4 delicious cold-weather soups

Try these substantial soups for long winter nights

A supper of soup says comfort. It’s the edible equivalent of a duvet, a dish you can snuggle up to. Add a salad, hot crusty bread, a hunk of cheese and you have a feast. Use the easy secrets below to making delicious soup every time.

Italy has a pantheon of hearty, slow-cooked soups, of which Minestrone is probably the most well-known. Leftovers are turned into Ribollita (which means ‘reboiled’), a soup served with olive oil drizzled over the top, made thick enough to stand a spoon in, with the addition of chunks of stale bread. Pasta e Fagioli, or pasta and bean soup, is another classic meal in a bowl. Half its cannellini beans are mashed, the rest are left whole, and it’s cooked with pasta tubes, sometimes cubes of potato and slivers of fennel, and served with a trickle of olive oil and grated Parmesan. Try it with fettunta, toasted Italian peasant bread rubbed with a clove of garlic and drizzled with more olive oil.

Stock up
So long as you have good stock – available in supermarkets if you don’t have your own – you can make any soup.

  • Toss into the stock, in order of thickness, rounds of potato, courgettes, and baby carrots, french beans, tinned flageolet beans or broad beans, and shreds of spinach or chopped watercress. When all is cooked, remove from the heat and beat a ladle of the stock into a bowl in which you have whisked a couple of egg yolks with a little double cream. Pour back into the soup and cook over a low heat, without boiling, for a couple of minutes to thicken. Served with a sprinkling of chopped parsley, some hot French bread and cold butter, and it’s a taste of summer all year round.
  • Black beans, tomatoes, onions, chilli and garlic in a vegetable stock, served with a bowl of fresh, chopped raw tomato, onion and coriander salsa and a basket of tortillas is a filling soup with a South American flavour.
  • Cook brown lentils in stock with toasted cumin seeds, onion and garlic, then liquidise and served with a squeeze of lemon juice and warm pita bread.
  • A base of fried onions, bacon, and cubed potatoes with a generous pound of shredded Savoy cabbage added to the stock, makes a rib-sticking soup that is great with dumplings or warm scones.

The Russian peasant soup, borscht, is one of the world’s greats, dominated by beetroot in a beef stock base, its other vegetables varying depending on where the soup is made. Common to all versions are shredded cabbage, potatoes, tomato paste and a characteristic sourness which comes from red wine vinegar and the liquid in which cucumbers are pickled. With a dollop of sour cream on top and pumpernickel bread to dip in, it becomes a substantial filler, like a goulash soup without the meat.

Recipes:

Borscht
Serves 6-8

30g butter
2 raw beetroots, finely chopped
½ white cabbage, finely chopped
2 leeks, finely chopped
3 celery sticks, finely chopped
2 onions, finely chopped
2.5 litres beef or vegetable stock
1 tsp caraway seeds
sprig each thyme, parsley and a bay leaf (tied together as bouquet garni)
pinch of grated nutmeg
2 tbsp red wine vinegar
2 tsp sugar
glass red wine
1 cooked beetroot
150ml sour cream
salt and freshly ground black pepper

1. Melt the butter in a large frying pan and sweat the chopped vegetables in it for about 10 minutes. Add the stock, the caraway seeds and herbs and season to taste with salt, pepper and nutmeg.

2. Simmer gently for 1 hour. Add the vinegar, sugar and red wine and simmer for a further 20 minutes.

3. Grate the cooked beetroot. Add to the soup and heat through. Check the seasoning and remove the bouquet garni.

4. Serve, adding 1 tbsp sour cream to each bowl.

Goulash Soup

Lentil Soup

Kidney Bean and Carrot Soup