Hot and Sour Soup with Tofu

$6.72 recipe / $1.12 serving
by Beth Moncel
4.85 from 45 votes
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So, I actually made this Hot and Sour Soup last week, but got so busy with Thanksgiving madness that I didn’t have a chance to post it until today. But that’s okay, I figure you might need this recipe now, when you’re stuffed to the brim and maybe looking for something a little on the lighter side.

Overhead view of a pot full of hot and sour soup with colorful vegetables and cubes of tofu. A wooden spoon in the center.

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What is Hot and Sour Soup?

You may recognize hot and sour soup from your neighborhood Chinese take out menu. It’s a really flavorful soup with a tangy broth that isn’t too heavy or thick. I added some cubed tofu to the broth to give my soup a little more substance, then ladled it all over a bowl full of colorful vegetables. This is one of those awesome dishes that is not only really delicious, but you feel awesome about eating it because you just know it’s full of all sorts of “good for you” things. I love that.

What Makes Hot and Sour Soup Sour?

The sourness of the hot and sour soup comes from vinegar. The sour flavor helps keep this soup light, even though hot soup usually sits heavy on the stomach. It’s also a nice contrast to the spicy red chile sauce. 

Serving Options

There are two options for serving this soup. Ladle the hot broth over the vegetables and let them slightly wilt from the heat, or stir the vegetables right into the pot of hot broth and let them cook until tender. The first option (ladling broth over vegetables) makes the best presentation, but if you’re not into slightly crisp, only lightly blanched vegetables, you might not like this option as much.

Cooking the vegetables in the broth makes them softer, but you will lose some of the vibrant color. And, as I found, while the soup sits in your fridge, the pretty purple from the cabbage bleeds out into the broth and then up into the tofu. It’s really kind of funny looking to see violet tofu cubes in your soup, but I promise the flavor is not compromised. :)

Overhead view of a bowl full of hot and sour soup with vegetables and cubed tofu, chili garlic sauce in the center of the bowl
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Easy Hot and Sour Soup with Vegetables and Tofu

4.85 from 45 votes
This easy hot and sour soup is light on the stomach, but big on flavor! The spicy and tangy broth is full of colorful vegetables and tender cubes of tofu.
Author: Beth Moncel
A bowl of hot and sour vegetable soup with herbs with a spoon.
Servings 6
Prep 20 minutes
Cook 15 minutes
Total 35 minutes

Ingredients

  • 1 Tbsp canola oil ($0.04)
  • 1 Tbsp grated fresh ginger ($0.11)
  • 4 green onions ($0.50)
  • 1/4 red cabbage ($0.50)
  • 3 carrots ( $0.26)
  • 8 oz. button mushrooms ($1.99)
  • 6 cups vegetable broth ($0.75)
  • 1/2 Tbsp soy sauce (or more to taste) ($0.05)
  • 1.5-2 Tbsp rice vinegar ( $0.19)
  • 1 Tbsp chili garlic sauce or sambal olek ( $0.34)
  • 14 oz. block extra firm tofu ($1.99)
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Instructions 

  • Thinly slice the cabbage, mushrooms, and the green onions (both the green and white ends of the onions). Peel the carrots, then either slice them thinly, use a vegetable peeler to slice them into ribbons, or cut them into thin sticks (julienne).
  • Add the canola oil, grated ginger, and the sliced white ends of the green onion to a large pot. Sauté the ginger and onion over medium heat until soft (1-2 minutes). Add the vegetable broth to the pot, along with the soy sauce, vinegar, and chili garlic sauce. The amount of soy sauce, vinegar, and chili garlic sauce needed may be subjective and will depend on how much salt your vegetable broth contains. Start with a smaller amount of each, then add more to your taste. The final broth should be tangy and spicy. Heat the broth until piping hot.
  • Drain the tofu, then cut it into small cubes (small enough to fit on a spoon). Add the tofu to the hot broth, and allow it to heat through ( a few minutes).
  • Either add the sliced vegetables to the soup pot and cook until softened, or divide the vegetables into individual bowls for serving, then spoon the hot broth over top. Sprinkle the sliced green portion of the green onions over each bow. More chili garlic sauce can also be added to each bowl if desired.

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Nutrition

Serving: 1ServingCalories: 131.5kcalCarbohydrates: 13.05gProtein: 9.12gFat: 5.72gSodium: 1068mgFiber: 3.28g
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Scroll down to see the step by step photos!

Front view of a shallow bowl of vegetables and tofu with hot and sour soup broth

How to Make Hot and Sour Soup – Step by Step Photos

Vegetables for Soup - mushrooms, red cabbage, carrot and green onion

Begin by prepping all of the vegetables. I used 1/4 head red cabbage (STILL trying to use up that cabbage weeks later!), an 8oz. container of button mushrooms, about 4 green onions, and a few carrots.

Sliced Vegetables on a cutting board

Thinly slice the cabbage, mushrooms, and green onions (you’ll be using both the green and white ends of the green onions at different points, so keep them separated). You can either cut the carrots into very thin sticks (julienne), or use a vegetable peeler to make thin ribbons (or hey, use a spiralizer!).

Knob of ginger on a grater

Grate about 1 Tbsp of fresh ginger, as well. I keep this little knob of ginger in my freezer and it really does make it SO much easier to grate. No stringy stuff clogging up the grater! :D

Green onion and ginger in a soup pot with a wooden spoon.

Add the white portion of the sliced green onions and the grated ginger to a large soup pot along with 1 Tbsp canola oil. Sauté the onion and ginger over medium heat until soft (about one or two minutes).

Better Than Bouillon soup base jar

Add six cups of vegetable broth. I use Better Than Bouillon concentrate to make my broth. 1 tsp BTB + 1 cup water = 1 cup broth.

Rice Vinegar bottle

To the broth you’ll want to add about 1/2 Tbsp soy sauce (depending on how salty your broth already is), and 1.5 to 2 Tbsp of rice vinegar. Rice vinegar has a very mild flavor, but still has that nice tangy-sour effect. I like mine pretty sour, so I added 2 Tbsp of vinegar, but if you’re unsure, start with a smaller amount and add more until you get the broth where you like it.

Chili Garlic Sauce bottle

For the hot component of the “hot and sour” broth, I used 1 Tbsp chili garlic sauce. You could also use sambal olek or even sriracha. If you don’t want your soup spicy at all, just leave it out.

Hot and Sour soup broth in the soup pot, a wooden spoon sitting on the edge

Once you have the broth hot and sour to your liking, let it heat through until it’s piping hot.

Tofu Package

Take one 14oz. block of extra firm tofu and drain the liquid from the package.

Diced Tofu

Cut the tofu into small cubes. You want the cubes small enough to fit on a soup spoon. I ended up making the rest of my cubes a bit smaller than the cubes shown above.

Tofu added to broth in the soup pot

Finally, add the tofu cubes to the hot broth and let them warm through. They’ll absorb some of that super flavorful broth and get nice and tasty. At this point, you can add all of your sliced vegetables to the pot and let them get nice and tender, or…

Sliced fresh vegetables in Bowl

Divide the sliced vegetables into individual bowls, and…

Broth being ladled over vegetables in the soup bowl

Pour the hot broth right over the thinly sliced vegetables. The hot broth will soften the vegetables just a bit, leaving you with a very fresh and tasty soup.

Overhead view of a bowl full of hot and sour soup with vegetables and tofu. Garnished with a dab of chili garlic sauce.

Sprinkle a few of the sliced green onions over top and add more chili garlic sauce if you like it super hot!

A soup pot full of hot and sour soup with cubed tofu and vegetables, a wooden spoon in the center.

Or, just add all the vegetable to the pot and let them cook a little. Cooked red cabbage does lose it’s nice vibrant color, so just keep in mind that it won’t be quite as pretty this way (but still just as delicious!).

If you find you have more sliced vegetables than you can use in the soup, switch it up one night and make them into a quick stir fry! Or, add them into your Dragon Noodles. :)

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  1. This was DELICIOUS! But mix a little cornstarch into a little warm water and pour it in at the end for that perfect thickened Chinese restaurant texture where nothing sinks to the bottom. I also whisked in egg before this step. I love your recipes, thank you! ย 

  2. As I have a daughter with thyroid problems and is unable to have soy in her food, what can I use to replace the tofu? She and I would love to try this soup, but because of the soy problem, please suggest if it can be left out or if there is possibly something I can put in it instead. Many thanks.

    1. I would probably just make it a hot and sour vegetable soup and leave the tofu out.

  3. Really enjoyable, many thanks. I prepared the broth to taste, your ingredients for this were spot on and than added peas carrots and extra firm tofu.

  4. Tried this today–quick, easy and really good. It did replicate the taste of restaurant hot and sour soup.
    I doubled the ginger, chili sauce, and vinegar as others suggested. I’ll be making this again!
    I haven’t found a recipe on this site I didn’t love.

  5. I made this recipe over the weekend and followed the instructions to the letter, only adding a little more chili sauce for personal preference. The soup turned out very delicious and is very light yet filling (as promised!) I could not be happier with this recipe and will definitely be making again. Thanks so much for sharing!

  6. Oh my gosh, this soup was SO good! My boyfriend made it for dinner last night and the presentation was amazing along with the flavor. The subtle spice from the chili really made it great, and the ginger flavor was so fresh and yummy. I have printed this recipe out and will be definitely making it in the future! YUM!

  7. That was freaking delicious! All my family enjoyed it so much that we printed it out and added to our weekly menu

  8. Question about refrigerating this soup: I like the crispy, raw vegetables with the broth poured on top. Does it make sense to store the vegetables and broth separately, and pour the broth on top of each serving? Or will the chopped veggies just get wilted and gnarly in the fridge. I’ll probably try it and see, but wanted to know what you’d do!

    I loooove this wonderful soup, btw. Thanks for the great recipe, like so many others!

    1. I think storing them separately is your best bet. They shouldn’t get too wilted on their own, definitely less so than if they were in the soup. :)

  9. I made yesterday the Halusky noodles, my family enjoyed and eat it all..ย 
    for fasting season is a great place to find good ideas how to eat different flavors o making easy and fast healthy food.

  10. This was an easy, tasty way for me to use up some ingredients and really hit the spot on this cold, winter day. My nose was running but I felt like I did my body some good with those veggies and broth! I’m ridiculous so I sprinkled some fried onions on top. Yum. Thanks for posting this!

  11. I just made this soup for about the third time. We had it on the first cold, rainy day of fall here in New England, and it was absolutely perfect! I love how easy and comforting this recipe is. I’m considering making extra batches of the broth so I can freeze it and have it on hand for all of the cold, dreary days ahead.

  12. Would this still taste good if I use chicken broth instead of veggie broth? Thanks!

  13. So delicious! Just tried this dish for the first time, but I’ve tried many of your other recipes. I appreciate the cost estimations, and the delicious ideas! This one is a winner I’m keeping for a cold winter day when I need some comfort, or just something delicious! I followed to a T except added some boiled wontons. thanks!