I hate using the term “diet”, so let’s just say that ever since I got back from vacation I’ve been focusing on healthy lifestyle choices. I’m trying to focus (again) on increasing my vegetable intake and reducing my dependency on simple carbs. Judging by my Pinterest feed, it’s suddenly time for all-things-fall, so I thought a nice basic vegetable soup was in order. I wanted something classic and simple, like the kind you get out of a can, but homemade. Since I’ve also been hitting it hard at the gym lately, I knew I was going to need a little extra protein in the soup, and that’s how this became a Garden Vegetable Quinoa Soup.
What is Quinoa?
Quinoa is technically a seed, but it cooks up a lot like a grain, which makes it very versatile. It’s higher in fiber and protein than rice, which makes it a great alternative if you’re trying to swap out those simple carbs. Quinoa can be pricey, so I like to use it in recipes like this soup where it’s balanced with lesser expensive ingredients, like the carrots, celery, spinach, and tomatoes in this soup.
Substitutions for Quinoa
If you’re not into quinoa, you can try another grain like pearled barley, or even pasta (orzo or couscous), or rice. Just be aware that the cooking time for other grains, pasta, and rice will not be the same as the quinoa.
How to Store Your Garden Vegetable Quinoa Soup
This Garden Vegetable Quinoa Soup will freeze great, so don’t be frightened by the 10 cup yield! That just makes it great for your weekly meal prep. Make a huge batch, stash 4-5 portions in the fridge for the week ahead and then freeze the remaining portions for the future when you’re running low on funds or time to cook.
P.S. Serve this soup with a couple slices of garlic bread, which you can also keep in the freezer, and you’ll be in fall soup heaven!
Garden Vegetable Quinoa Soup
Ingredients
- 1 Tbsp olive oil ($0.11)
- 1 yellow onion ($0.25)
- 4 cloves garlic ($0.32)
- 3 carrots ($0.32)
- 3 ribs celery ($0.44)
- 1 15oz. can kidney beans ($0.69)
- 1 15oz. can fire roasted diced tomatoes ($1.35)
- 1/2 tsp dried basil ($0.05)
- 1 tsp dried oregano ($0.10)
- 1/2 tsp smoked paprika ($0.05)
- Freshly cracked black pepper ($0.05)
- 1 cup quinoa, uncooked ($1.97)
- 4 cups vegetable broth* ($0.54)
- 2 cups water ($0.00)
- 1/4 lb. frozen spinach ($0.40)
Instructions
- Mince the garlic and dice the onion. Add the olive oil, garlic, and onion to a large pot and sauté over medium-low heat until the onions are soft and transparent.
- While the garlic and onion are cooking, wash and peel the carrots, then slice into 1/4-inch thick rounds. Wash the celery and slice into 1/4-inch pieces. Add the carrots and celery to the pot and continue to sauté until they just begin to soften (about 5 minutes).
- While the carrots and celery are cooking, rinse the quinoa well with cool running water in a wire mesh sieve. Drain and rinse the kidney beans. Add the quinoa, kidney beans, diced tomatoes (with juices), basil, oregano, smoked paprika, and some freshly cracked pepper (about 20 cranks of a pepper mill) to the pot.
- Add the vegetable broth and water to the pot, place a lid on top, and turn the heat up to medium-high. Allow the pot to come to a boil, then turn the heat down to low and let simmer for 25 minutes (make sure it’s simmering the entire time, turning the heat up just slightly if it stops).
- After simmering for 25 minutes the quinoa should be slightly translucent and tender. If not, let simmer a few minutes longer. Stir in 1/4 lb. of frozen spinach until heated through. Taste the soup and add salt or adjust the seasonings if necessary. Serve hot.
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Notes
Nutrition
Scroll down to see the step by step photos!
How to Make Garden Vegetable Quinoa Soup – Step by Step Photos
Begin by mincing four cloves of garlic and dicing one yellow onion. Add both to a large pot along with 1 Tbsp olive oil. Sauté the onion and garlic over medium-low heat until the onions are transparent.
While the onion and garlic are cooking, wash and peel three carrots. Slice the carrots into 1/4-inch rounds. Wash three ribs of celery and slice into 1/4-inch pieces. Add the carrot and celery to the pot and continue to sauté until just slightly tender (about 5 minutes).
While the carrots and celery are cooking, rinse 1 cup quinoa really well with cool water. This step is very important because quinoa has a natural substance on the surface that tastes kind of bitter. Since the quinoa are very small, you’ll want to do this in a fine wire mesh sieve.
Add the rinsed quinoa, a 15oz. can of kidney beans (drained and rinsed as well), 15oz. can of fire roasted diced tomatoes (WITH juices), 1 tsp dried oregano, 1/2 tsp dried basil, 1/2 tsp smoked paprika, and some freshly cracked pepper (maybe 20 cranks of a pepper mill).
Finally, add four cups of vegetable broth and 2 cups of water. Stir to combine. I use Better Than Bouillon base to make my broth, which usually has enough salt to season my entire soup. If using a low sodium or less flavorful broth, you may want a pinch of salt at the end of the soup. Adding salt at the end of a dish often gives a bigger flavor punch with less salt than salting earlier at the beginning.
Place a lid on the pot and turn the heat up to medium-high. Let the pot come up to a boil, then reduce the heat to low and let simmer for 25 minutes. Make sure it’s simmering the whole time. After 25 minutes, the quinoa should be tender and slightly translucent.
Now pour in about 1/4 lb. of frozen spinach and stir until the spinach has melted. The residual heat from the soup should be plenty to thaw the spinach. I like to add the spinach at the very end like this so that it doesn’t over cook and the color stays vibrant and green (instead of an icky dark olive color).
And that’s it! Easy vegetable filled goodness right there. As always, you should taste the finished product and adjust the salt or other seasonings to your liking (everyone’s taste buds are different!). As for me, I liked it just the way it was.
It’s just screaming “GARLIC TOAST!” isn’t it? I don’t know how I forgot to pick up a baguette at the store. *sigh*
I still have some queso fresco left over in my fridge so I sprinkled a little of that on top of my Garden Vegetable Quinoa Soup, but honestly it didn’t add much. The soup had enough flavor going on on its own! #win
Made this last night and it was very good.
Didn’t have canned tomatoes so I added some tomato paste and used a white bean. Other then that I made it as noted. Will be making it again. Thank you for the recipe.
Made this and loved it! Random note, this is FANTASTIC with ramen noodles! Like the cheap 25¢ kind. Just put the uncooked noodles in a bowl (throw away the cheap flavor pack), add the soup, then microwave for approx 1 and 1/2 minutes (depending on your microwave strength)! If the noodles are still sticking together just let the bowl sit for a minute or two more. The noodles absorb all the wonderful flavors and give you a little change up if you make large portions to eat over several days. Anyway, love the recipe and will definitely make again in the future!
This might be my favorite soup! I used green beans instead of celery because that’s what I had on hand, and added 1 tsp more salt and 1/2 tsp red pepper flakes to make it spicy. I eat it with a handful of crushed up tortilla chips and a dollop of sour cream. I also added an extra cup of water to thin it out a little bit. I split this into 6 big servings to eat for lunch and just move one from the freezer to the fridge the night before to thaw it a bit. Pop it in the microwave for a couple minutes and you’re good to go. This is going into my monthly meal prep rotation for sure!
Delicious, nutritious, and filling! I made a few small tweaks: I added 2 small parsnips with the celery and carrots, I used chicken stock instead of vegetable, and instead of kale I added frozen green beans and frozen peas. The quinoa turned out perfectly. Yes, the soup is thick, but as it’s getting colder a nice thick soup is exactly what I was looking for. Looking forward to eating the leftovers.
Bland vegetable soup with too much quinoa. I added bay leaf, thyme, tomato paste and more bouillon to make it palatable. Disappointed to be disappointed.
Cant please everybody, I always ‘adjust’ the ingredients and never make exactly the same twice.. I like low salt so this was perfect even with low sodium broth
Horrible. I would not add more than a quarter cup of quinoa. I agree the result was way too thick and bland. Give this one a pass.
Dean. Sept 30 2020
Not a big fan of this one. Like someone else mentioned the end result is very thick and almost more of a stew consistency. It also didn’t have much flavor IMO, and I did use the Better than Bouillon vegetable broth and added quite a bit of salt. I doubled the seasonings and added more bouillon at the end and it was still kind of bland. Maybe I’m just not a vegetable soup person. At least it made me feel healthy.
I added 28 oz of diced tomatoes instead and it should make it thinner and more soupy
Delish! Didn’t have spinach and still good. Husband added vinegar based hot sauce and was very pleased.
Awesome soup! So tasty and so nutritious
Thank you Deborah!
This is my favorite soup and I make it several times a year! Very tasty and filling, and my body feels so great after.
I usually use chicken broth and add a bit more quinoa, carrots and celery for extra goodies. So good.
I love this soup, it’s always a hit. One thing that always confuses me is that I end up needing to double the amount of liquid because the quinoa makes it so thick. It’s almost resembles a thick vegan chili without doubling the liquid (it still delicious and no complaints!) Is there a certain variety of quinoa that you use?
I didn’t use any special quinoa, and mine was fairly thick, although not quite like chili. It’s never a bad idea to adjust recipes to fit your needs, so adding more broth is a good fix. :)
Great Recipe!! My family loved it. I saw a few people commenting about the calories so here is what I use.
I found this Recipe Calorie counter, and I copy pasted the ingredients she used. This is what it came up with. Here is
the link: https://www.verywellfit.com/recipe-nutrition-analyzer-4157076
Nutrition Facts
Servings: 8
Amount per serving
Calories 194
% Daily Value*
Total Fat 4.2g 5%
Saturated Fat 0.7g 3%
Cholesterol 0mg 0%
Sodium 703mg 31%
Total Carbohydrate 29.6g 11%
Dietary Fiber 6.7g 24%
Total Sugars 4.6g
Protein 9.6g
Vitamin D 0mcg 0%
Calcium 80mg 6%
Iron 3mg 16%
Potassium 686mg 15%
*The % Daily Value (DV) tells you how much a nutrient in a food serving contributes to a daily diet. 2,000 calorie a day is used for general nutrition advice.
Recipe analyzed by
I love, love, love this soup. It’s a really yummy way to use up the vegetables in your fridge at the end of the week. It’s also a great soup for warm or cold weather. Thanks so much Beth!!
Wow, what a simple, tasty soup! I threw some chilli flakes on top. Will for sure make again.
Overall, I really liked this recipe. It was healthy and filling and an actual one pot meal that was very easy to throw together. Also, once I added some Parmesan cheese and SALT, it was very flavorful. I don’t use Better than Bouillon because it has MSG (hidden in the hydrolyzed soy protein) and in general is full of chemicals. Therefore, in order to really make this soup delicious, you really have to add a good Tbsp of salt. Will definitely be making this again!
I use Seitenacher Vegetable Broth and Seasoning powder. It’s great in so many things, not too salty and all natural.
I made a double batch of this soup, since I needed something to take to a mom friend with a new baby. I had to sub some things because of what we had on hand – chickpeas for the beans. Also added zucchini, yellow squash, and a half a green pepper (cleaning out the fridge). My tomatoes weren’t fire roasted, but I’m not sure I would’ve noticed. Completely forgot the spinach, but I had the green from the zuc and pepper. Made 4 large quarts, plus a big Pyrex plus a half dozen bowls to eat. Makes a lot, and seems to get better in fridge everyday! Thanks for the recipe!
Happy to hear it Tracy! I love when you use what you have on hand, makes it even better! Congrats to your friend!
Any MSG in Better than Boullion is probably from the hydrolized soy protein–it’s a natural byproduct of the (hydrolyzing) process. As a natural by-product, any MSG does not need to be listed.
Really enjoyed this but I was wondering if you knew the calories per serving?
No, I’m sorry, I don’t have a reliable source for the nutrition information.