Saimin is made up of two chinese words that mean 'thin' and 'noodle'. Saimin soup is usually made with wholemeal egg noodles but since I couldn't get those I used soba noodles which are also wholemeal.
Saimin soup was sold from food wagons as early as the 1900s, to farmers and workers in Hawaii. They have become popular again in recent years and can be made with a variety of toppings.
Ingredients:
1 package noodles
3 cups chicken stock
1 tablespoon minced ginger
2 tablespoons soy sauce
Toppings:
sliced spam
sliced pork
peas
spring onions
sliced green cabbage
scrambled eggs
I prepared all the toppings before I made the soup. I sliced and fried the spam and pork. Scrambled 2 eggs. Sliced the cabbage and spring onions.
In a large pan of salted water I cooked the noodles and then drained them.
In the same large pan I added the chicken stock, ginger and soy sauce. Stirring as they combined.
I put the toppings in the pan (keeping some back for garnish) and gave them a good stir. Leave them for a few minutes to heat through.
Add the noodles back to the pan and stir well to distribute the toppings through the noodles.
Heap some noodles in the middle of your serving dish and then add some toppings, finish with a ladle full of the stock. Enjoy!
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