• Skip to main content
  • Skip to header right navigation
  • Skip to site footer
Umami Cooking

Umami Cooking

Still meaty with a dash of veggies, but better.

  • Recipes
    • Appetizers
    • Salads
    • Soups
    • Main courses
    • Side dishes
    • Sweets
    • Beverages
  • Cooking tips
  • Food Stories
  • Newsletter
  • Recipes
    • Appetizers
    • Salads
    • Soups
    • Main courses
    • Side dishes
    • Sweets
    • Beverages
  • Cooking tips
  • Food Stories
  • Newsletter

Mussel soup with ginger scallion broth

Debearded mussels are dropped in ginger scallion broth and boiled just until the shells open. The heat is turned off, the pot covered and the mussels are left to cook in the residual heat.
Mussel soup with ginger scallion broth
Seafood recipe by Connie Veneracion | Last updated: 11.10.2025
Prep: 15 minutes mins
Cook: 20 minutes mins
Total: 35 minutes mins
Servings: 6 people
Course: Soup
Cuisine: Modern Filipino
Label: Seafood and vegetable soup
Print recipe Subscribe

Connie’s notes

Tinolang tahong and sinabawang tahong are only two of the names by which this simple and rustic Filipino soup is called in some food blogs. We didn’t have a name for it when I was a child. But it was on our dining table often. I still cook it the way my father did. And I still prep mussels as carefully as he did.
You must have heard the term “debearded mussels” or “debeard the mussels” or “debearding mussels” before. It might sound something from another planet because how the heck could mussels have beard, right? Do they even have faces on which beard could grow? Mussels don’t have faces like we do but they do have something that resembles human beard.
What we call “beard” is byssus — filaments that mussels (and a few other molluscs) grow so they can attach themselves to rocks and other solid surfaces. A strand is about the same size of human hair so we can forgive whoever first used the term “beard” to refer to byssus.
Pulling off mussel beard
How the byssus is formed is a fascinating process but the bottomline is that it isn’t edible. You need to tug it out and discard it. How easily it comes off depends on how tightly shut the mussel shell is. Newly harvested mussels will have very tightly shut shells and removing the byssus is difficult. You want the mussels to open their shells a bit for easier removal of the dreaded beard.
I rinse the mussels first, place them in a bowl, cover them with water and sprinkle in a tablespoon or two of rock salt. I cover the bowl loosely and place it in the fridge for an hour or two. I take the mussels out of the fridge and rinse them repeatedly until the water is clear. At that point, the shells are partially open and it is easier to tug off the beard. With the beards discarded and any trapped silt inside the mussel shells removed from the repeated rinsing and shaking, the mussels are ready for the pot.
Note: The prep time indicated below excludes soaking the mussels.

Ingredients

  • 2 tablespoons cooking oil
  • 1 two-inch knob ginger sliced
  • 12 to 15 stalks scallions cut into thirds
  • ¼ cup fish sauce
  • ¼ teaspoon white pepper
  • 1 ½ kilograms fresh mussels (3.3 pounds) cleaned and debearded

Instructions

  • Heat the cooking oil in a pot.
  • Saute the ginger and bottom third of the scallion stalks until aromatic.
    Sauteeing ginger and scallions before adding water to make broth
  • Pour in eight cups of water and the fish sauce. Bring to the boil, lower the heat, cover and simmer for ten minutes.
    Adding fish sauce to broth / Mussels in broth in pot
  • Turn up the heat, drop in the mussels and middle third of the scallion stalks, and bring to the boil.
  • Once the mussel shells open a bit, cover the pot, turn off the heat and leave the mussels to cook in the hot broth for five minutes.
  • Take the top third of the scallions stalks and thinly slice.
  • Taste the broth and add more fish sauce, if needed.
  • Ladle the mussels and broth into bowls, sprinkle in the sliced scallions and serve.
    Mussel soup with ginger scallion broth
Print recipe Subscribe

About Connie Veneracion

Home cook and writer by passion, photographer by necessity, and good food, coffee and wine lover forever. I create, test and publish recipes for family meals, and write cooking tips and food stories. More about me and my umami blogs.

Previous Post:Air fried shrimp lemongrass skewersAir fried shrimp lemongrass skewers
Next Post:3-mushroom miso soup3-mushroom miso soup

More recipes

Cream cheese and roasted tomatoes dip

Cream cheese and roasted tomatoes dip

Eggs en cocotte with Korean ham

Eggs en cocotte with Korean ham

Sichuan-style potato stir fry

Sichuan-style potato stir fry

Gingered fish belly and vegetable soup

Gingered fish belly and vegetable soup

Bok choy and mushroom egg drop soup

Bok choy and mushroom egg drop soup

Honey Balsamic chicken skewers

Honey Balsamic chicken skewers

Cinnamon sugar breakfast muffins

Cinnamon sugar breakfast muffins

Boiled beef shank, marrow and vegetable soup (bulalo)

Boiled beef shank, marrow and vegetable soup (bulalo)

Pork ribs and vegetable soup (nilagang tadyang ng baboy)

Pork ribs and vegetable soup (nilagang tadyang ng baboy)

  • Cook & Author
  • Privacy
  • Copyright
  • No AI
  • Contact

Created by a human for humans · Copyright © 2025 · Connie Veneracion · All Rights Reserved