up to 3 months.  Reheat on the stove over medium heat.

The BEST Gut Healing Chicken Soup - Healthy Recipe

Gut health doesn't have to be complicated!  Fix your leaky gut and heal your immune system with this delicious gut-healing soup!

Ingredients

ROASTED WHOLE CHICKEN + BROTH

  • whole chicken (organic, pastured if possible)
  • 1/2 cup olive oil or melted butter
  • 1 tablespoon all-purpose seasoning like paleo powder

Instructions

Roast a whole chicken

  1. Mix olive oil and seasoning in a small bowl.  Wash and pat dry a whole chicken then pour/rub the seasoned oil all over the chicken.  Roast in a roasting pan or dutch oven at 375 until the internal temperature is 165F.  
  2. Allow the chicken to cool, remove all of the meat, and set aside.  Save the carcass with skin to make bone/carcass broth.

Make bone broth

  1. Add the carcass, skin, and drippings from the roasted chicken to a large pot or dutch oven (or just use the one you used for roasting), fill it with water, bring to a boil, then turn the heat down and simmer for 1 hour for low histamine broth or up to 24 hours.  
  2. Remove from heat and strain the broth.  Use it to make this soup or save for later use.

Make Gut Healing Soup

  1. Chop and prep all veggies and herbs.
  2. Heat butter or olive oil in a large pot over medium heat, then add chopped veggies, split peas, herbs, and spices (salt and turmeric).  Let everything "sweat" over medium heat for 15-20 minutes.
  3. Add the broth and chopped, cooked chicken from the whole roasted chicken, cover, and simmer on medium-low heat for at least 30 minutes or up to an hour.
  4. Serve hot or store in the fridge in an airtight container for up to 5 days or in the freezer for up to 3 months.

Notes

  • Start with a whole chicken or bone-in pieces.  This will yield a more flavorful, nutritious final product and the bones, skin, and carcass can be used to make homemade broth.
  • Use the highest quality ingredients you can source.  Don't stress too much about this.  When I was younger on a tight budget, I just got the best I could find - I bought organic when possible but didn't have access to farm fresh anything then - I was still able to heal.
  • If you've got a giant 5-gallon stock pot, double or triple this recipe and freeze several batches of gut healing soup.  This would be especially helpful if you're preparing postpartum meals.
  • I eat a LOT of ruminant meat, mostly beef, as well for gut healing.  I slow roast a few big beef roasts at the beginning of every week and keep the meat in the fridge to have on hand.  Sometimes I throw a big chunk of roast into my soup when I'm heating a bowl up for added protein to keep me satiated longer.  This is especially vital for pregnant and/or breastfeeding mothers or for athletes focusing on digestive system healing.  
  • Aim for 1 gram of protein per pound of ideal body weight every day.  My ideal body weight is 160lbs so I aim for 160 grams of protein a day.  I do not calorie count.  But I do track protein intake.  When you eat enough protein, you won't have the appetite to overdo it by carb loading.  

Gut Healing soup can be stored in the fridge for up to 5 days or in the freezer in an airtight container for up to 3 months.  Reheat on the stove over medium heat.

Did you make this recipe?

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