Viral No Water Chicken Soup

5 from 2 reviews

This post may contain affiliate links. Please read our disclosure policy.

Add as a preferred source on Google
A close-up of No Water Chicken Soup with a spoonful of clear brown broth held above it, showing pieces of chicken, chopped carrots, and fresh herbs on top—perfect for a rich, waterless chicken soup recipe.

This Viral No Water Chicken Soup 🥘 has been making the rounds on the internet and I had to try it for myself (and for you ❤️). The soup makes its own broth – no added water or stock. Just pile Napa cabbage, onions, carrots, garlic and a Honeycrisp apple into a pot, nestle a whole chicken on top, and let low heat do all the work. The result is the richest, most concentrated chicken soup you’ve ever tasted 😋.

I tested it, tweaked it, and I’m giving you my Mediterranean-inspired version. The broth is SO rich and the veggies turn so sweet and jammy. It is 90000/10 🤤.

Key Takeaways

  • The Viral No Water Chicken Soup uses a whole chicken and high-moisture veggies to create broth without added water.
  • This Mediterranean-inspired version features Napa cabbage, aromatics, and a Honeycrisp apple for natural sweetness.
  • Add 2 cups of water to ensure enough liquid is available during cooking.
  • Use a heavy pot with a tight lid to keep steam trapped and maintain broth richness.
  • Serve the soup with rice, crusty bread, or a simple green salad for a complete meal.

What Is No Water Chicken Soup?

No Water Chicken Soup features a whole chicken cooked with high-moisture vegetables in a sealed pot on low heat. The idea is that the veggies release their natural juices, creating ultra-concentrated, collagen-rich bone broth 🍖 without a single drop of added water. However, my version adds a Mediterranean-inspired twist to the Chinese home cooking method of waterless chicken soup that went viral on TikTok 📲.

Why You’ll Love this Viral No Water Chicken Soup

🌊 Mediterranean simplicity: I add my own twist to the viral no water chicken soup trend – swapping ginger, jujubes, and Chinese herbs for 6 everyday ingredients from your Mediterranean pantry.

🍎 A secret weapon: One Honeycrisp apple goes into the pot and adds natural sweetness to the broth.

🧄 5 cloves of garlic: Because this is The Modern Nonna.

😇 I keep it honest: I’ve tested this both ways, so you don’t have to. I recommend adding two cups of water to the bottom as insurance, since not every chicken or cabbage releases the same amount of liquid.

Nonna’s Honest Tip 💧

Even though this method technically works without liquid, I recommend adding 2 cups of water to the bottom of the pot. Not every batch of vegetables releases the same amount of liquid, and you do not want to risk anything burning or sticking.

Ingredients You’ll Need

🥬 Napa cabbage: The real MVP. It releases the most liquid of any cabbage variety, and this is what creates the broth.

🥕 Aromatics: Onions, carrots, and garlic add depth to the savory base.

🍎 Honeycrisp apple: Adds subtle sweetness that rounds out the broth without making it taste fruity.

🍗 Whole chicken: As it cooks, it creates the most delicious collagen-rich bone broth for your chicken and cabbage soup.

🧂 Salt & Pepper: Simple and flavorful – perfect as is or as a base to add your own seasonings.

Tips for the Best Results

Use a heavy pot with a tight-fitting ild
A dutch oven or heavy-bottomed soup pot is ideal 🥘. Steam needs to stay trapped and the lid of a dutch oven is specially designed to circulate steam and juices.

Low and slow
You want gentle sweating to give the components time to release juices without burning. However, avoid bringing to a rolling boil.

Don’t peek.
Seriously, don’t. It’s going to smell amazing, but every time you lift the lid, steam escapes and you lose broth – and add minutes to your cooking time ⏲️.

The 2-cup insurance
If you’re nervous about not having enough liquid, add 2 cups of water or Homemade Chicken Broth. It won’t dilute the flavor, and it prevents scorching.

Bigger chicken = more broth
A 4-5 pound roasting chicken gives the best results.

Season at the end
The broth concentrates as it cooks, so add salt 🧂 gradually at the end.

How to Serve It

Storage and Reheating

  • Fridge: Up to 3-4 days in an airtight container.
  • Freezer: Up to 3 months in a freezer-safe container. The broth freezes beautifully; shred the chicken before freezing for easier thawing.
  • Reheat: Warm gently on the stovetop over low heat. The broth may gel when cold – that’s the collagen and it’s a sign of a great broth!
  • Note: Add a small splash of water when reheating if needed.

More Soup Recipes

Common Questions

Does the soup really make enough broth without water?

Yes! The vegetables — especially the Napa cabbage and onions — have a very high water content. As they cook down over low heat, they release that liquid naturally, which becomes the base of your broth. As a result, I recommend adding 2 cups of water as insurance, especially on your first try, since every chicken and cabbage is different.

Can I use chicken pieces instead of a whole chicken?

You can, but a whole chicken (bone in, skin on) gives the richest, most collagen-packed broth. If you’re using pieces, then stick to bone in chicken thighs and drumsticks.

What does the apple do in this recipe?

It adds a subtle sweetness to the broth without making it taste fruity. Honeycrisp is my pick because of its firm texture and balanced flavor, but any sweet variety works.

How do I know when it’s done?

The meat should be falling off the bone and the vegetables should be completely soft and jammy. Total cook time is about 1.5 to 2 hours on low heat.

What type of pot should i use?

Ideally, a heavy-bottomed pot with a tight lid, such as a dutch oven, is ideal to fit all the ingredients and circulate the juices.

Is this the Chinese no-water chicken soup?

This recipe is inspired by the viral Chinese cooking tradition, with a Mediterranean twist – no ginger, no jujube, no Chinese herbs. Just 6 everyday Mediterranean ingredients that let the chicken shine.

5 from 2 reviews

Viral No Water Chicken Soup

A close-up of No Water Chicken Soup with a spoonful of clear brown broth held above it, showing pieces of chicken, chopped carrots, and fresh herbs on top—perfect for a rich, waterless chicken soup recipe.
This no water chicken soup 🥘 lets the vegetables do all the work — slow-cooked cabbage, onions, carrots, and a surprise apple create the richest, most naturally delicious broth.
Makes: 3 servings
Prep Time: 10 minutes
Cook Time: 2 hours
Total Time: 2 hours 10 minutes
Send This to Me!

Video

Ingredients

  • napa cabbage, 3/4 of it
  • 2 yellow onions, sliced
  • 2 carrots, chopped
  • 5 cloves garlic, peeled and whole
  • 1 apple, sliced
  • 1 whole chicken
  • salt + pepper, to taste

Instructions

  • Add the roughly chopped Napa cabbage (¾ of the head), sliced onions, roughly chopped carrots, apple, and garlic cloves to the bottom of a large, heavy-bottomed soup pot.
    A stainless steel pot on a wooden surface contains chopped vegetables, including carrots, onions, napa cabbage, and apple slices—perfect ingredients for a flavorful no water chicken soup recipe, ready to be cooked.
  • Nestle the whole chicken on top of the veggies and apple. Season generously with salt and pepper.
    A whole raw chicken sits atop carrots, onions, and potatoes in a large stainless steel pot—perfect for preparing a flavorful no water chicken soup recipe on a rustic wooden surface.
  • Optional but recommended: Add at least 2 cups of water, and keep an eye on the bottom of the pot – it may start to burn if the veggies don't release enough liquid.
  • Place the lid on and cook on low heat for 1.5 to 2 hours, or until the chicken is completely tender and falling off the bone.
    A whole raw chicken seasoned with pepper sits in a pot over chopped vegetables, covered with a glass lid, on a stovetop—perfect for making No Water Chicken Soup, a waterless chicken soup recipe that captures pure flavor.
  • Note: Keep the heat low and the lid on. If you lift the lid partway through and it looks dry, add a splash more water.
  • Once the chicken is cooked through and the vegetables are soft and jammy, carefully remove the chicken. Shred the meat off the bone and return it to the pot. Taste and adjust seasoning. Serve hot with a side of rice and enjoy.
    A close-up of No Water Chicken Soup with a spoonful of clear brown broth held above it, showing pieces of chicken, chopped carrots, and fresh herbs on top—perfect for a rich, waterless chicken soup recipe.

Nonna’s Notes

  • Water tip: Add at least 2 cups to the bottom — even with this no-water method. It’s just the safer move and I sleep better at night knowing you did 😅. Keep an eye on the bottom of the pot, because it may start to burn if the veggies don’t release enough liquid.
  • Low and slow: This is not a recipe to rush. Low heat for 1.5 to 2 hours is what gives you that deeply flavorful, jammy broth. 
  • Serving: Rice is my go-to but egg noodles or a big hunk of crusty bread are both excellent decisions for soaking up all that broth 🍜.
  • Storage: Cool completely, store airtight in the fridge for up to 4 days, or freeze for up to 3 months.

Nutrition

Nutrition Facts
Viral No Water Chicken Soup
Serving Size
 
1 bowl
Amount per Serving
Calories
679
% Daily Value*
Fat
 
39
g
60
%
Saturated Fat
 
11
g
69
%
Trans Fat
 
0.2
g
Polyunsaturated Fat
 
9
g
Monounsaturated Fat
 
16
g
Cholesterol
 
190
mg
63
%
Sodium
 
237
mg
10
%
Potassium
 
1516
mg
43
%
Carbohydrates
 
30
g
10
%
Fiber
 
8
g
33
%
Sugar
 
16
g
18
%
Protein
 
52
g
104
%
Vitamin A
 
8138
IU
163
%
Vitamin C
 
97
mg
118
%
Calcium
 
302
mg
30
%
Iron
 
4
mg
22
%
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.

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

5 from 2 votes

Leave a comment

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

Leave Your Rating




The maximum upload file size: 5 MB. You can upload: image, video. Links to YouTube, Facebook, Twitter and other services inserted in the comment text will be automatically embedded. Drop files here

2 Comments

  1. 5 stars
    We had this last night served over egg noodles, and it was sooo good. Definitely a recipe we will be coming back to!