I hit a wall last week, figuratively speaking. I’ve been so utterly consumed with projects on my to-do list that I’ve neglected the basic necessities. You know, important stuff like sleep, food and time with friends. A person can only neglect that stuff for so long before she breaks down and calls her mama and cries. And by “a person,” I mean me.
In hindsight, I’ve been trying to do way too much at once and I’ve been trying to do it all myself. Examples: applying for a trademark, installing my new light fixture, hemming and hanging curtains, redesigning this website, taking my dog to the vet three times a week, obsessively baking brownies, like, six times until they are just right, and, well, SEND HELP.
If there’s ever a time to hunker down and work on some projects, though, it’s during the depths of winter. Now that the weather is warming up and my to-do list has fewer ambitious projects on it, I’m ready to take it easy. For starters, I’m forcing myself to go to bed at a reasonable hour.
I also invited my friends over for girls’ night last night. I made them this redeeming and restorative green soup, which our friend Tessa had made for us at a girls’ night past. The recipe came highly recommended from her coworker. I liked it so much that I thought I’d share it with you all.
I’m well aware that this soup is mossy green and won’t win any beauty pageants. However, I’m gonna do my best to sell you on this soup because it’s truly delicious. Slow cooked, sweet caramelized onions contribute tons of flavor and balance out any bitterness present in the greens. A small amount of starchy arborio rice blended into the greens helps thicken up the soup and makes it a little creamy (without any cream). Finally, cayenne pepper and lemon really punch up the flavor.
If you’ve ever experienced kale belly, which is what I like to call that glowy, life-is-good feeling that emanates from your belly after you eat a bunch of kale salad—this soup does the trick, too. Maybe it’s all the vitamin C.
There are a couple of ways to serve this soup. As a simple bisque, this soup would be a great side for a sandwich or avocado on toast (serving it with a salad might be a little redundant on the greens). If you want to turn it into a full meal, I suggest serving the soup on a bed of brown rice (I like basmati) with chickpeas. My friends and I really liked the chickpea addition, which adds both texture and protein.
You can also swirl a little olive oil on top to add some richness and up the satiety factor. Definitely sprinkle it with freshly ground black pepper and a squeeze of lemon juice. This soup is just crazy good and crazy good for you.
PrintRedeeming Green Soup with Lemon and Cayenne
- Author:
- Prep Time: 15 mins
- Cook Time: 45 mins
- Total Time: 1 hour
- Yield: 6 1x
- Category: Soup
A super fresh and healthy soup filled with greens and seasoned with lemon juice and cayenne pepper. This recipe is vegan and gluten free. The soup requires some multitasking; you’ll be caramelizing the onions in a skillet while you cook the rice and greens in a pot. If you’re cooking additional rice as a garnish, you’ll need one more pot on the stove (see notes for rice cooking instructions). Recipe yields 6 servings of about 1 ⅔ cup soup each.
Ingredients
- 2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil, plus more for garnish
- 2 large yellow onions, chopped
- 1 teaspoon salt, divided
- 2 tablespoons plus 3 cups water, divided
- ¼ cup arborio rice, rinsed (I used brown arborio rice)
- 1 large bunch kale or green chard, preferably organic (about 1 pound)
- 14 cups gently packed spinach or baby cooking greens, like chard, preferably organic (about 12 ounces)*
- 4 cups vegetable broth
- Big pinch of cayenne pepper, to taste (I used over ¼ teaspoon)
- 1 tablespoon lemon juice, or more to taste
- Serve with (optional): cooked brown basmati rice and cooked chickpeas
Instructions
- First prepare the greens: Remove the ribs from the chard/kale and discard or save them for another recipe. Coarsely chop or tear the kale leaves. Trim any tough stems from the spinach/baby greens and roughly chop the leaves.
- Caramelize the onions: Heat 2 tablespoons oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add onions and ¼ teaspoon salt. Cook, stirring frequently, until the onions begin to brown, about 5 minutes.
- Reduce the heat to low, add 2 tablespoons water and cover the skillet (I used a baking sheet to cover mine). Cook until the onions are greatly reduced and have a deep caramel color, 25 to 30 minutes. Stir frequently while the pan is still hot and occasionally once the pan has cooled down (always recover the pan after stirring).
- Cook the arborio rice: While the onions are cooking, combine the remaining 3 cups water and ¾ teaspoon salt in a soup pot or Dutch oven. Add rice and bring the water to a boil. Reduce heat to maintain a simmer, cover and cook for 15 minutes.
- When the rice has cooked for 15 minutes, stir in the chard greens or kale. Return to a simmer; cover and cook for 10 minutes.
- When the onions are caramelized, stir a little of the simmering liquid into them. Then add the onion mixture to the rice along with the spinach, vegetable broth and cayenne. Return to a simmer, cover and cook, stirring once, until the spinach is tender but still bright green, about 5 minutes more.
- Puree the soup in the pot with an immersion blender until perfectly smooth, or in a regular blender in batches (never fill your blender past the maximum fill line, and be careful with hot soup). Stir in 1 tablespoon lemon juice. Taste and add more lemon juice, sea salt or cayenne pepper, if desired. Garnish each bowl of soup with a drizzle of olive oil.
- Divide the soup into bowls if you’re serving it as a bisque, or serve in bowls over cooked rice and chickpeas for a more complete meal. Garnish soup with a swirl of olive oil if you’d like. Serve with lemon wedges and freshly ground black pepper on the side.
Notes
Recipe adapted, not a whole lot, from Eating Well.
*Greens note: I used store-bought, washed baby greens for ease of preparation (more specifically, three-fourths of a giant container of OrganicGirl’s Super Greens). Organic greens are always best because conventionally grown greens tend to absorb a lot of the pesticide used on their crops.
How to cook brown rice to serve with soup: Bring a large pot of water to boil on the stove. Rinse the rice (1 ½ to 2 cups should be plenty to go with the soup) in a fine mesh colander. Once the water is boiling, pour in the rice and give it a stir. Boil the rice for 30 minutes, then turn off the heat and drain the rice. Return the rice to the pot and cover the pot. Let the rice steam for 10 minutes. Remove the lid, fluff the rice with a fork and season with sea salt to taste.
▸ Nutrition Information
Lindsey
Kate, I have made about 12 of your recipes and they are all amazing!!! I picked up a bunch of greens at a farm today, and then I got a CSA farm box delivered… (my fridge is like a rainforest right now) so I needed a green plan, and of course searched your blog for Green Soup! Super excited because I know this will be delicious.
Question: I don’t have aborio rice – can I use white basmati or wild rice?
Kate
I’m so happy to hear that, Lindsey! Basmati may work.
Elena
I can’t wait to make this tonight! But I think I’m missing something — I can’t see in the instructions where the 4 cups of vegetable broth get added?
Thanks!
Elena
Never mind, I found it hidden in there!
Thanks again. Your recipes are pretty much all I cook :)
Tali
Kate, do I use white aborio rice if I can’t get brown?
Kate
Sure, you will just need to reduce cooking time as indicated on the package.
Mary Jane
I tried this soup because I need to get more veggies in my diet and the “energy” in the title caught my eye….I’ve tried a few other soups here and all were good so figured I’d give it a try. Chopping up the kale and removing the stems and ribs was painstaking. I kept asking myself why I was doing this is, it was going to be gross anyway. But I persevered. Then the kale went in to steam, what a smell (stink)….just keep going, they say it’s good. Finally it was done and I tasted it. Wow! It really is a great soup and better the next day. I added a spoon of sour cream to it instead of the olive oil and that added another dimension to this.
Thank you for your down to earth recipes! I have the ingredients in my kitchen, I don’t have to get out and buy a whole lot of strange ingredients and they all taste great. Amazing job Kate! Thank you!
★★★★★
Kate
I’m glad you made it and loved it, Mary! Thanks for your detailed comment and review.
Leanda
The best ogre soup ever, as my sons’ once said. It’s delicious. Thank you for sharing your recipes, I love them Kate!
★★★★★
Jeanne Greco
Please clarify the 14 cups of greens. Is that correct? I’d love to try the soup this week as I have an abundance of greens. I am not using store-bought but have two large bags of greens plus a bunch of beet greens from a CSA, so I don’t have a weight in oz. Thank you!
Kate
Hi Jeanne! 14 cups of cooking greens, or roughly 12 oz. This soup has lots of greens! :)
Melanie
Hello Kate!
Thank you for not only being a life saver with these delicious, easily prepared, healthy varieties one pot meals, but also for being a time manager in our large family of six.
I am attempting to make this recipe today for my family. Please clarify for me (always recover the pan after stirring). I am looking forward to making this for my family.
Sarah
Hi Melanie! I am just making this recipe, and I bet that means “re-cover” – ie, Make sure to put the lid back on after you stir, while caramelizing.
★★★★★
DB
I wanted to love this soup but felt the flavor was lacking and the time and amount of dishes it made wasn’t really worth the end result. Without rice and chickpeas this is a very thin soup.
★★
Kate
Sorry to hear you didn’t love this one!
Stephanie
Can this recipe be made in the instant pot? Any recommendations for how to make it in the instant pot?
Kate
Hi Stephanie! I haven’t tried making this in the instant pot, sorry.
Catherine
Honestly love this soup, thought originally it might taste too healthy, but super tasty and super easy to make. Just made it for the second time, going to be a go to for me!
★★★★★
Kate
Thanks for sharing, Catherine!
Penny Jorgenson
I have a bunch of collard greens, and I wonder if anyone tried this soup with collards instead of kale.
Katie J
I love this soup! My grocery store didn’t have arborio rice so I subbed pearled barley and it was fantastic. Love it with chickpeas, rice and olive oil drizzled on, and I squeezed a little lemon on top as well. I can’t get enough. I have never been disappointed in a Cookie & Kate recipe!
★★★★★
Juliana S
so yummy and guilt free!
★★★★★
tone n gabs
Ahhhhhhh this soup is amazing!!! probably going to have this multiple times a week its so yummy n good for you mmm. we love your stuff so much!! you da best Kate
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you!
Meg Fletcher
Omigosh! I made this for dinner, adding Jasmine rice & chickpeas – my husband, teenaged son, & I all absolutely loved it!! Thank you so much. We’ll make this again.
★★★★★
Kate
A hit with everyone, that’s great! Thank you for sharing, Meg.
Laura
To clarify, did you use the organic girl super greens in addition to ribbed kale?
Kate
Hey Laura! Yes, that’s correct. Hope you love the soup.
Charlotte
Tasted like grass and was kind of expensive
★
Meghan
Delicious, my husband and I both loved it!
★★★★★
Melissa Burr
This soup is so delicious, I have made it twice already in a month. We have so many fresh greens and this is a great way to use them. This time I used a medium sized potato to thicken it instead of rice and it was equally tasty. Thanks for sharing the recipe.
★★★★★
Melissa Wynne
I looked up green soup recipes as part of new low-histamine diet, and stumbled upon this recipe! I made it today and was impressed at how many greens are packed in, and how delicious it is! I used 9 cups chard, 4 cups stinging nettles, and a bunch of kale. I also didn’t have cayenne but subbed in a similar ground pepper powder. Thanks for the great recipe :)
★★★★★
Kate
You’re welcome! Happy you loved it, Melissa.
Lisa Sherrard
Kate, I have made this soup with 2 yellow onions, carmelized in olive oil, 1 bunch kale, about 14 oz spinach, 2 bunches of greens such as collard, turnip or mustard, tough stems removed, cooked in broth, any kind, teasooon or two lemon juice and a pinch cayenne pepper. Purée in blender. (Rice not needed). Simply delicious.
Camisha
This was delish! I’m a big fan of greens, eat them everyday, but I only had 2 go-to recipes that I really liked. This recipe completes my top 3 for sure! I used all baby greens: kale, chard, arugula, and spinach. Which cut down the prep a lot and cut the cooking time a bit. I used sushi rice, which is very similar to arborio, and the end result was soooo delightful! I can’t wait to enjoy this all week for lunch! And it truly makes the belly happy! I didn’t want anything else after! Fully satisfied and nourished :) Thank you Kate!
★★★★★
Susan
Looking for a quick pureed soup for a beautiful bunch of swiss chard to star in I came across this gem of a recipe. Thank you for the post! I made the bisque style, leaving out the rice and chick peas, and ended it up thickening it with a scoop of herb and garlic mashed potatoes I had on hand. I chose chipotle tabasco over cayenne pepper, and didn’t skimp on the lemon at the end. So delicious!
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you for sharing how you made this one work for you, Susan! I appreciate it.
Amy
I was slightly skeptical that this large pile of greens would be as delicious as advertised but it didn’t disappoint! Even my kids – ages 5, 3 & 3 – gobbled up their green “superhero” soup. Yum & Thanks!
★★★★★
Anna Desousa
I am very pleasantly surprised. When I read the recipe, and as I was making it, I thought it would have a grassy or even sulfury taste, but it’s completely delicious. It reminds me of my grandmother’s broccoli cheddar soup that I ate growing up, except this is a pure bowl of health.
★★★★★
Lizzie
I am so excited to make this! How long do you think it would last in the fridge? I am hoping to eat it for lunch some this week!
Kate
Hi! It should last 3-4 days. Always be sure to check for spoilage. I hope you love it!
Carolyn
Absolutely fantastic! I used baby spinach, Swiss chard and long grain brown rice because I didn’t have Arborio and the soup puréed beautifully. The green color was very pretty. I baked chickpeas tossed with olive oil, cumin and garlic powder in my toaster oven so they’d be crisp, then served this soup with leftover cooked brown rice from earlier in the week and the crisp chickpeas. Delicious! Though my son took one look in the pot and decided to head out for a burger…that’s his loss!
★★★★★
Sharon King
I’m so happy to find this! I have a bunch of greens I need to use up. This will be perfect on a cold day. Tastes lovely and feels so healthy.
★★★★★
Kate
I’m delighted you loved it, Sharon!
Barbara a Dodge
Delicious!! I made it and floated lemon slices on top. I was wondering if you could substitute jalapeno or some other kind of heat as I was out of cayenne…Also, I am saving this recipe to make again.
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you! I haven’t tried it, but I would be interested to hear what you think!
Julie Mayo
Does this soup freeze well?
Kate
Hi! I don’t freeze all my soups, but I believe others haven’t minded the results.
Brieanna
The soup was tasty, but the way it made me feel was fantastic. There’s nothing quite like that glowy, kale feeling. This will be a new winter lunch regular for me.
★★★★★