Houston Chronicle

A chicken soup for all seasons — even this one

- By Bonnie S. Benwick Adapted from “Better Homes and Gardens Quick Homemade: Fast, Fresh Meals in 30 Minutes.” Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2019.

These are the days when food sites thrill to charms of seasonal eating. Tastes like summer! Perfect for picnics! Summer in a bowl! Summer on the grill! I wasn’t expecting a hot brothy pot to figure into this line of tropes, but here it is: chicken soup for summer.

Then again, it should be no surprise. America loves chicken soup. Homemade or storebough­t, it’s always at the top of most-popular lists. It lives up to its hype as comfort food, healing food, healthful food. Recipes can take hours or minutes, and they welcome modificati­on. The stock can be rich and flavored or light and clarified, but plant-based add-ins are the elements that distinguis­h chicken soup’s seasons: kale and roasted garlic in the fall, hearty leeks in winter, carrots and dill in spring.

This one-pot chicken soup relies on the summer calling cards of lemon, tomato and zucchini. Oddly enough, the flavor of chicken takes a back seat. Instead, the bite-size chunks of lean meat lend texture and pair naturally with the light pasta element of slippery orzo. Each bowlful gets topped with a helping of basil pesto, which seals the deal, summerwise.

Slurp it up warm or even at room temperatur­e; it’ll be fine. Leftovers morph into stewy territory, as the orzo tends to absorb the broth after a day’s refrigerat­ion.

Chicken Orzo Soup with Pesto

25 minutes 4 servings

Who’s eating chicken soup, even in hot weather? You are, when it’s nice and light like this one-pot version.

Serve with cornbread.

Make ahead: For best flavor and texture, leftovers can be refrigerat­ed for up to 1 day.

1 pound boneless, skinless chicken

breast halves or thighs

32 ounces low-sodium chicken broth One 14.5-ounce can diced tomatoes, preferably with basil and garlic (may substitute 2 medium tomatoes, hulled, and 1 teaspoon minced garlic or the same size can of no-salt-added diced tomatoes) ¾ cup dried whole-wheat orzo pasta (may substitute regular dried orzo)

1 medium zucchini or yellow squash,

or half of each kind

1 lemon

Kosher salt Freshly ground black pepper

4 to 6 tablespoon­s basil pesto, for serving (store-bought or homemade)

Trim/discard excess fat from the chicken, then cut the meat into bite-size chunks, placing them in a large saucepan as you go.

Add the broth, tomatoes and their juices and the orzo; bring to a boil over medium-high heat, then reduce the heat to mediumlow; cook for 7 or 8 minutes, stirring a few times.

Meanwhile, rinse the zucchini or squash and trim/discard the ends. Cut into ½-inch dice, or coarsely chop, to yield 1 ½ to 2 cups.

Grate 1 teaspoon of zest from the lemon (about half a lemon’s worth) directly into the pot, then cut the fruit in half and squeeze in 1 tablespoon of its juice. Stir in the zucchini and/or yellow squash and cook for 3 to 4 minutes, until tender. The chicken should be cooked through.

Taste, and season lightly with salt and pepper if you are using the basil-and-garlic-flavored tomatoes; season with about 1 ¼ teaspoons salt and a few grinds of pepper if you are using fresh or no-salt-added tomatoes.

Divide among individual bowls; top each portion with the pesto (to taste). Cut the remaining lemon into wedges, for serving.

Nutrition (based on whitemeat chicken, no-salt-added tomatoes and whole-wheat

orzo): Calories:,380; total fat: 13 g (saturated fat: 3 g), cholestero­l: 90 mg, sodium: 590 mg, carbohydra­tes: 32 g, dietary fiber: 7 g, sugars: 6 g, protein: 35 g.

 ?? Stacy Zarin Goldberg / For the Washington Post ?? Chicken Orzo Soup with Pesto makes the most of lemon, tomato and zucchini — the tastes of summer.
Stacy Zarin Goldberg / For the Washington Post Chicken Orzo Soup with Pesto makes the most of lemon, tomato and zucchini — the tastes of summer.

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