I started to feel lousy the day after Thanksgiving (stuffy head, dry throat, tired), and I've been eating a lot of chicken soup (chicken noodle soup, specifically), and I was wondering why we are supposed to eat the stuff when we are sick and why I immediately craved it once I got sick. Does it really have the power to cure you, or is it just an old wive's tale passed down through the decades?
Yahoo! Answers has the, well, answer. Sort of. There is no conclusive proof that chicken soup helps when you're sick, but Dr. Stephen Rennard tested his grandma's recipe and came to the conclusion that the soup inhibits inflammation in the nasal cavity. Drkoop.com and others say it has amino acids that help. Another doc says that it creates mucus that soothes the throat. Mmmmm...think of that the next time you're eating chicken soup. I've also heard that the starch in the noodles helps in some way.
Me? I just think it tastes really good, and really makes me feel good when I'm sick, especially on a chilly, late fall day.

Last week, a tasting panel at the San Francisco Chronicle slurped their way through 15 different canned
chicken noodle soups. Of the top five soups, four were condensed and three of the top five were from Campbell's. Their
standard condensed chicken noodle soup took top honors among the panel of local chefs. Campbell's Homestyle took second
and Safeway, Campbell's Select and Albertson's rounded out the top five in that order. Soups were scored on a 100-point
scale, with the top one receiving 76 points. The lowest scorer, a soup in a pouch from Pacific Natural Foods, received
four points. Wolfgang Puck's offering hovered near the middle of the rankings with 39.








