Jamaican Chicken Soup
Saturday soup — golden, pumpkin-thickened, loaded with ground provisions, corn rounds, flour spinners, and bone-in chicken simmered with allspice, thyme, and whole Scotch bonnet.
Chicken
Vegetables & Ground Provisions
Dumplings (Spinners)
Seasonings & Aromatics
Soup Mix
Liquid
Overview
This is real Jamaican Saturday soup — the hearty, golden, one-pot meal that shows up in cookshops, at kitchen tables, and beside every sickbed on the island. Synthesized from 11 authoritative sources including island-based bloggers, multi-generational diaspora families, and Caribbean cookbook authors. The golden color comes from pumpkin dissolving into the broth, not curry powder. The body comes from bones, ground provisions, and time. Grace Cock Soup Mix is not a shortcut — it’s a deeply embedded part of modern Jamaican cooking that adds savory depth, body, and color.
Steps
1. Wash the chicken
Place chicken pieces in a large bowl. Squeeze lime halves over them and rub thoroughly into all surfaces. Rinse with cool water and drain. This step is universal in Jamaican cooking — it cleans, removes surface residue, and is considered non-negotiable.
2. Build the base
Bring 10 cups of water to a rolling boil in a large, heavy-bottomed pot. Add the chicken pieces, pimento berries, crushed garlic, salt, black pepper, and the small-cut half of the pumpkin. Return to a boil, then reduce to a steady simmer. Skim any foam that rises during the first 10 minutes.
Simmer for 25–30 minutes. The chicken releases flavor into the broth and the small pumpkin cubes dissolve, turning the liquid golden. If the pumpkin hasn’t broken down after 30 minutes, crush the soft pieces against the side of the pot with a fork or potato masher.
3. Add the ground provisions
Add yellow yam, carrots, corn rounds, and the medium-chunk half of the pumpkin. Stir gently. Return to a simmer and cook for 20 minutes, until the yam and carrots are nearly tender but not falling apart.
4. Add soft vegetables, aromatics, and soup mix
Dissolve the Grace Cock Soup Mix in a ladle of hot broth in a small bowl — stir until smooth to prevent clumping. Pour into the pot.
Add cho cho, sweet potato (if using), whole crushed scallion stalks, thyme sprigs, and the whole Scotch bonnet placed on top of the soup near the surface. Simmer for 10 minutes. Stir gently — aggressive stirring can burst the Scotch bonnet.
5. Make and add the dumplings
While the soft vegetables cook, combine flour, cornmeal (if using), and salt in a bowl. Add warm water a little at a time, mixing until a firm, stiff dough forms — it should not be sticky. Knead briefly and let rest 10 minutes.
Pinch off small pieces and roll between your palms in a back-and-forth motion to form tapered cylinders about 3 inches long with slightly pointed ends. These are spinners — they sink and spin as they cook. For variety, flatten some pieces into discs with a thumb dent in the center (cartwheel dumplings).
Drop the dumplings directly into the simmering soup. Simmer for 15–20 minutes until they float and feel firm when pressed.
6. Final check and serve
Remove the Scotch bonnet as soon as it begins to soften — if left too long it can burst and make the soup very spicy. Remove scallion stalks and thyme sprigs. Taste and adjust salt — the soup mix contributes significant sodium, so you may not need more.
The soup should be thick but still brothy — a spoon should move through it, but it should not be thin or watery. If too thick, add hot water a quarter cup at a time. Serve piping hot in deep bowls. Every bowl should have chicken on the bone, corn rounds, dumplings, and a cross-section of the ground provisions.
Notes
- Grace Cock Soup Mix: This is not a shortcut — it is deeply traditional in modern Jamaican cooking. Dissolve separately in hot broth before adding to prevent lumps. If using both cock soup and pumpkin soup mix packets, omit added salt entirely and adjust at the end.
- Pumpkin splitting technique: Half the pumpkin goes in early (small cubes that dissolve for body and color), half goes in later (medium chunks that hold shape). This is the consensus technique across the best sources.
- Do not add curry powder. This is not curry chicken soup.
- Do not add coconut milk. That belongs in red peas soup.
- Do not use boneless chicken. Bones build the broth.
- Corn stays on the cob. Cut into rounds, eaten from the rounds in the bowl.
- Yellow yam caution: Causes skin irritation when handled raw. Wear gloves and soak cut pieces in water immediately.
- Kabocha is the best substitute for Caribbean pumpkin — closest in sweetness, color, and breakdown behavior. Butternut squash works but is more watery (reduce starting water by 1 cup).
- The Scotch bonnet is there for fragrance, not punishment. Whole and uncut gives flavor without overwhelming heat. Make a small slit for more heat.
- Serving: This is a one-pot meal, not a starter. Serve with hard dough bread, water crackers, or buttered bread. A squeeze of fresh lime into the bowl is common.
- Storage: 3–4 days in the fridge (flavors deepen overnight). Freezes up to 3 months — dumplings soften upon thawing, so make fresh when reheating.
- Traditionally served on Saturdays. Also given to the sick, the tired, and anyone who needs restoring.