Taiwanese Corn Soup Recipe: School-Lunch Style, Light and Silky

A light Taiwanese corn soup made with canned corn, potato, carrot, onion and egg ribbons. It is smooth without butter, easy to cook in Japan, and comforting as a simple dinner soup.

A bowl of Taiwanese corn soup should feel warm before it feels fancy. This is the kind of soup that reminds me of school lunch: sweet corn, soft potato cubes, tiny carrot pieces, silky egg ribbons, and a clear but gently thickened broth.

It is also a good Japan-life soup when you want to clear the fridge. If you have a potato, a piece of carrot, half an onion, a can of corn and eggs, you can make a pot that works beside rice, a simple stir-fry, or a child-friendly dinner.

This version does not use butter or heavy cream. The smoothness comes from potato starch slurry and egg ribbons, so the soup stays light, familiar and easy to reheat.

What makes this Taiwanese corn soup feel familiar

The ingredients are ordinary, which is exactly why this soup is useful. Potato, carrot and onion often stay in the fridge after curry night, and canned corn is easy to find in Japanese supermarkets. Cut everything small and the soup starts to feel like the corn soup served with Taiwanese lunch trays.

Keep the corn kernels whole. They give little sweet bites in the bowl. If the canned corn liquid tastes clean, I like adding it too because it brings a soft corn sweetness without needing extra sugar.

The soup should be smooth, but not heavy. Potato starch gives the broth a gentle body, and the egg ribbons make the bowl feel complete. You still taste the vegetables instead of only a thick cream base.

The key to a smooth but light soup

The most important order is: simmer the vegetables first, thicken the soup second, then add the egg at the end. If the potato starch slurry goes into boiling soup too quickly, it can clump. If the egg goes in before the soup has body, the ribbons can turn rough and scattered.

Turn off the heat before adding the starch slurry. Pour it in slowly while stirring, then bring the soup back to low heat. Once the soup looks silky, drizzle in the beaten egg in a thin stream and stir gently.

Cook the potato until tender, not broken. When the potato holds its shape, the soup stays clean and light. If the potato falls apart, the broth can become sandy and dull.

Ingredient notes

Canned corn is the main sweetness. If you want a stronger corn flavor, lightly crush a small portion of the kernels before adding them, then keep the rest whole for texture.

Potato, carrot and onion are the fridge-clearing base. Dice them small so every spoonful gets a little color and sweetness. Onion should melt into the broth rather than stand out sharply.

A chicken bouillon cube makes the soup base quick and stable, but different brands have different salt levels. Always taste before adding salt at the end.

Potato starch is the thickener. In Japan you can use katakuriko (片栗粉). Mix it with cold water first; never sprinkle dry starch directly into hot soup.

Calories and serving size

This recipe makes about 4 servings. With canned corn, potato, carrot, onion, eggs, a bouillon cube and potato starch, the whole pot is roughly 530 kcal, or about 133 kcal per serving.

Treat this as a home-cooking estimate. The number changes with the corn brand, egg size, potato weight, whether you add the canning liquid, and how much starch you use.

Recipe card: Taiwanese school-lunch style corn soup

The recipe card below keeps the method simple: cook the vegetables until sweet, thicken gently, then finish with egg ribbons.

A bowl of golden Taiwanese corn soup with corn kernels, egg ribbons, potato and vegetables on a wooden table.

Taiwanese School-Lunch Style Corn Soup

Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
Total Time 30 minutes
Servings: 4 servings
Course: Soup
Cuisine: Taiwanese
Calories: 133

Ingredients
  

Ingredients
  • 1 can canned corn kernels add the canning liquid too if it tastes clean and sweet
  • 1 potato cut into small cubes
  • 1/2 onion finely diced
  • 1/3 carrot cut into small cubes
  • 1 to 2 eggs beaten
  • 1 cube chicken bouillon cube adjust salt at the end because brands vary
  • 800 ml water adjust slightly for your preferred soup thickness
  • 1.5 to 2 tbsp potato starch for thickening
  • 3 to 4 tbsp cold water to make the starch slurry
  • to taste salt taste before adding
  • to taste black pepper add near the end for aroma

Method
 

Method
  1. Dice the onion, carrot and potato into small pieces, and beat the eggs. Keep the potato cubes small, but do not cook them until they fall apart; the soup should stay light and clean.
  2. Add water, onion, carrot and the chicken bouillon cube to a pot. Simmer over medium heat until the bouillon dissolves and the onion turns translucent.
  3. Add the potato cubes and simmer until a chopstick can go through them easily while the pieces still hold their shape.
  4. Add the canned corn kernels. If the canning liquid tastes clean and sweet, add it too for extra corn flavor. Simmer for 3 to 5 minutes.
  5. Turn off the heat. Mix the potato starch with cold water, then pour the slurry in slowly while stirring. Turn the heat back to low and warm until the soup turns silky.
  6. Slowly drizzle in the beaten eggs after the soup has thickened, stirring gently so the egg ribbons spread through the soup. Season with salt and black pepper at the end.

Notes

  • Always mix potato starch with cold water first. Add the slurry slowly while stirring so it does not clump.
  • Chicken bouillon cubes are already salty, so taste the soup before adding extra salt.
  • If the soup becomes too thick, loosen it with a little hot water. If it is too thin, add more starch slurry in small amounts.
  • Cook the potato only until tender. If it breaks down completely, the soup becomes sandy instead of light and silky.
  • Estimated calories: about 530 kcal for the whole pot, or about 133 kcal per serving when divided into 4 servings. The number changes with the corn brand, egg size and starch amount.

Success tips

Dice the onion small so the sweetness blends into the soup

Small onion pieces soften quickly and disappear into the broth. This keeps the soup gentle and sweet without making onion the main flavor.

Cook the potato until tender, but keep its shape

The potato should be easy to pierce with a chopstick or fork. Stop there. If it breaks down completely, the soup becomes grainy instead of silky.

Add the starch slurry off the heat

This small step prevents clumps. Stir slowly, add the slurry gradually, then warm the soup again until it turns smooth.

Add the egg ribbons after thickening

The egg looks softer when the soup already has some body. Drizzle it in slowly, stir gently, and season at the end with salt and black pepper.

FAQ

Related reading: This soup uses potato starch for its silky body. If you are replacing Taiwanese starches in Japan, see how to substitute Taiwanese flours and starches in Japanese supermarkets.

Do I need to blend Taiwanese corn soup into a puree?

No. This version keeps the corn kernels, potato, carrot and onion in small pieces, then uses potato starch slurry and egg ribbons for a smooth body. It feels closer to the corn soup many people remember from Taiwanese school lunches.

Can I make this corn soup with canned corn?

Yes. Canned corn is actually very convenient for this soup because it is sweet and cooks quickly. If the liquid in the can tastes clean, add it to the pot for a little more corn aroma.

How do I keep the starch from clumping?

Mix the potato starch with cold water first. Turn off the heat, pour the slurry in slowly while stirring, then return the soup to low heat until it becomes silky.

Will this corn soup taste heavy?

No. It is thickened with potato starch and egg ribbons instead of butter or cream. The potato should stay in small tender cubes, so the soup stays warm, smooth and light.

What should I do if the soup is too thin?

Make a little more potato starch slurry with cold water, then add it in small amounts while stirring. Stop when the soup is silky; it does not need to become paste-like.

Can I cook this corn soup ahead and reheat it?

Yes. Refrigerate it for 1 to 2 days. Reheat gently over low heat while stirring, and add a splash of water if it thickens too much. Avoid boiling for too long after the egg ribbons are in the soup.

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