Cabbage Soup

$7.89 recipe / $0.99 serving
by Beth Moncel
4.85 from 120 votes
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I was first introduced to this Cabbage Soup recipe through the notorious cabbage soup diet. While I’m not a fan of that type of diet, I am a huge fan of this homemade Cabbage Soup recipe itself. Why? For one simple reason—it’s absolutely DELICIOUSYeah, I was surprised too. The first time I had the famed diet cabbage soup I was pleasantly surprised by how extremely flavorful and comforting the soup was. I actually ended up eating it over and over again just because I wanted to, not because I was trying to stick to the diet. And ever since, this recipe for cabbage soup has been one of my winter comfort food staples. 😅

Overhead view of a pot of cabbage soup with a ladle

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Cabbage Soup Ingredients

The classic “cabbage soup diet” recipe has taken many forms over the years, but they all have one thing in common—they’re stuffed full of non-starchy vegetables swimming in a flavorful herb-filled broth. Here’s what you’ll need to make the BEST cabbage soup recipe you’ve ever had:

  • Onion, Garlic, Celery, and Carrot: These four ingredients create the base for most of my soup recipes. It’s a basic mirepoix plus garlic, which gives the soup a deep flavor base.
  • Cabbage: The start of the show! Cabbage makes this soup extra hearty, gives it volume, body, fiber and other nutrients, and all for pennies.
  • Green Vegetables: I also add green bell pepper, green beans, and parsley to the soup to round out the medley of flavors and colors. You’re definitely getting your daily dose of veggies with this soup!
  • Tomatoes: A combination of diced tomatoes and tomato sauce gives the soup a beautiful red color and even more texture to tempt your eyes.
  • Vegetable Broth: Using a pre-made broth to fill out the soup ensures that every last drop is packed with flavor.
  • Herbs and Spices: There’s already a lot of flavor going on in this soup but the addition of smoked paprika, oregano, thyme, and pepper really keeps the flavor exciting.
  • Lemon Juice: this is the secret ingredient! A little bit of lemon juice at the end gives the soup a shot of brightness and keeps the flavors from being too heavy. Don’t skip this one!

Flavorful Variations

Soup recipes in general are very flexible, so there are so many options when it comes to making this cabbage soup your own. Here are some other great cabbage soup variations:

  • Add beans (cannellini, chickpeas, kidney beans)
  • Add meat: Ground beef (or check out my Beef and Cabbage Soup), Italian sausage, or shredded chicken
  • Add cubed tofu (extra firm)
  • Add potatoes to help bulk it up without adding a lot of cost
  • Make it spicy: Add hot sauce or crushed red pepper to give the soup a kick!

How to Store Leftover Cabbage Soup

This cabbage soup recipe does make a really large batch, so it’s a good idea to freeze about half of it, just in case you can’t eat all of it within about five days. To freeze this soup, divide it into single-serving portions, chill it completely in the refrigerator first, then transfer to the freezer for longer storage. Keep in the freezer for up to three months.

a bowl of cabbage soup with a spoon and garlic bread on the side

Shown with Homemade Garlic Bread.

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Cabbage Soup

4.85 from 120 votes
This delicious Cabbage Soup recipe is super healthy, chock-full of flavorful vegetables, and perfect for cold fall and winter days.
Author: Beth Moncel
a bowl of cabbage soup with a spoon and garlic bread on the side
Servings 6 2 cups each
Prep 10 minutes
Cook 1 hour
Total 1 hour 10 minutes

Ingredients

  • 1 yellow onion ($0.32)
  • 4 cloves garlic ($0.32)
  • 1 Tbsp olive oil ($0.16)
  • 4 carrots ($0.57)
  • 4 ribs celery ($0.50)
  • 1 green bell pepper ($0.69)
  • 1 28oz. can diced tomatoes ($1.00)
  • 1 8oz. can tomato sauce ($0.34)
  • 1/2 lb. frozen green beans ($0.67)
  • 1/4 cup chopped parsley ($0.23)
  • 1/2 Tbsp smoked paprika ($0.15)
  • 1 tsp dried oregano ($0.10)
  • 1/2 tsp dried thyme ($0.05)
  • 1/4 tsp freshly cracked black pepper ($0.02)
  • 6 cups chopped cabbage (½ head) ($1.14)
  • 6 cups vegetable broth ($0.78)
  • 1 tsp salt ($0.05)
  • 1 Tbsp lemon juice ($0.04)
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Instructions 

  • Dice the onion and mince the garlic. Add the onion, garlic, and olive oil to a large soup pot and sauté over medium heat until the onions are soft.
  • While the onion and garlic are sautéing, peel and slice the carrots, chop the celery, and dice the bell pepper. Add the carrot, celery, and bell pepper to the pot. Continue to sauté as you measure the rest of the ingredients.
  • Add the diced tomatoes (with juices), tomato sauce, frozen green beans, chopped parsley, smoked paprika, oregano, thyme, and pepper. Continue to stir and cook while you chop the cabbage.
  • Chop the cabbage into 1-inch pieces. Add the cabbage to the pot along with the vegetable broth and stir to combine.
  • Place a lid on the pot, turn the heat up to medium-high, and allow the soup to come to a boil. Once boiling, reduce the heat to medium-low and allow it to continue to simmer, stirring occasionally, for about 40 minutes or until the cabbage is to your desired tenderness.
  • Once the cabbage is tender, season the soup with salt, starting with ½ tsp and adding more to your liking. Finish the soup by adding the lemon juice and stirring to combine. Serve hot with crusty bread for dipping.

See how we calculate recipe costs here.


Equipment

  • Dutch Oven
  • Measuring Cups Spoons
  • Chef’s Knife
  • Garlic Press

Nutrition

Serving: 2cupsCalories: 133kcalCarbohydrates: 26gProtein: 4gFat: 3gSodium: 1783mgFiber: 7g
Read our full nutrition disclaimer here.
Have you tried this recipe?Mention @budgetbytes or tag #budgetbytes on Instagram!

Video

A ladle full of cabbage soup held over the pot

How to Make Cabbage Soup – Step by Step Photos

Onion and garlic in a soup pot

Start by mincing four cloves of garlic and dicing one large onion. Add them both to a large soup pot with one tablespoon olive oil. Sauté over medium heat until the onions are soft and translucent.

Celery, carrot, and bell pepper added to the pot

While the onion and garlic are sautéing, peel and slice 4 carrots, slice 4 stalks of celery, and dice one green bell pepper. Add the carrots, celery, and bell pepper to the pot. Continue to sauté over medium.

Tomatoes, spices, parsley, and green beans added to the pot

Add one 28oz. can diced tomatoes (I used petite diced), one 8oz. can tomato sauce, ½ lb. frozen green beans, ¼ cup chopped parsley, ½ Tbsp smoked paprika, 1 tsp oregano, ½ tsp thyme, and ¼ tsp pepper. Stir to combine.

cabbage in soup pot, broth being poured in

Chop 1/2 head of cabbage into one-inch pieces (about 5-6 cups once chopped). Add the chopped cabbage to the pot along with 6 cups of vegetable broth.

Cabbage soup before simmering

Stir everything together, place a lid on the pot, and turn the heat up to medium-high. Allow the soup to come to a boil, then reduce the heat to medium-low. Let the soup simmer over medium-low, stirring occasionally, for about 40 minutes, or until the cabbage is to your desired tenderness.

Salt being added to the soup

Once the cabbage is tender, season the soup with salt, starting with 1/2 teaspoon, then adding more to taste (I used 1 tsp total). Next, add one tablespoon of lemon juice, which really helps brighten the flavors. 

close up of the pot of cabbage soup

And then slurp down all that vegetable-y goodness! I garnished the cabbage soup with a little more fresh parsley, but it’s not needed for extra flavor.

close up of a bowl of cabbage soup

This cabbage soup recipe goes great with some crusty bread (garlic or not) to soak up that delicious broth!

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  1. I was wondering about using this soup as a way to get more daily vegetables, so thank you. Question: would red bell peppers mess up the flavor much? My housemate doesn’t like green pepper.

    1. I think red bell peppers would be great in this. :)

  2. The “Cabbage Soup Diet” [which also includes eating fruits and veggies as well as an occasional “heavy carb” (i.e., a potato) plus a few proteins tossed in — towards the end of the week – for good measure] is ALIVE and WELL! And this Soup made our7-day adventure to the tip of the abyss not only bearable, but actually quite pleasant (IOWs, it’s as DELICIOUS as a Cabbage Soup can be!) My adult-Daughter and I have a Wedding we’ll be attending mid-next month and, for whatever reason (???) Keto just wasn’t “dong it” for us :( . But THIS SOUP — in coordination with other of “The Cabbage Soup Diet” directives caused ME to lose 9 lbs. in a week and my Daughter to lose 12. We’ll be going back onto our Keto regimen starting 2morrow and then (after 2weeks) doing the “Cabbage Soup Diet” once again for another week. While the immediate objective is that the Dresses will fit, I can see myself using this recipe to make THIS Cabbage Soup many times during the current Autumn and upcoming Winter seasons. It really IS that GOOD! Thank you, Bth, for this delightful recipe.

  3. Can you recommend what I can substitute for the tomatoes and tomato sauce? I am allergic to them unfortunately.

    1. Unfortunately, the tomato ingredients are a big part of this recipe, and replacing them would change it quite a bit. So I’d need to reformulate and test options before offering a suggestion.

  4. I made this soup tonight and it was very delicious!! It’s very comforting and hearty, the only think that I did differently was to add some cooked tofu to the soup to add some protein to it.

  5. Love this healthy soup. I make a double batch in a huge pot and then freeze it in individual containers for future meal portions. This soup plus the Budget Bytes freezer garlic bread is a real treat on a chilly day. This soup has saved my wallet and waistline from fast food on many occasions – why do drive through when this takes less than 10 minutes to heat in the microwave and is full of delicious veggies. Modifications I make:
    1. I add chicken for protein. While I’m cooking the soup, in a separate pan with a lid, I poach chicken breast to shred and then add to the soup. ( I put a portion of shredded chicken into each of the containers for the freezer portions, and then fill them up with soup.
    2. Instead of the tomato sauce, I just replace the liquid with more broth instead, for my personal taste.
    3. I add sliced mushrooms and whatever else I have such as zucchini. Bring on the veggies.
    4. It adds a pan to wash, but I use Better than Bouillion and I just find it easiest to boil up a separate pot of water and make the broth and then pour the hot boiling broth into the pot of veggies. It adds a pot to wash, but no scrubbing so this is not a big deal.
    5. I add a few pinches of shredded Romano cheese (or Parmesan or even a little shredded mozzarella).
    Not related to this recipe, but want to tout the freezer garlic bread again, it just makes meals scrounged from leftovers, bagged salad kits, or whatever you defrosted that was lurking in the back of the freezer between zoom calls on a work from home day suddenly seem like an intentional meal.

  6. I like okra in this soup, it thickens it a little and it tastes great! But y’know what would REALLY give it a wonderful kick? — half of a small or 1/4 of a large preserved lemon, flesh and all, minced and mixed in near the end. Oh yeah, that’s what I’m gonna do.

  7. I used the recipe as a base and did my own thing. Added roasted garlic (lots), mushrooms (cuz I had some), hot paprika (cuz I like heat), canned diced tomatoes (again had it on hand) and doubled (maybe tripled) the (meyer) lemon – it was awesome! I think you can add anything you want. Loved the lemon and the fresh parsley. The cabbage is a great filler and tastes great in the soup. I didn’t use any onion in this batch…so I didn’t have to do the first step w oil. So basically zero fat!

    Have made it a ton of times and always a hit. I have served with a little protein on the side (sausage, chicken) and with fresh french bread for a bigger meal.

    LOVE LOVE LOVE the soup and makes you feel like you’re loving your body and soul!

  8. Hi I’m thinking of making this soup,can I add zucchini? I have a lot that needs to be used 😐
    Thank you!

    1. Absolutely. :) That’s what I love about this soup–you can add just about any vegetable! Flexible recipes are the best.

  9. Recipe looks easy and great to follow. Family loves different types of soup especially during the harvest season. Hope to make this soup this week and offset it with a delicious grain bread. Yum…….

    1. Probably because all the canned tomatoes and the broth. Be sure to read our nutrition disclosure to understand why calculated nutrition data is only a broad estimate and should be taken with a grain of salt (pun intended).

  10. Perfect for cleaning out the fridge! Even threw in some zucchini that needed used up. Used v8 instead of canned tomatoes, and added some more seasonings. Overall very delicious! Will be making this again, great for using up cabbage.

  11. Absolutely love this soup! I’ve made it twice in the last month (mainly because my dad gave me a cabbage bigger than a bowling ball 😂 ) but it’s so good! I add ground beef & barley to it to beef it up a little but it’s just packed with flavor in general. Thank you so much for this recipe

  12. Great soup. I leave out the green pepper but add spinach.  Half the amount of tomatoes. Add  bay leaf. 

  13. This veggie soup is the bomb!! I love soups even in the tropics where I live. But today we had our first tropical storm and it felt just great!!! Very yummy. I added petite Brussel sprouts and some Cayenne pepper to spice it up a bit and cooked it in the pressure cooker. Excellent thank you

  14. Thank you for sharing this recipe!!! THE best vegetable soup I’ve ever had and made. If ever I think about making soup (regardless of season) this is the one that comes to mind first. I almost always have all of the ingredients, and it’s easy to substitute/add extra ingredients  if need be. Not sure why I haven’t left a review yet (Must’ve just slipped my mind) being that I found it about 2 years ago and have shared it with numerous people, whom all love it as much as I do!!! Even my two kids like it ;) I typically use red bell pepper in place of the green. Also I love to add fresh dill and mushrooms. A keeper that I will use over and over again, and never tire of! 

    1. I think green cabbage is a better option here because the red cabbage will give the soup a very “off” color. :)

      1. Mary.
        I made this recipe to lose weight. It was designed for those who were awaiting Cardiac Surgery to slim off.
        I used to make a double batch and freeze it. I did lose a lot of weight and had it for more than two years. I will start again.

    2. I’ve used both. And the dark red cabbage just makes the soup look maroon instead of tomato red. Still quite delicious!

  15. Hey!  I’ve made this twice now. The first time was with the beans and the second time with beyond ground beef that I browned off.  This is the best anytime soup I have ever had. I’ve shared it with many friends and strangers as well

    Good job 🤟. The next one is the lentil soup. Will keep you posted

  16. Excellent soup. Very tasty and versatile. This is likely to become a regular dish in my household.

  17. When it comes to cabbage soup, the more vegetables, the merrier! I’ve eaten cabbage soup with only the cabbage in it and was disappointed. It looks delicious and just as good as any restaurant!

  18. I added shredded chicken for protein and left out peppers because I don’t believe they belong in soup.  Really tasty!

  19. Ha! Been making this all of my life. Doesn’t the state of Mississippi have a patent on this? Recently I’d forgotten that I sometimes use V-8. Thanks for the remiinder. Also, I need to get some frozen green beans. I’ve always used fresh or none. Frozen can have more nutrition than fresh, due to processing immediately after harvesting. Thanks for bringing that idea. Almost always have fresh thyme and oregano, I dry my own.. I use only dried oregano for salads. Dried is often better than fresh in some ways. I’ll use fresh and dried as they do have some differences. The oregano must be Greek.
    Sometimes my homemade broth is made with corn cobs with the corn cut off. The starch makes it thicker, and it taste very good.
    It has just come to my attention that when I “shop” online for recipes, I almost always choose yours as a reference. Your emails always have good suggestions too.
    Thanks for all that you do.

  20. I really liked this recipe. It was simple to make and tasted good. I added some white beans to bulk it up. Lovely.

  21. I only have 2 cups of vegetable broth can water be substituted for the other 4 or something else , I have a child that is a vegetarian 

    1. Also can can green beans be substituted for the frozen

  22. I wanted to bulk out the soup a bit and added 2 cups of  broth and 1 cup of quinoa. Definitely a winner! My husband kept saying over and over it’s the best soup I’ve made. 

  23. I have made this soup before and added pasta , broken into small pieces ,, it is Awesome !! My Girlfriend is Vegetarian , and she loves it ! I find it gives you energy and yes , you lose weight ,, Win Win Right !!!

    1. You can store it in glass or plastic food storage containers.

  24. Wow. Seriously delicious! I added up the calories for everything that went into the pot, and it was well below 1000 calories for the entire pot. FABULOUS “diet” food that tastes fantastic.

    Thank you!

    Ps. I used diced tomato and green chilies… (Rotel) in place of the straight diced tomatoes and got a really nice “zip”. Will make a second pot with the “regular” diced tomatoes for comparison purposes… but this potful was delicious!

  25. I made a few changes:

    -Used dried parsley instead of fresh
    -Regular paprika instead of smoked
    -Added a cup of frozen corn
    -Used half a green pepper, half a yellow pepper and a whole red pepper
    -4 cups of chicken broth instead of 6 cups vegetable broth
    -1 can of diced tomatoes instead of 2 (I didn’t read oz size apparently. :) )\
    -Annnddd…I left out the cabbage. (I know I know it’s in the title….)

    I lot of changes were because it was what I had on hand or didn’t have on hand.

    This was PHENOMENAL. It tasted okay last night after making it but today for lunch…after the flavors had blended in the fridge last night…outstanding. Thank you so much for this recipe!

    1. sorry but without the cabbage it just isn’t cabbage soup..i believe you should checkout veggie soup….

    1. You were ahead of the curve on this! Making this tomorrow in isolation.

  26. Followed the Recipe to the tee, thought I’d add 6 hot sausage links and some ground beef for extra protein!
    Wow the added Ingredients pushed my taste buds over the top !!Simply delicious !!
    So far Ive finished 2 Pot fulls and going to start Making my third pot full!!!

  27. I made this yesterday. My husband loved it. I liked the smoked paprika flavor. Recipe is really versatile. I will be making this on a regular basis. Thanks for sharing!!

  28. A great post-Christmas detox! I used only a quart of broth, as the soup was threatening to overwhelm my pot. (I also skipped the tomato sauce,) It was still plenty broth-y, and we both really enjoyed it.

  29. I love the versatility of this soup! I’ve added cinnamon and turmeric and topping with Whisps Parmesan Cheese Crisps adds enough salt per bowl and some protein and they’re gluten free too! 

  30. I love the versatility of this soup! I added a sliced jalapeno for some heat and used a can of chickpeas instead of green beans the last time I made it, and it turned out wonderfully. Such a great soup to use up celery and for making a LOT of food on a slim budget. Thanks for this one, it’s a banger!

  31. I tried this recipe several times with minor changes. I added mushrooms and 1 tsp. of cayenne pepper to give it a little heat. Eating some of this soup every week for two months and have lost 18 pounds.I love this soup.

  32. Made this in my instapot tonight and it is deeeeelicious! I didn’t have a green pepper, so I used an orange bell pepper, didn’t have a can of diced tomatoes so I used what was left of a pack of cherry tomatoes, I had red cabbage instead of green, dried parsley instead of fresh, and I used better than bullion chicken flavor! It made TONS of soup, enough to eat, freeze, and share! 

    1. I just love all you used that you had on hand! That’s the best part about this soup is it’s just whatever you’ve got and it’s still delicious!

  33. I absolutely love this recipe. I’m a big “meat as a main” person, so I thought I’d need to supplement it with something after I finished the soup, but SURPRISE it’s delicious and filling. Great for any Meatless Monday, and to top it off, you’re eating all veggies. My vegetarian friends also loved this recipe (and it was something we could finally agree on!). I highly recommend even if you’re on the fence about it. This is my go-to soup recipe once winter or fall hits and it gets chilly. Serve with a sweater and a side of fireplace.

    1. Happy to heat it Alex! I like the side of fireplace :)

    1. We do get that request a lot, but unfortunately we don’t have a reliable source for the nutrition information. The calculators and databases that most bloggers and websites use to calculate the info can be extremely inaccurate, and for something that can so severely impact the health of people with health conditions, we just don’t feel comfortable publishing unreliable numbers. We prefer to leave it up to the reader to use the database or calculator they trust. I’m sorry and I wish accuracy were easier than shipping the food off to a lab for analysis! 😅

    2. I keep a food diary with My Fitness Pal. You have the option to create recipes and can import recipes from online via web link.  It then searches for matches for the ingredients. It has worked well for me to do this. Hope that might help you!

      1. Thanks for the request! We do get that request a lot, but unfortunately we don’t have a reliable source for the nutrition information. The calculators and databases that most bloggers and websites use to calculate the info can be extremely inaccurate, and for something that can so severely impact the health of people with health conditions, we just don’t feel comfortable publishing unreliable numbers. We prefer to leave it up to the reader to use the database or calculator they trust. I’m sorry and I wish accuracy were easier than shipping the food off to a lab for analysis!

  34. Hey made a double batch of this I love it so much thanks for the recipe .. my question though can I add meat of some sort to it and still be effective??!!

    1. Oh for sure! It would be great with some roasted chicken.

  35. Made this today and it was so good! Can’t believe how tasty this was for the cost.

  36. Made this several times…delicious and nutritious thank you !

  37. I am making this delicious looking soup today. I am adding shrimp because I enjoy the combination of shrimp and cabbage. I am also adding 2 cans of HOT rotel tomatoes and sliced mushrooms. I live in Louisiana and you know we love spicy food. I am going on a cruise in a couple of weeks and need to lose a few pounds. Can’t wait until this soup is ready to eat! Thanks so much for the recipe!

  38. Looked in the refrigerator yesterday and found a bunch of vegetables about to go bad. Googled “cabbage soup” and was excited as soon as I saw a link from your blog!

    I mostly followed the recipe. I added a pound of sausage, substituted fresh tomatoes (from my mom’s garden) with as much marinara sauce as I thought would taste good, and otherwise played around with what I had on hand. I only added one bouillon cube because of all the salt from the sausage and sauce. It came out great.

    Like everyone else has said, there’s a ton of room for experimentation in the recipe and it will taste awesome. The smoked paprika gives it a great depth of flavor and I forgot how much I love cabbage.

    1. This would probably work well in the slow cooker, but because I’ve never tried it I unfortunately don’t know how long it would need to cook.

  39. I love this soup so much. My BF bought a red cabbage by accident, anyone knows if it will work as good?

    1. Just keep in mind that the purple cabbage will probably turn the entire pot purple or even grey because it has a very strong natural color! :)

  40. I made this exactly as written. It’s a great, solid recipe to get in your veggies and fill up without a lot of calories. However, it’s missing something. It needs a splash of vinegar or something. Next time I’ll add some ketchup. Now before you think that’s gross or weird- it’s not, ketchup is just tomato paste, sugar and vinegar. It balances a lot of soup recipes out and is the key ingredient in my vegetable soup. It doesn’t take like ketchup in a soup-you would never know it’s in there. It  just balances out flavors. 

  41. I loved this! After making it by the recipe the first time and really enjoying it, I substituted lima beans for the green beans for a little heartier taste. This recipe is so flexible; I imagine I’ll be making this, and variations on it, frequently. Thanks for posting it!

    1. It’s such a fun one to add things to and play with the flavors.

  42. Really delicious and easy, clear instructions.  Many thanks 

  43. Made a big pot… added a pound of cooked ground sausage. It was absolutely delicious! My husband and I both agreed the best soup I’ve ever made. We divided into 3 freezer bags for quick dinners. Thawed and reheated perfectly. 

  44. Hi, Beth. This looks like another winner. I remember my mom making “Skinny Soup” back in the 70s when she was on Weight Watchers, so I have a deep well of memories for cabbage soup in one form or another. :-)

    My question: can the remaining parsley be frozen? I know that your site contains a bunch of handy hints about freezing, but I couldn’t find one relating to parsley or similar herbs.

    Thanks so much for all that you do!

    1. You can freeze parsley, but it’s not suited for everything once frozen. :) It will get limp after thawing, so if you’re going to use it in recipes where the parsley gets cooked that would be fine (because it wilts when cooked anyway). If you are looking to use it in recipes where it will stay fresh, like salads, the frozen parsley wouldn’t work so well.

    1. It’s such a small amount that you probably can without much change in the flavor.

    2. I’ve been making a similar soup for years to use up veg (I like it spicy so I use Thai Curry Paste as a base) and I’ve used lemon juice, lime juice and rice vinegar – it depends what I have to hand – at the end to give a little sour zing. It’s all good.

      I prefer rice vinegar but that’s because it works best with the curry paste, to my taste anyway.

  45. Excellent soup Beth. Loved the number crunching too. Made it exactly like yours except I sliced fresh tomatoes and change it up by adding a Thai Tom Kha soup paste spoonful for a little chili and lemongrass tang. Best to you. Kenny and Lori from Woodland, CA. 

    1. It’s included in step 3: “Allow the vegetables in the pot to heat while you chop the cabbage. Chop the cabbage into one-inch strips or squares, then add them to the pot. Add the vegetable broth, chopped parsley, paprika, oregano, thyme, and some freshly cracked pepper. Stir to combine.”

  46. I am thinking if you add beets, it would make great borscht too.

    1. I entered the ingredients into MyFitness Pal, and it calculated 90 calories per serving! Each serving is two cups, so, 45 calories per cup. I might fill up on 3 or 4 cups now that I know. I love this soup! If someone else does the math and get another answer please let me know.

  47. This soup is delicious! Added fresh green beans because I had them…. and some red pepper flakes.
    I will be making this again. Thanks for the recipe!

    1. I’m sorry, I’m not familiar with the weight watchers program or its requirements.

  48. I cant wait to make my next batch with your recipe! Tomato sauce and seasonings you use sound the best! I have lost weight and feel great!

  49. Thanks for sharing this recipe! I absolutely love it. That says a lot, considering that I don’t usually eat vegetables. This will be a healthy way for me to get a ton of healthy veggies.

  50. How many carbs per serving (2 cups)
    Of the cabbage soup?

  51. I ran this through a nutrition calculator and this came out to 109 calories for a 2 cup serving.

  52. Made this last night, As with most things, I doubled it, which required THE BIG BOY aka my 12 qt stock pot and some extra time. I added 2 cans of white beans before I simmered and a 10 oz block of frozen spinach near the end . I also used dried parsley since I almost never have fresh (it always goes bad on me); I think I used about 3 tbsp for the double batch. We ate for dinner last night and I still have 4 large containers of it, 2 of which will go in the freezer for later. I loved how rich the broth was. Next time I may add some crushed red pepper flakes; I think a little spice would be nice. This may be my new go-to “eat allllllllll the vegetables” soup!

  53. This is the 3rd batch of this I’ve made, I absolutely love this soup!

  54. Can I use squash in not green beans?? This is for cabbage soup

    1. All I know is it’s about 45 calories per serving, one cup I believe. Adding starches like cannellini beans adds a lot more calories, but still good for you. Great for keto diet

  55. I have this soup on the stove right now! I added 3 small diced potatoes and a small carton of cannellini beans. Instead of parsley, I used cilantro. This is a great soup for using up whatever leftover veggies that you have. I haven’t eaten any yet but tasted the broth and so far so good. I’m looking forward to having this for supper with some sourdough bread.

    1. I don’t see why not. Red cabbage has more vitamin c in it, and a different flavor, but I don’t know why you couldn’t use it, if this is what you prefer

  56. This looks Incredibly delicious. I have to make this soon for my family!

  57. Wonderful! To keep with low carbs add some diced sweet potatoes the last 30 minutes of cooking🤗

  58. Love the soup recipe I’m going to make it this weekend!! 😋😋😋

  59. I love this soup! Sometimes I add sausage and beans (I know, carbs and fat. But, whatever.) This is the first time I have heard of smoked paprika (I am now hooked on it!!).

    I made some today without sausage and beans (trying to lose some weight).

  60. Made this like a month ago.  One of the best cabbage soups we’ve had.  Had some in freezer that I gave to my 90 year old mom.  She called me raving about it!  I think the paprika makes it!  Don’t add string beans as I still hate them from my childhood (immature I know…) but add whatever we veggies I have on hand.  My new go-to veggie soup.  Thank you!

  61. made a big pot of this soup this afternoon and added a few chopped potatoes to the mix. Hearty and delicious and recommended for a cold winter night with crusty bread.

  62. I love a simple, uncomplicated soup, especially when I am beginning to feel under-the-weather. The Soup Starter is idea is brilliant, I will definately use it.

  63. Easy vegan recipe that smells and tastes amazing. I added some kale for extra greens. This soup is pretty heavy on the tomatoes so if they aren’t your cup of tea, I’d replace the diced tomatoes with extra broth or something. It’s the perfect end to my night especially after the holidays when I have been thinking I need to eat more veggies. This recipe makes it painless!

  64. I make this soup and add white beans, kale, andouille sausage, and 1 lb of cod loins. I know that bumps up the calories some but also the flavor (spicy sausage) and protein.

  65. Could I chop up and freeze the other half of the cabbage like you suggest for the carrots and celery? Thanks!

    1. If you plan to use it in a soup where it will get soft from cooking anyway, yes. :) It’s just not good for using fresh in salads and things because freezing and thawing makes the cabbage limp.

  66. This wasn’t delicious! I didn’t have enough broth or any boullion so I used water and added a teaspoon of harissa to ensure lots of flavor and oh man! It turned this into a delicious kimchi-esque soup. Highly recommend!

    I used some tomato paste in lieu of tomato sauce (didn’t have any on hand). Also used a frozen mixed veg that had corn, carrots, peas and green beans. Great base recipe with tons of flavor to build on!

  67. Wow! This recipe is absolutely wonderful! If I could have given it 10 stars, I would have. I made it for dinner yesterday, and even my 11 year old Son loved it. My wife said it reminded her of a Panamanian dish that her Mom makes, just without the meat. I pretty much followed the recipe to a ‘T’, including the Better Than Bullion broth. Sooooo good. I highly recommend trying this one out. I’m gulping down leftovers as I write this comment…

  68. Delicious!
    I pureed a portion of this soup for my little one and it worked so well that I ate a few pureed bowls for myself too!

  69. Does anyone know how many calories there are in each cup? 

    1. I know this is late and not 100% the recipe, but I make a cabbage soup in a crock pot with:
      Large cabbage (~300cal)
      4-5 yellow potatoes( ~ 550cal)
      A can of veggie broth (40cal)
      3 (small) cans of fire roasted diced tomatoes (187.5 cal)
      1 onion (60 cal)
      Cup of carrots ( 50 cal)
      Roasted bell pepper ( 100cal for jar)
      Various spice

      Total = ~1,300 calories for the WHOLE pot. It easily makes about 8-15 servings for me. 8 servings = 163/ serving. This is probably a bit less though and very filling :)

    1. I use Better Than Bouillon, which is a broth concentrate. You mix one teaspoon of the concentrate with water to make one cup of broth. :)

  70. I just made this recipe for the first time and I’m absolutely in love! This soup is so comforting and delicious! Definitely going to be a go-to recipe! 

  71. Im currently in the process of making this soup! The aromas are taking over my house. So much so that My dad keeps coming downstairs sneaking sips of the broth! Mmmm this IS the perfect autum soup! 

  72. I love that Better Than Bouillon. it is just the handiest thing to have around when you cannot make your own stock and when I see someone else knows about it as well, it is like-Oh yeah this person knows what they’re doing! I bought this huge head of cabbage a day or two ago and I am going to make a big pot of soup today, and look forward to freezing some as well! Your recipe just confirmed that I have everything I need and now I can get going with this!

  73. I used this recioe with weight watchers cabbage soup recipe. I also added a can of white kidney beans, and canned green beans rinsed off well. Used italian stewed tomatoes,  and tomatoe paste instead of sauce. I love mixing this recipe with the weight watchers recipe because not only am i getting something thats really good  for me, but also something i llove eating, and could eat everyday till its gon! 

  74. This soup is so good!! I added 1/4 cup of rice after 10 minutes of cooking and some brocoli. A hit! Thanks again for your wonderful work…

  75. Can u clarify 1/2 lb of carrots and celery is what in cups, please. I would like to make this today. Thank u

    1. It’s pretty flexible, so you can aim for about 1.5 cups of each.

  76. Can u make this in the crock pot????
    How long would you have to leave it in there?

  77. Another awesome recipe!  Although it added calories and carbs I put in a can of chickpeas (because I love them with everything).  Super filling and tastes even better the next day!

  78. This was awesone! I left out the green pepper because I dont like them! Will definitely make again!!

  79. I have been looking for a recipe for the cabbage soup made in the instapot

    1. Add the oil and onions on salute. Once done add the other ingredients and use the soup button on your instant pot.

  80. Can I use instant pot press cooker and how many minutes? Thank you 

    1. Yes, that would probably work. I’ve never tested it, but I would try the “soup” button.

  81. Good recipe, I would like to make again. The only change I would make is the 1/2 TBS of smoked paprika. It was too much, I’d probably only use 1 TSP next time, maximum.

  82. I made this and followed the recipe except that I left out the green beans (didn’t realise that I didn’t have any) and used a can of kidney beans. This soup was so good!

  83. I made this for guests who stay pretty low fat. I’m eating low carb, so I was stymied until I found this recipe.. I picked  up a rotisserie chicken which I shredded and added at the end, used 8 coups of vegetable broth, fire roasted canned tomatoes, and added a cauliflower cut in small florets with the cabbage. They absolutely loved it!! This is a super recipe that allows the cook to deviate based on what’s in their pantry and fridge, and it still tastes great!

  84. Absolutely Awesome Recipe and with organic ingredients SO Good AND Good For You Too! I had to add some dried red pepper flakes for a little kick and had some organic Red Pepper and Tomato Soup that really added to the creaminess. appreciate the recipe, makes me wish it were Winter instead of spring, Almost!!!

  85. I substituted  14 oz can rotel tomatoes for one of the cans of diced tomatoes to add some heat. Delicious 

  86. To get the tomatoes to the desired consistency squeeze juice and tomatoes together with your hands. into a separate bowl. Let the juisce and tomatoes squeeze through your fingers (clean fingers of course). This hands on apprpoach works well for me.

  87. To get the tomatoes to the right consistency I squeeze them through my fingers into a separate bowl and tlhen squeeze juice and tomaoes together until I get the consistency I want. This is my hands on approach. It wo.rks well.

  88. Hahaha ~ oops! I got carried away and added a whole head of cabbage and probably a full pound of carrots. It’s still amazing! I threw in a handful of egg noodles. I really like it and will be making it again when this pot is gone.

  89. This is a good recipe! I like it b/c it is nice and thick with lots of good veggies! For seasoning, you could also include about 1/2 teaspoon of caraway seed to help bring out the flavor.

  90. This is delicious! I didn’t have all the desired veggies so I added a bag of chopped broccoli stems that I had in the freezer. This is really marvelous!

  91. Sounds yummy! I’m making that tonight with just a few substitutions. A local thrifts store often has free food for the taking and I picked up some loose carrots, a very large, bright green pablano pepper, one bag of snow peas, a small bag of chopped kale, and an onion. I’ll substitute the snow peas for green beans, the poblano for the green pepper, and a few cubes of tomato paste I froze from a can I didn’t finish from another recipe. Some warm water in the jar and a shake makes the tomato sauce that I don’t have on hand. I had a cabbage in the fridge that was lingering a bit too long to become slaw, so, soup it is. The kale will be a nice addition if I chop it finely.

    My recipe may cost closer to $3.00 since I scored some freebies. The mild heat from the poblano will be welcome for my family because we often just add a teaspoon of red pepper flakes for heat anyway. I always look out for good deals on large cans of diced tomatoes, puree, and paste to keep my basic kitchen stocked, but I quit buying tomato sauce because it is just as easy to make it from tomato paste.

  92. I’m soup lover from way back, have many recipes for many kinds of soups. This one is outstanding! Thank you very much for it.

  93. I used matchstick carrots and 20 minutes was enough time for all of my veggies to soften.  The recipe can be tweaked to your liking, there really is no right or wrong way to make it.  I add broccoli and mushrooms to mine and it’s delicious! 

  94. Recipes sounds amazing would love to eat better and healthier

  95. Delicious!! I used fresh organic 6 roma tomatoes diced along with a 14.5 can of organic fire roasted diced tomatoes . Added a shake or two of cayenne pepper (speeds up metabolism). I only simmered for about 10 minutes to keep the cabbage from getting soggy and giving the vegetables a bit of crunch. I find that the sensation of chewing helps me fell full which is why I didn’t cook the veggies too long.

    I have a bunch of leftover turkey meatballs and will add one or two for dinner. Definitely a keeper. Thanks a bunch for a great recipe.

  96. Good looking recipe!  I wouldn’t call it a “fad diet” though, it actually works.  I did it a while back, and lost 5 pounds in a week.  It works well if you stick to it, supplement with other fruits and veggies, and lay off the sugars and minimal carbs.  ;o)

    1. Hi when you ate cabbage soup and lost 5 lbs
      Did you just eat cabbage soup
      I did the same as I am on weight watchers
      I did eat fruit during the day also had hard boiled egg which is 0 points
      What was I doing wrong

    2. How right you are ~ sugar is the devil! I love this soup and I add some chicken to it for more protein and substance.

  97.   Did not like the soup. The  acid from the tomatoes is overwhelming  You cannot taste the vegetables  due to the tomatoes. 

  98. If you’re making it in on the stove as suggested, how do the carrots and celery get soft enough in time with just the 20min cook time? I started on the stove and threw everything in the crockpot in fear the carrots and celery would still be too hard….

    1. The vegetables sauté in the pot for a little while before the rest of the ingredients are added, then they simmer in the soup for 20 minutes as well. That’s plenty of time for them to soften up. :)

    2. I was thinking the same thing, and not only for the carrots (which I’d like to leave a little bit on the chunky side) but those canned tomatoes which don’t look like the petite size..  I know from making some chunky tomato sauces with baked fish that those canned tomatoes cooked in a pot with lots of olive oil and spices take way more than 20 minutes to get them soft to my satisfaction. Maybe it’s just me but I don’t like can’t tomatoes on the slightly hard side, So I think I’m going to skip chunky tomatoes and just dollop in some tomato sauce I already have prepared and see what happens.  I don’t think carrots in anything but liquid would ever really get them going to be soft No matter how long I toss them around in a pan with any kind of fat, and I think I might just speed things up a bit and nuke them to give them a head start, and maybe pan fry up the celery a bit because I don’t like that too hard either.  I guess that’s what I have to do because I know if I over cook the cabbage it’s going to turn into but we all know will be stinky/smelly  cabbage Instead of it having just a bit of a bite to it, which i like.  That being said, the soup looks beautiful and colorful.

  99. This recipe tastes amazing! I love your choice of spices.

  100. I make this in the crockpot. I just throw everything in, in the morning g and I come home from work with an amazing smelling house. Love this soup.

  101. Any idea how it would be substituting red cabbage for the green?

    1. I think it would make the entire soup kind of grey-ish in color and probably not very appetizing. :(

    1. If you consider this 4 servings, I calculate it as ~185 per bowl.

    1. If you do it will likely be very bland. The broth adds a lot of depth and needed salt to make the flavors pop.

  102. How do you think this would taste with a can of great northern or pinto beans added?

    1. I think great northern would be better than pinto. :) And cannellini even better than great northern because they hold their shape better.

  103. I made this yesterday and it was AMAZING!! My VERY picky fiancé said it was AMAZING also! Thanks for the easy delicious recipe!! 

  104. I’m making this for the second time. Can it be frozen? I’ve made way more than I can eat!

  105.  The soup turned out great I love the idea of using the tomato sauce, which I haven’t done in the past when I made it. The only thing that I added was parsnip and I used regular paprika because I did not have any smoked on hand. Excellent recipe thank you! 

    1. IT just so happens I have a parsnip. Going to add it now. Thanks for the idea. 

  106. I tried this in my 6 qt instant pot. Turned out great! Sautéed garlic and onions, then added the rest of the ingredients. Manual 10 min, quick release. Everything almost didn’t fit but if you do a little less of each veggie, should all fit!

  107. Do you have the nutritional value of this soup? How many calories per serving?

  108. Thanks for the recipe! I sort of tried the ‘Cabbage Soup Diet’ years ago and the best take away was the cabbage soup! I don’t remember losing weight, but the soup was delicious. I tried to make it a month or so, but added too many weird things, so it wasn’t . This time, I’ve followed your recipe. Not for weight loss, just for good eating!

    1. Hahah, sounds just like me! I just liked the soup for what it is! :D

  109. So delicious! The hubs loves it, too. I had to use 1 tablespoon dried parsley because I didn’t have fresh, and forgot to add the lemon juice (will do that next time). This soup is divine!

    1. I made it in a crock pot, just sauteed the onions and garlic on a pan first then transferred them then did the rest on a crock pot and cooked on low for 9 hours tastes fantastic and cooked great.

  110. This is the same soup I have been making for decade when I make my vegetable beef soup, sans the beef. I just love this type of soup!

    1. It does freeze pretty well but the vegetables will definitely get more tender after reheating.

  111. I have cooked the soup for a second time. I did lose 6 pounds my first 5 days of doing it, but I felt weak for most of the week because the lack or protein in it. Instead of a heavy meat I added some tofu to it to get some protein in it. Is that okay?

    1. I’m sorry, I don’t offer diet advice. I posted this recipe because it tastes great, not with the intention that anyone should use it for weight loss.

    2. Tofu isn’t a bad idea, and I bet the soup would be good with a dollop of plain Greek yogurt too.

  112. What a great winter meal.  Wife is not a cabbage fan but the spices and broth won her over. Easy and very tasty.  Will be a family staple from now on.  

  113. Just finished eating this and it was delicious! 8 don’t even like vegetables but this was bomb diggity.  Very clear instructions :) ate with buttered sourdough on the side. Saw someone mention sausage and I feel like something spicy like that would be a great addition.

  114. I made this delish soup and added beef chuck cubes, which I browned in the pan with the garlic and onions before adding it to the rest of the ingredients!  Made it in the crock pot! Yum!!!

  115. I’ve got this simmering on the stove right now for what is probably the fifteenth time.  Everyone loves it. Thanks again!

  116. Yum!! Made this because we needed to eat some healthier veggies after Thanksgiving :) Served it with some good bread to soak up the delicious broth. The lemon juice adds a great zing, so I went with the full 2 tbsp. I also added a chicken breast for some protein to keep my boyfriend happy – I just baked it in the oven with some olive oil, salt, and pepper while I was prepping the veggies, then shredded it to add in near the end of the simmering time. I think this would also be great with mushrooms added in. I’m definitely going to freeze a container of this because it made so much – but that’s a good problem to have. Now I’ll have some great veggie soup ready to go when I need it!

  117. Omg! Soooo good.  Absolutely perfect! Reminds me Of 1984! My mom was crazy about newest fad diet. She never let me touch her watermelon . Salivated! Next she broke out the guiltless cabbage soup & ate it for several days. How could it be so good? And good for you too? That deep tomatoes broth, Accompanying Decadent herbs, carrots and cabbage? Covered with sharp cheddar cheese? Okay, maybe no cheddar! But now in 2017 trying to keep traditional flavors current and still feeding my 7 year old I have added a few the more greens . The more greens the better ! I  Added zucchini’s and some times some kale! A  sharp cheddar Bottini sandwich always helps for the soul no matter what age you are. The perfect  meal no matter what age or season!

  118. Why not add some bean’s such as black beans or kidney beans? That should give you good protein. And add the chicken breast as well!!

    1. I love it! Kidney beans would be awesome in this. Thanks for the great suggestion!

  119. What about smoked sausage in it? Would that still taste good?

      1. Making it right now minus the sausage lol! But i have large family so i doubled it. Looks like ts going to make a ton

    1. It’s supposed to be a healthy soup! Putting sausage in this would not be healthy!!! 

      1. It’s supposed to be whatever you want it to be. :) If she wants sausage, by all means put sausage in it.

  120. I have kidney disease so I can’t use broths.. how can I flavor it up with water?

    1. With all the vegetables and herbs in the soup it kind of creates a broth on its own with the water. You can simmer just a bit longer to extract a little more flavor, and you’ll want to add salt to make all those flavors pop. Salt will be the key.

    2. I also have kidney disease and I use unsalted vegetable broth.  Same with the canned tomato sauce.

  121. Hi! Do you think the soup will be ok if you use  chicken breast in it because I am doing a or low carb but I have to eat lean protein due to a health issue! I want to try it with the chicken and se what it will do!

    1. Sure! I think chicken is neutral enough in flavor to be added to just about anything. :)

  122. I find the prices you cite crazy cheap…. For example a pound of carrots cost me about a 1.20…. The rest also seem really low, unless this was posted in the 80’s 😁 I have made this several times, but the lemon juice is a new add for me. I’m trying it with the lemon juice right now. Thanks and have a good day.

  123. Wow followed your recipe almost to the T this is the best soup I’ve ever eaten I’m not a soup man but I do love vegetables. I need to drop some pounds and as good as this stuff tastes I’ll be eatin it like a wild man thank you so much for sharing a wonderful thing.

    1. I have tried a similiar cabbage soup with my niece and she lost 10kg in 3 weeks. So yes it does work. I’m now going to do this one for me…

  124. Can you freeze this cabbage soup?  It is very good. 

  125. I really liked this soup, especially the broth, the spices were just right. The taste also has a lot to do with the vegetables too! We will be making it again. Thank you for sharing.

  126. This was soooo good! I am honestly surprised by how tasty it is because I’m not the biggest cabbage or soup fan but I like quite a few of your recipes. This is one of my favorites for sure. It is really filling! Perfect for lunch at work. 

  127. Any vegetable will work in this recipe but if you’re trying to keep it as the All you can eat cabbage soup for the diet you have to watch the carbs you’re adding to the pot. Sure, potatoes would be fantastic BUT they’re starchy and full of carbs as are corn, peas, lima beans, pinto kidney navy beans and the like! 

  128. I was skeptical about this soup, but I had all the ingredients so I made it. So good!!! My husband is not the biggest cabbage fan and he loved it. Thanks Beth!

  129. On low carb diet. Have made cabbage soup previously. Very good. This looks like an excellent recipe. Thank you.

    1. Hi Don! I’m doing the low-to-no carb diet too and remembered this recipe! I’ve made it many times before so I know it’s good. I also know how to tweak it to make it even more substantial without adding any more CARBS!  I found a great deal on some portobello mushrooms and figured they use them as a meat substitute so I will too. Make sure to remove the stem, scrape out the gills with a spoon then brush off the tops with a paper towel to remove any dirt. Cut them in half then slice about a quarter inch thick. I would then saute them after the garlic and onions. 
      I’m also going to use button mushrooms sliced, a handful of snow peas, cauliflower, broccoli and a poblano pepper, You can also use zucchini,  yellow squash and turnips TOO! There’s a plethora of no and low calorie, no carb veggies you can use.  This is going to be a huge pot of soup but there’s two of us and I plan on having the soup whenever I’m hungry then have very small, low carb meals or follow the diet that goes with the soup. Good luck on your diet! I know I need it because I have a month before I need to look as good as I can

  130. Want to make this, I live on my own, so I was wondering if you can you freeze this?

  131. Great recipe! I made a big batch as part of my meal prep. I had some chick peas and leftover cooked farro and added that for a couple of servings. I’m sure any beans and grains would be a great addition to the soup for a complete protein. Very versatile recipe!

  132. Excellent taste! I had to make substitutions of ~5 fresh tomatoes from garden, one can of tomatoes paste, and a squirt of ketchup. Used beef broth plus water. Added cooked ground beef per hubby’s request. Turned out delicious!
    I used a half head of a gigantic cabbage. It was not too much cabbage at all.

  133. I made the soup with one of my own home grown cabbagas! It was the best!!!!!

  134. DELICIOUS! My whole family loved it! Thank you so much for sharing ☺

      1. Instant Pot is a registered trademark for a specific company’s range of programmable electric multi-function pressure cookers. They, as with a variety of other companies’ brands of similar appliances, are designed to take the place of a traditional pressure cooker, slow cooker, rice cooker etc. and at least some of the models can be integrated with smart home technology. This particular company started selling their “smart” pressure cookers about 7 years ago and have developed quite a following for their brand.

    1. These are all nonstarchy veggies, low calorie & generally on the “all you care to eat” list of any diet, except the carrots. Carrots are higher in sugar, higher glycemic index. If you are diabetic, I would recommend figuring the serving size into you meal plan.

    2. The entire recipe is roughly 800 calories and it makes at least 8 servings. I put it into MFP and 1/8 of the recipe is 110 calories. It definitely makes more than 8 cups of soup so I wouldn’t worry about the calories too much. About 20ish g of carbs per 1/8 serving. I ended up having to freeze a few of the tupperware that I put the soup in because the recipe makes a lot! 

  135. For a little added protein, I stirred in a spoonful of Greek yogurt. It was good!

  136. I meant
    black pepper when I said peppers. Also I add smoked paprika and season to taste. I like plenty of seasoning but you can use less or more easily. Just please yourself.

  137. Using the ingredients and quantities which I do, mine tends to turn out more of a stew than a soup but its all good and it’s very easy to add more liquid as desired.

    1. I thought the same, but a vegetable soup is good, no? I prefer a soup that is more solids and less broth.\

  138. This is such a great base recipe. So flexible in terms of both quantities and ingredients. I’m on my second batch using tomato juice as the main liquid, a couple cans of fire roasted and rotel tomatoes, frozen mixed vegetables, cabbage, taco, Italian, and lemon pepper seasoning besides onion, garlic, and plenty of peppers. Used some btb last week. Experimenting with omitting it this time since last week’s batch was a little salty. Added two cans of pinto beans this time. I’m trying to start cooking more whole grains and plan on adding some to the bowl at mealtime. Very filling and good both warm and cold. Very useful for using up leftovers and vegetables which need to be used up.

  139. I substituted the frozen green beans and used fresh snow pea pods, delush

  140. This is a wonderful recipe. My fiance made it today. I had major surgery on March 31 and many of my lifestyle habits required change. Very tasty and filling.

  141. This soup is the “Bomb” I used a 28oz. can of crushed San Marino tomatoes, 14oz can diced tomatoes and 8oz of tomato sauce also added 1 cup of beef broth with the vegetables broth, it’s really so good one bowl of it won’t do. Per instructions be careful when adding salt it doesn’t need much.

  142. This came out so amazing! It really tastes like a cheat meal! Yum!!

  143. This reminds me of my mom’s vegetable soup, only she used tomato juice instead of the tomato sauce and canned tomatoes combination. She also shreds the cabbage thinner, adds in corn and lima beans (maybe something else?), and doesn’t use green pepper. Oh, and she uses chicken broth and seasons only with salt and pepper. Despite those changes, there’s a pretty similar taste. I guess vegetable soup is pretty versatile and most veggies can be tossed in based on what you have!
    I LOVE the tangy spice of hot sauce so I also add a few dashes to the top of each bowl (both soups). :) And I added a little beef bouillon to this one because I ran out of vegetable broth. Healthy and filling!

  144. Any thoughts on throwing in some diced red potatoes? How would that alter the cook time? Thanks!

    1. As long as they aren’t huge chunks I feel like they should soften within the time that this soup simmers. If not, just let it simmer a bit longer. It won’t hurt this fool-proof soup. :)

  145. Can someone tell me how many calories per serving there is?

    1. About 110 per serving which is 1/8 of the recipe. Potentially less because I think I overestimated when entering it into MFP. it is very healthy and filling and you don’t feel guilty having more than one serving

  146. I just made this soup and it is killer. Take the few minutes to make this dish. You won’t be disappointed. I’m headed back for my third bowl. Enjoy!

  147. I loved this recipe. So easy, healthy, satisfying and cheap! The seasonings really make it a tasty soup. A few variations- used petite chopped tomatoes, no celery (don’t like celery), and red pepper instead of green. I added about a tablespoon each of kosher salt, sugar, and lemon juice. Also used vegetable ‘better than bouillon’. Next time I might add some corn.

  148. We just made two pots and it is delicious. The lemon juice gave it extra zing to. Thanks for sharing. Sonya and Jeff

  149. My whole family loves this! We swapped out the green beans for Portobello mushrooms. The smoked paprika really makes it so I went heavier with it, and added a dash of red pepper flakes (no lemon juice). I basically threw everything through the food processor so it took no time to make, putting in the cabbage absolute last. Now my picky 7yr old is on his 2nd bowl, and my 4yr old is tucking in. Thanks for posting this awesome cabbage tomato soup recipe!

  150. Enjoyed this soup a lot, thanks.

    I froze a small portion of the soup to see how well it would handle being frozen, and I was happy to find it just as good after being frozen.

  151. Please send me a simple recipe for cabbage soup with vegetables in in it it

  152. I made this for dinner tonight. I am having a bowl right now. It is delicious. I sprinkled some Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese in to my bowl of soup.
    I didn’t add the lemon juice. Is there a special reason to add the lemon juice or is it for flavor only?

    I love your idea of chopping the carrots and celery and freezing them! Great idea.
    Thank you for posting this recipe!

  153. Wow packed with flavor. I was surprised, I really thought it might be bland but tried it anyway. I used zucchini instead of green beans because I already had some that needed used up. I was skeptical about using Lemmon but I followed the recipe except the zucchini and this is a flavor packed soup that I will make again…Thank you

  154. Great recipe! I used fire-roasted tomatoes, and threw a little kale in there for a little extra nutrients.

  155. This soup is so good that I’m about to make it for the third time in a row. Thanks for another winner!

  156. I love cabbage soup my grandpa made it ,when we all when to visit. Love it!!!!!

  157. My boyfriend, who isn’t a big fan of veggies, loved this soup. I added a can of navy beans for some extra protein and it worked quite well. I would definitely make it again.

  158. I appreciate you re-framing this soup from a “cleanse” food to what it is–a delicious veggie soup! Yum! I added a little ground turkey and some avocado on top for some healthy fats. Thank you for the recipe!

  159. This is really amazing, I not Fine Cook but your recipe seem easy and I know I can do it. Thank you, admin :)

  160. Excellent! I’m about to make this for the second week in a row. Thanks!

  161. Make this for diner today. Yet another keeper from Beth. It will be added to my meal rotation.

  162. I enjoyed this soup all week. The flavors were so amazing!! I added a little quinoa while it was cooking to amp up the protein. I had 2 big bowls for lunch each day. It was totally delicious. Another hit! Thank you!!!

  163. Made this tonight and it was awesome. I used beef better than bullion for the broth instead of vegetable just because I already had it on hand , but the tomato sauce definitely made it a savory vegetable flavored broth. This blog is awesome and every recipe I’ve tried off of here has been a hit. Just goes to show you can make great meals while still on a budget and don’t always have to hit Mc D’s.

  164. Really good! I made a few tweaks based on what I did/didn’t have, but this recipe, as so many others on this site, lend themselves to some flexibility. Didn’t have bell pepper or green beans, but I added kidney beans and some diced potatoes that absoluely needed to be cooked. I increased the spices due to the added starch and it turned out great. This is my third recipe to try here and all have been terrific – I’m loving these vegetarian dishes!

  165. Loved it! I subbed out the fresh parsley for the leafy carrot tops to cut down on waste, and it came out really good!

    1. Without having tried it, I would guess you could just put everything in the pot and then use the “soup” function.

  166. This was really good! I made it as written except with beef broth. Feels good to get all my veggies in.

  167. This is an old standby here! I’ve always called it “Free Soup,” in reference to that diet program with the Points system — when one is on that plan, “free” foods are everything! I like the flavor that v8 gives, and I often add a dash of Tabasco in my bowl. I’ve added kidney beans and small pasta to make it a heartier minestrone soup that will satisfy the whole family, too. Thanks for the reminder — I’m adding Free Soup to the menu next week!

  168. I made this tonight as part of a week’s worth of budget bytes meals (writers have to eat too, you know). I didn’t buy lemon or parsley to save money, but I should’ve. I’ll probably buy some tomorrow to add to the leftovers. I can tell the soup would be better and brighter with them. It’s still fantastic, though, and it came out to just around 100 calories for a 2-cup serving, according to My Fitness Pal! What more could I want (besides six or seven pounds of good cheese and some chocolate cake)?

  169. This is amazing!!! I used a whole head of cabbage (mine was on the small side) and I’m on my second bowl! I also used canned green beans (all I had), rinsed them and tossed them in. Other than that, everything stayed the same. Thank you so much :)

  170. Would the tomato sauce to V8 juice just be a one to one substitution? I have some leftover from making your chipotle chicken chili (delicious by the way!)

  171. What I love about this soup is that it is truly customizable. Sometimes I add frozen corn, sometimes no tomatoes, sometimes leftover meat, as suggested above. The easiest version I have ever made is a bag of coleslaw mix, a bag of frozen mixed veggies, big teaspoon of better than bouillon, and a couple packets of dried onion soup mix. It’s nothing like the homemade version above, but it fed me for days and kept me full.

  172. I make a very similar soup except I add a tablespoon or so of sugar. It gives it that delicious sweet ‘n’ sour flavor liked stuffed cabbage often has. Try a tiny bit of sugar in a bowl of soup and see if you like it!

    1. I’m not a big fan of tomatoes and I find tomato based stuff too acidic for me, so I add brown sugar to most everything I make with tomatoes or tomato sauce because I find it cuts some of the acid but usually doesn’t add too much sweetness, though there is some sweetness. So if you try this and regular sugar doesn’t do it for you, try brown sugar.

  173. Any thoughts on using Better Than Bouillon beef stock vs vegetable stock…. or even chicken stock? I already have both in my fridge, but alas not the veggie version. Thanks!

  174. I so want to make this. i am going to add some white beans and pasta and called minestrone

  175. I always called this Weight Watcher Soup. You have more spices which I love. I used French Style Green Beans instead of regular green beans.

  176. I used to love cabbage soup and had forgotten all about it! Made this tonight and it was amazing. I followed the recipe to the letter—scrumptious!

  177. I made this tonight, except I added ground meat because the guys in my family can’t do without their meat! I bought cheap ground meat, browned it, then skimmed the fat. It made such a delightful, bowl of comfort food that I didn’t feel guilty eating! Being from Louisiana, we added dashes of Tabasco to the steaming bowls, which brought it to another level of flavorful. Thanks for reminding us of this classic!

  178. This is so delicious! My very picky vegan kid devoured it and, like you, came back for seconds.

  179. This does look tasty!

    Do you think that prepping this soup in the morning and letting it cook all day on high in a slow cooker would work?

    1. Yes, that would probably work! The vegetables might break down a bit, but that would just create a nice thick broth!

  180. This looks so great and easy! I can’t wait to make it!

  181. Does this cook well in a crockpot? How long would you cook it on low? It looks wonderful!

  182. I’m currently doing a 21 day fast and decided to make this and omg. I’m not a fan of vegetable soups but I love cabbage so I decided to try it. I subbed in half a tbsp of dried parsley because I didn’t have fresh. It’s delicious and I can fill up on it without worrying about being hungry later.

  183. Can I toss the extra 1/2 head of cabbage in with the celery and carrots to freeze? Does it freeze well?

    1. I think it freezes fine. I made a batch of a very similar cabbage soup several weeks (a couple of months?) ago and froze portions in ziploc jars. I ate the last jar just yesterday and it was delicious.

      I was also planning on making more this week, so this recipe is very timely! Can’t wait to try this version!

    1. No, I just freeze them as is and try to use them up within a few months.

  184. Good idea on freezing the other half of the celery and carrots! I too often have to throw out some celery due to going bad between recipes!

    1. I think green cabbage is a better option here because the red cabbage will give the soup a very “off” color. :)

  185. I had nearly forgotten this old standby–it was a budget classic at our house for years. One of the best things about this particular soup is that you can do a lot of substitution, and even personalize part of it. I like just the veggies in mine, but i can put a 12 oz serving of the finished soup in an extra pan for my husband who enjoys a bite of meat in his soup–diced leftover steak carried home from a restaurant, a bit of browned burger meat, sliced kielbasa, a little chicken, a lonely pork chop diced or sliced, or just about anything else left over in the fridge. I couldn’t resist making up a pot for supper and leftovers for the freezer.

    1. Oh, what a great idea, Janet. I’m single and I’m always looking for dishes that I can have ready for what may come up or that I may have on hand. Often I like to have just a little meat and get tired of just having it on a plate or sandwich This soup would be a great vehicle.

  186. I think I remember using V8 juice for some of the liquid. It tasted fine. Kind of cabbage soup cum gazpacho….. As long as it tastes good to you, throw it in to the pot.

  187. Bingo! I had forgotten about this classic recipe, Beth. I’m glad to have one recipe for it which I know where to find. Now, I know what to make with the frozen vegetables which are taking up WAY too much room in my teeny, weeny freezer. The beauty of vegetable soups and chilis, like this and many others is that you can put in whatever you like in whatever quanties you like. So easy to forget the classics.

    1. The old rule of thumb is that you use one half to one third as much dried as fresh. In other words, you’d use one to one and a half teaspoon dried if the recipe calls for one tablespoon of fresh. I would season to taste, however, especially since they say dried parsley is not very flavorful.

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