Recipe: Easy Green Minestrone (2024)

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Vanessa Barrington

Vanessa Barrington

Vanessa Barrington is a PR and marketing consultant, writer, cookbook author, and cook, based in San Francisco, CA. She wrote for The Kitchn in 2006 & 2007. Her latest cookbook is DIY Delicious: Recipes and Ideas for Simple Food from Scratch.

updated May 3, 2019

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Recipe: Easy Green Minestrone (1)

Serves6 to 8Makesabout 8 cups

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Recipe: Easy Green Minestrone (2)

Sometimes you just want to sit cross-legged on the couch and eat a big bowl of soup. Something simple and comforting. Something good. You need a homemade bowl of soup and you don’t want to go to much fuss to get it. Well, here’s an easy minestrone that can be made almost any time of year, as long as you have a few vegetables in the fridge and some broth to cook them in.

Whatever the season, I like this soup with potatoes and one or two green vegetables. In late summer and fall, it might be swiss chard and green beans. In the winter, I’d sub in some hearty spinach and broccoli — and if you froze or canned any vegetables over the summer (peas! zucchini!), this would be the time to use them.

Whatever I have in the bowl, I love topping it with a fluffy snowfall of Parmesan cheese. A drizzle of pesto or infused olive oil would also turn this soup into something extraordinary.

Tester’s Notes:

A soup that knows no season! Our summer suddenly turned wet and chilly here in the San Francisco area, so this soup seemed like the perfect solution — warm and comforting, but still filled with produce from the farmers market. I took Vanessa’s suggestion of green beans and added some rainbow chard (which you can thank for the slightly rosy color of my broth!). You could just as easily add diced zucchini, fresh fava beans, or anything else in season — just be sure to adjust the cooking times to match the vegetables you use.

This makes a light, but very filling, vegetarian dinner that’s perfect for a summer evening. Once we head into winter, I’m thinking that I might add some crumbled sausage or bacon to make it a bit heartier. I also added a parmesan rind to the broth as it simmered for an extra boost of savory flavor. All this said, I’m hanging on to this recipe for the next time I have vegan friends to dinner — it’s flavorful enough on its own without needing to add any cheese.

Emma, August 2013

Comments

Makes about 8 cups

Serves 6 to 8

Nutritional Info

Ingredients

  • 2 teaspoons

    olive oil

  • 1

    medium yellow onion, diced

  • 3

    whole celery stalks, diced

  • 2 to 3

    cloves garlic, minced

  • 1 teaspoon

    fresh thyme (1/2 teaspoon dry)

  • 1

    bay leaf

  • 6 cups

    vegetable or chicken broth

  • 1 pound

    waxy red potatoes (4 to 5 small potatoes), cut into bite-sized pieces

  • 1/2 pound

    green beans, trimmed and cut into bite-sized pieces

  • 1 pound

    small-shaped pasta, like shells or elbow macaroni

  • 6 ounces

    greens, like spinach, kale, or chard, cut into ribbons

  • 1

    (15-ounce) can white beans, like Great Northern or cannellini, drained and rinsed

  • Salt and pepper to taste

  • Grated Parmesan cheese, optional, to serve

Instructions

  1. In a large soup pot, warm the olive oil over medium heat. Add the onion, celery, and 1/4 teaspoon of salt, and cook until the onion and celery are soft and translucent, 8 to 10 minutes. Stir in the garlic, thyme, and bay leaf, and cook until the garlic is fragrant, about 30 seconds.

  2. Add the chicken broth, potatoes, and 1 teaspoon of salt to the pan. Increase the heat to high and bring the soup to a boil. Lower heat to medium-low and simmer the soup for 5 minutes. Add the green beans and simmer for another 5 to 10 minuets, until both the potatoes and the green beans are tender.

  3. While the soup is simmering, bring a pot of salted water to a boil and cook the pasta to al dente. Drain and set aside.

  4. When the vegetables are tender, stir the greens and the white beans into the soup. Simmer until the greens are wilted and tender, 1 to 3 minutes. Taste and add additional salt and pepper if needed.

  5. To serve, add a scoop of pasta to each bowl and ladle the soup over top. Sprinkle some parmesan cheese and pesto over top, if using. Store pasta and soup leftovers separately; they will keep refrigerated for 1 week.

Recipe Notes

Parmesan Broth: If you're in the habit of freezing parmesan cheese rinds, add one to this soup as it simmers for extra flavor.

Drizzle of Pesto: In the summer, a drizzle of pesto over the top of this soup is a beautiful thing. If you have some in your fridge, I recommend it!

This post and recipe have been updated. Originally published December 2006.

Filed in:

easy

Gluten-Free

Healthy Living

soup

stovetop

vegan

Recipe: Easy Green Minestrone (2024)
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