Anyone claiming to have a piece of electronic equipment without any noise is telling you a lie. Even the universe itself has a background hiss that you can hear with the right detectors.
Any chain of electronic gear (in this case microphone, pre amp, A to D converter) is going to leave you with the sum of the noise in each item.
What this means is that you're not trying to eliminate noise, just keep the ratio of your voice to the background noise at a point where the noise isn't audible in any normal listening condition. There's noise in every recording I've ever done--but, with care, it's at a level where you have to zoom in on the waveform in you DAW to find it. In my home studio it typically sits at around -85dB.
How do you achieve an acceptable signal to noise? There are a bunch of things.
First, almost any condenser mic will have a superior noise figure to any dynamic mic.
Second, be careful in your choice of pre amp. The process of adding gain (the function of a pre amp) also adds noise. A good pre amp adds less than a poor one. Use your decent pre amp with a condenser mic (which'll have a higher output) and it's quieter again.
Third (really following on from the second item) if you have any other bits of gear in the chain (mixers, outboard effects) be careful of your gain staging. You want a nice even flow of gain through the system rather than turning it up too loud in one place, then reducing it at the next stage, then up again. Keep it even.
Fourth, watch your monitoring. Monitoring involves an amp again. It doesn't affect your actual recording but, turned up to high, can fool you into thinking you have more hiss than you really do.
Now, be aware that for all this I'm talking about ELECTRONIC noise (hiss). Room noise is something else again and the causes and cures are very different. For music, you want a nice sounding room. For spoken word you want a dead sounding room. A folding frame (PCC pipe works well) with a layer or two of duvets or moving blankets placed behind you helps hugely. Another layer of soft stuff on the wall opposite you (the one you're facing) pretty much finishes the job. Keep both softies a few feet away from you--you don't want to be in a closed box because it sounds, well, boxy.
Frankly, the quality of modern gear is such that, in terms of electronic noise, any microphone/interface combination above
the absolute bottom feeders should give you an S/N ratio somewhere between 80 and 90 dB. As for room noise, that's up to your skill with duvets.