Vegetarian Broccoli-Cheddar Soup
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Broccoli-Cheddar soup is something I always want to make but never do. With heaps of cheese, half and half, butter, and sometimes bacon, recipes, at a glance, often more resemble Super Bowl queso than soup.
So when I saw this recipe on Bon Appetit, I was intrigued. For one, it calls for water, as opposed to stock or milk. How nice? Two, it’s thickened by both puréed broccoli stalks and potato, as opposed to a roux. Love it. Three, it’s finished with a small amount of Greek yogurt. Interesting, right?
As I made it, I discovered another plus: It’s a one-pot, prep-as-you-go job: while you sweat the onions and garlic, you chop the broccoli and potato; as you simmer the broccoli and potato; you grate the cheese. It all comes together in about an hour, but it’s a very efficient hour.
It’s relaxed, too, a period of time during which you can both prep and clean in between steps. When the soup is ready to serve, your kitchen will be neat as a pin. You may even find time to toast up some cubes of day-old bread with olive oil and sea salt, something I highly recommend you do.
Can you tell how much I love this recipe? The soup tastes like — wait for it — vegetables! But it’s not so austere: there’s a richness and a heartiness to it thanks to a good amount of Cheddar cheese as well as the puréed potato-broccoli base. It has some nice heat, too, thanks to crushed red pepper flakes and as much freshly cracked black pepper as you wish.
This soup may have you heading back to the pot for thirds and fourths, which may leave you wondering if one bowl of queso might have been better? No chance.
PS: 5 Favorite Soups:
- Carrot-Ginger with Curry and Coconut Milk
- One-Pot Vegan Lentil Soup
- Pantry Tomato Soup
- Slow Cooker Butternut Squash Soup
- Vegetarian Cabbage Soup
PPS: ALL the Soups.
PrintVegetarian Broccoli-Cheddar Soup
- Total Time: 1 hour
- Yield: Serves 6
Description
Recipe by Sarah Jampel of Bon Appetit
As with so many soups, this one tastes better by the day, so don’t be afraid to make it ahead of time.
The original recipe calls for making cheesy toasts, which you cut up and add to the soup, which look and sound delicious. For simplicity, I’ve stuck with my favorite soup topper: cubes of olive oil-toasted, day-old bread. They are irresistible on their own, but especially good in soup. I also find I can keep my children more interested in their soup with a bowl of these croutons on the table.
With that in mind, if you are making this for children, omit the crushed red pepper flakes or cut it back to 1/4 teaspoon.
Ingredients
For the soup:
- 3 tablespoons butter, salted or unsalted is fine
- 2 onions, roughly chopped (to yield about 4 cups)
- 4 garlic cloves, smashed and roughly chopped
- ½ teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes, see notes above
- Kosher salt
- Freshly ground black pepper
- 1½ pounds broccoli (2-3 heads, roughly)
- 1 medium russet potato (9-11 ounces, roughly)
- 6 ounces sharp cheddar cheese, grated to yield about 2 cups
- ½ cup plain Greek yogurt
For the croutons:
- day-old bread
- olive oil
- flaky sea salt, such as Maldon
Instructions
- Melt the butter in a large pot over medium-low heat. Add the onion, garlic, and crushed red pepper flakes (or less or none at all if serving to children). Season with a pinch of salt and pepper. Stir to combine, then cover pot and cook, stirring occasionally, until softened and just starting to take on color, 15 minutes.
- Meanwhile, trim the bottoms of the broccoli stalks. If stalks are thick, peel the outer layer. Using a knife, separate the hefty stalks from the florets (the thin, little stalks attached to broccoli tops are fine to leave intact). Set aside florets. Coarsely chop the stalks.
- Peel the potato, and coarsely chop it.
- Add broccoli stalks and potato to pot and stir to combine. Pour in 5 cups water, add 1 tablespoon kosher salt, and bring to a boil over high heat. Reduce heat to medium-low and keep at a simmer. Cover pot and cook until broccoli stalks and potatoes are completely tender (test with a paring knife), 20 to 25 minutes.
- Meanwhile, chop reserved florets into small pieces. Add half of the florets to pot, cover, and cook until bright green, 3–5 minutes. Purée soup with an immersion blender or, if using a traditional blender: transfer soup in small batches to the blender, let cool for 5 minutes, and purée until smooth, taking care to remove the center lid from the cover, and to use a kitchen towel to cover and allow steam to escape (and avoid explosions) while you blend.
- Return soup to medium heat and add remaining florets. Cover pot and cook until bright green, another 3–5 minutes. Add 2 cups cheddar cheese and stir until smooth. Reduce heat to low.
- Remove soup from heat and stir in ½ cup plain Greek yogurt. Season generously with black pepper; taste for salt.
- To make the croutons: In a large skillet over medium-high heat, heat a hefty splash of olive oil (2 to 3 tablespoons). Add the cubed bread and a good pinch of sea salt. Let cook, undisturbed, for one minute. Check one cube. If it’s beginning to turn golden, give the cubes a stir or flip each one over with tongs or forks. Cook for 3 to 5 minutes or until cubes are evenly golden and beginning to crisp. Pile into a bowl and serve alongside the soup.
- Prep Time: 10 minutes
- Cook Time: 50 minutes
- Category: Soup
- Method: Stovetop
- Cuisine: American
This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure policy.
79 Comments on “Vegetarian Broccoli-Cheddar Soup”
This is delicious. I’m so glad to find a not so heavy recipe for broccoli cheddar soup!
Yay! Hey neighbor 🙂 🙂 🙂 So happy to hear you liked this one. I feel exactly the same way. xo
Another delicious recipe, and so healthy! Thank you, Ali for another fabulous recipe!
So happy to hear this, Diane 🙂 🙂 🙂 I feel like I’ve been living on this for days but I just made another batch tonight, and I’m so excited to have it on hand for lunch all week.
Wow, well I can’t say i’m not shocked to hear this, but I’m sorry this one didn’t work out for you. Question: can you point me to a soup that requires less chopping? I feel like this is so minimalist: there’s no celery to chop, no carrots. And it’s a pretty rough chop … no precise chopping bc it’s puréed in the end. Anyway, my experience as far as mess goes couldn’t be more different, but again, sorry this one didn’t work out.
Hi Alex,
I recently discovered, that adding water and not broth does not take away from flavor in some recipe, and makes the dish so much lighter but still enjoyable ( see broccoli butternut squash soup & borscht)
Thanks
-M
Totally! Water is a miracle ingredient.
Hi Alexandra! This is bubbling on my stove right now! It tastes good and I haven’t added the yogurt yet because my burner runs hot and I don’t want it to boil after I add it. My cheddar wasn’t salty, so I upped the salt a bit (gotta taste as you go, right?) It’s cold outside. Perfect easy Monday Meatless dinner. Thanks!
So happy to hear this, Leslie!! And yes, absolutely: even with the good amount of salt suggested here, I’ve been finishing with sea salt. Totally have to taste as you go.
We love this recipe! It comes together quickly and it is great how it is not as heavy as the standard broccoli cheddar recipes. We made it with the bread bowls from Ali’s book—it was the perfect meal on a cold, rainy night. My little girl loves it so much she is now taking it in her lunch to school in a thermos. We used a bag of pre-cut broccoli and pre-shredded cheddar cheese and it worked out very well. Thanks for the awesome recipe, Ali!
Rose, yay!! So happy to hear this. Give Heather a squeeze for me. She’s the cutest. xo
Great, easy, came together quickly. But a lot for two. What do think about freezing given the cheese? Maybe next time I make, I’ll try freezing half before adding the cheese?
I think it might be fine freezing it with the cheese … will report back once I give thawing and reheating a go. I have a quart in the freezer. Happy to hear you liked this one 🙂
Deeeelish. I have got 3 portions out of this. I have frozen it , fully made, but a bit worried about how it will be once defrosted so yes would be helpful to have that advice in the recipe. Great flavour combinations and v clear recipe to follow.
So happy to hear this! Will give an update once I freeze/thaw this myself. Thanks so much for writing.
I love this recipe!! I wonder if the other Mary would have better success adding the cheese in smaller amounts and whisking it in? I actually used half the amount, only because I was serving it as a first course, and it tasted delicious. I also, did not add the extra florets at the end or the yogurt. That’s a lot of changes, I know, and I think it would be delicious as is, but I just wanted an even lighter version for a first course before a substantial dinner. I used red potatoes because I always do, and they were fine. It’s a delicious soup and a very pretty green
Wow, great to hear half the amount of cheese works! I made one version in which I forgot the yogurt, and it was delicious, too.
i love this recipe…broccoli’s my favorite vegetable also..and it looking are fabulous…i will making it definitely few days later…Thanks for sharing….!
P.S. I made this again with the yogurt, and it is delicious! A great recipe
Great to hear!
I made it with kale, bec that’s what I had. I loved it! My extra sharp cheese was a little too dominant, so I will cut back maybe to half of the cheese if I use that type again. Loved the color!
Oh fun! Love this idea. Will try.
Any idea how the recipe would work in an instant pot?
Hi Susan! I bet it would work great. I might leave out the yogurt and cheese till after you purée it.
To be honest, I had my doubts about a water-based vegetable soup, but Ali has done it again; this is full of complex flavor and, like all soups and stews, tastes even better the second day. Interesting note: Immediately upon making the soup, I tasted a spoonful and thought it was bland, but instead of adding anything (like vegetable broth!), I walked away and came back an hour later to taste. In that short period of time the soup had acquired an incredible amount of flavor. So my personal notes will read: Be patient! Thank you, Ali.
Oh yay! So happy to hear this, Alyson. Isn’t it amazing what TIME will do?? A most unappreciated ingredient, right? Thanks for writing.
This looks so delicious!
🙂 🙂 🙂
I made this soup tonight and it was AWESOME! Sooo good! I can’t believe how good it is with such simple ingredients and water. I can’t wait to have it again for lunch tomorrow. Thank you so much for sharing this with us! 😊
So happy to hear this, Amanda!
So simple to make. So delicious. So comforting! Making it again tonight. Thinking of adding crab to it for a protein.
Ohhh I love that idea. So happy to hear this, Kathy!
I would give this a sixth star if I could. Made this last night and my husband and I loved it, soooooooooooooooo superior to Costco/Kirkland and even Panera’s. With my third(!) (coffee-cup size) bowl this morning, I put a plop of homemade tzatziki in it after I tried some of the yogurt in the second. Delish! And who knew that it could be so creamy with water and no cream? I think what I really like is just the hint of heat that lingers at the back of my throat, I think that’s what made me keep going back for more today.
Plus I had a handful of sad looking baby carrots in the reefer that I whirred up in the food processor and tossed in with the potato and first batch of florets, added just a touch of sweetness (or so I imagine). For sure I’ll be making this again, thank you, thank you!
Yay!! Candace, so happy to hear all of this! Love that you found purpose for the sad carrots, too … I think this soup/recipe could be a good format for clearing out the vegetable bin 😍😍😍😍
Made this today! very good. I had to tweek it b/c i didn’t have a lot of broccoli/i wanted to use up the sad head that i did have. I’m here to tell you it’s absolutely flexible! i threw in some frozen lima beans and then some peas for color b/c i forgot to hold back the florets! Baking the seedy sandwich bread, too!
So happy to hear this, Mari! Love that this recipe can be used as a sort of “puréed vegetable soup” model. Yay for seedy sandwich bread!
Love this broccoli soup! It tastes delicious! I was also thrilled that this recipe utilizes the stalks, by pureeing them – no broccoli wasted! With the florets on top, with those croutons, its also beautiful and lots of eye appeal! The croutons really help make the soup, and I’ve used them on other soups this week (I am on yet another soup binge) like my cream of asparagus. I was glad that the croutons “keep” so well, too and did not need recrisping. This will be my main stay broccoli soup – it may be called “lighter,” but it tastes rich and delicious to me!!!
So happy to hear all of this Nancy! I couldn’t agree more about the broccoli stalks, and also about it tasting rich and delicious. It’s so satisfying to me. Hope you are well!
I just made this – and it is the best! I made your kalamata-rosemary bread from Bread Toast Crumbs the other day, so I made croutons from that and the olive-rosemary taste just really works with this soup. I find soups that use creams and milks not pleasant, so having this very easy recipe – using all stuff I usually have on hand anyway – is a very happy quarantine find! The kalamata-rosemary croutons were a bonus! Thanks
So nice to hear this Janet!! And yay for having leftover olive bread on hand to make croutons … that sounds amazing! And I’m with you re very creamy soups — sometimes they are too rich to be pleasant. So glad you liked this one. I love this one, too 😍😍😍😍
Amazing soup! Thank you for the great recipe. It was a real hit. Is this a good soup for freezing?
Yes, perfect for freezing!
Folks, this is the best broccoli soup you will ever come across. Make it once and I promise you will have it on constant repeat. I dearly love this soup and have several quarts in the freezer. It does all things good for broccoli soup.
Oh yay! So nice to hear this, Winnie. Thanks so much for writing.
Ali, thanks SO much for sharing this winning recipe! It was easy to make and unbelievably flavorful. It tastes luxuriously rich—no one could believe it didn’t contain heavy cream. My family adored it. I served it with your homemade peasant loaf—a perfect pairing! I’ll be making this one again and again. Comforting, nourishing, and delicious. 🙂
Oh Diane, yay! So nice to hear this. I don’t think there is a better combo than soup and bread this time of year. Thanks so much for writing 🙂 🙂 🙂
This is my first recipe that I tried from Ali’s Kitchen … and it was AMAZING. I was surprised with how much flavor it had despite no butter, no stock, no cream. But I realized, that’s WHY it was so delicious! The vegetables came through, unencumbered by layers of other things … just broccoli, potato, onion and cheese flavors, with the hint of tangy from the final addition of yogurt. And those addictive croutons! UGH … I ate the whole batch … without the rest of the soup …
This dish was even better the next day. Often people say that and it isn’t really true. Here it is.
If all of Ali’s dishes are this simple, clean and flavorful, I will be a fan. Next, I’m trying the lentil soup. YUM.
Oh Lauren, yay! So nice to hear all of this. I couldn’t agree more: the absence of those richer ingredients really allows the flavor of the vegetables to shine here.
Thank you for your kind words. Hope you love the lentil soup, too 🙂 🙂 🙂
Hello Ali, I hope you’ve recovered from Thanksgiving, however scaled-back it may have been. I just wanted to say that I’ve made this soup twice — without the broccoli! My fruit-n-veg man has had the most beautiful cauliflower with fabulous, crispy outside leaves that I couldn’t bear to toss. So I used them instead of the broccoli for this amazing soup. Works like a charm! Just thought I’d share that. One of these days, I will get around to making it with the “real” ingredients!
And your sourdough foccacia makes the greatest croutons/cheese toast to go with. Thanks so much for all your lovely work. Stay healthy.
Carole! I am 100% going to make this Lighter, Better Cauliflower Cheddar Soup ASAP!! Thank you for the idea. Why have I never thought to do this??
Absolutely delicious. I’ve made it twice. This time I was out of yogurt and it’s snowing and I’m lazy and well, Covid, so I used goat cheese with the cheddar cheese. A little twang and a whole lot of yum!
Wonderful to hear, Betzy! Sometimes our laziness leads to delicious revelations. Thanks for writing!
I love this recipe. It took me a good bit longer, 1 1/2 hrs. But well worth it.
I’m wondering if I can use this recipe to make my other favorite “cream” soup – mushroom. Just leave out the cheese. What do you think, Alexandra.
Carole, I think you absolutely can! Someone else commented that she uses the method with cauliflower in place of broccoli, so I think it’s probably very adaptable to other vegetables.
This was fantastic! I must admit that I’ve never made a recipe of yours that I haven’t loved. You’re a wonderful cook with down-to-earth recipes that I’m always impressed by and thankful for.
Aww, Julianne, it’s so nice to hear this 🙂 🙂 🙂 Thank you so much. Means a lot. So glad you loved the soup, too!
This is the BEST Broccoli and Cheese soup that I have ever made! It was a hit with my family and I looked forward to the leftovers the next day. Only change: I used homemade broth (instead of water) because it’s one of my favorite things in the world. Thank you!
So wonderful to hear this, Shirley! This is one of my faves as well 🙂 Homemade broth sounds lovely!