Comfort in a Bowl: Our Best Soup and Stew Recipes for the Cold Months (2024)

These soul-satisfying dishes are just the food you need for chilly nights.

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Comfort in a Bowl: Our Best Soup and Stew Recipes for the Cold Months (1)

Some say casseroles are the ultimate comfort food, but we don't agree. If you ask us, there's nothing more comforting than digging into a bowl of soup or a plate of stew. The soups, stews, curries, and chilis in this collection are a mix of old classics and brand-new recipes, and they're all the types of dishes that you'll want to make on repeat when the weather turns cool. Before you start cooking, be sure to pull out your colorful enameled cast iron Dutch oven or a hand-me-down cowboy kettle—you'll need a generously sized pot to make warm memories and delicious meals like these soups and stews.

Ranging from vibrant and vegan to rich and meaty, these dishes will ward off the chill of autumn and warm you up on even the most freezing days of winter; and no matter the weather, you'll find that they always satisfy the soul. What's more, many are economical, too, relying on more affordable cuts of meat that benefit from cooking low and slow and budget-friendly pulses and vegetables. The Kitchen Sink Chicken Stew that you see right here is adaptable, which means you can use up pretty much whatever produce you find in your crisper drawer or root cellar while you make it.

Beef stew is a stick-to-your-ribs favorite, and you'll find our test kitchen's ultimate version in this collection. There's also a delicious beefy soup with pumpkin and shiitake mushrooms that's less expected but perhaps even more craveable. Fish stews and soups take less time to cook than their meaty counterparts, but are equally tasty and comforting, as our White-Fish Stew with Dumplings and a velvety take on avgolemono, the egg-lemon-rice soup, that's made with cod fillets, prove. Vegetarians and vegans are not forgotten here, either: Look out for Lentil Stew that's creamy but dairy free. The secret ingredient is coconut milk and it makes an irresistible broth.

Next time you think that winter is too long, just consider it provides you more opportunity to enjoy these favorite stews and soups.

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Normandy-Style Pork Stew

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Apples and pork are a classic pairing and a favorite combination in the French region of Normandy that's the inspiration for this richly flavored one-pot meal. We use inexpensive pork shoulder and dry-style cider, which is popular in the region, rather than the fruit for this slow-cooked stew.

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Creamy Lentil Stew

Comfort in a Bowl: Our Best Soup and Stew Recipes for the Cold Months (3)

Colorful, comforting, and vegan, this lentil stew relies on coconut milk as the base of the delicious broth.

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Red Chicken Pozole

Comfort in a Bowl: Our Best Soup and Stew Recipes for the Cold Months (4)

Hominy provides a satisfying chew in this chile-spiked chicken stew. Fiery anchos and guajillos flavor the liquid in which chicken legs cook. Keep the drumsticks intact but shred the thigh meat to stir into the pozole for serving. We love it with tostadas, shredded cabbage, cilantro, and limes.

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Beef, Pumpkin, and Shiitake Soup

Comfort in a Bowl: Our Best Soup and Stew Recipes for the Cold Months (5)

Use beef chuck, neck bones, or oxtail to make this soup—any of these thrifty beef cuts will work. The rest of the soup is loaded with pumpkin, shiitakes, and savoy cabbage. A splash of fish sauce finishes this meal in a bowl.

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Fish-Soup Avgolemono

Comfort in a Bowl: Our Best Soup and Stew Recipes for the Cold Months (6)

If you're familiar with avgolemono, you'll know versions of this egg-lemon-rice soup are found all the way from the Sephardic diaspora through Greece, Arabia, Italy, Turkey, and the Balkans. The classic fish versions of the soup use a whole fish and debone it after steaming, but we went the easy route here by using cod or halibut fillets.

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Corn, Watercress, and Potato Soup

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And the prize for the brightest bowl goes to this gorgeous green elixir. It's an upgrade on the traditional potato and watercress combo which often has dairy. This vegan take gets umami from miso and brights from a dash of apple cider vinegar.

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Classic Beef Stew

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It's a classic for good reason! Cubes of beef chuck are simmered until fall-apart-tender in broth flavored with punchy aromatics like tomato paste, Worcestershire sauce, red wine, and fire-roasted tomatoes for a subtle smokiness that's oh so spoonable.

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Slow-Cooker Ribollita

Comfort in a Bowl: Our Best Soup and Stew Recipes for the Cold Months (9)

Ribollita is a hearty vegetarian soup that's packed with kale, zucchini, and cranberry beans, then thickened with crusty bread. This is a fabulous set it and forget it recipe: Once the slow cooker has done its work, top with grated cheese for serving. Despite its name which means "reboiled," it's just as delicious on the day it's made as it is reheated.

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Test Kitchen's Favorite Chicken Soup

Comfort in a Bowl: Our Best Soup and Stew Recipes for the Cold Months (10)

There's a lot we love about this chicken soup recipe: It simmers on the stovetop for a few hours, but that time is completely hands-off; a whole chicken imparts tons of flavor; and the final dish is so soothing that it will surely cure what ails you.

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Easy Chile Verde

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We love chile verde for how it transforms pork shoulder with the piquant spice of green chiles. In fact, we love it so much that we created a pressure cooker-version and a stovetop version so there's no reason not to make this hearty pork stew.

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Split-Pea Soup with Spinach and Barley

Comfort in a Bowl: Our Best Soup and Stew Recipes for the Cold Months (12)

Looking for a filling, healthy soup for a cold night? This recipe is for you. Baby spinach makes this wholesome split-pea purée extra verdant. A swirl of plain yogurt to serve brings brightness and a sprinkle of barley gives the make-ahead soup another healthy boost—it contains the soluble fiber beta-glucan, which has been found to do wonders to lower bad cholesterol.

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White-Fish Stew with Dumplings

Comfort in a Bowl: Our Best Soup and Stew Recipes for the Cold Months (13)

An easy one-pot dinner, this fish stew is made cod or halibut, but it's the dumplings, made with biscuit dough, that take it over the top.

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Beef Chili

Comfort in a Bowl: Our Best Soup and Stew Recipes for the Cold Months (14)

Roasted dried chiles, red kidney beans, and cubed sirloin anchor this warming chili that makes a fabulous meal topped with grated cheese, sliced jalapeños, and plenty of sour cream.

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Comfort in a Bowl: Our Best Soup and Stew Recipes for the Cold Months (2024)

FAQs

What is the difference between stew and soup? ›

Soup can be completely liquified or it can consist of other elements (like meat and vegetables) that are fully submerged in water, stock, or broth. Stew, meanwhile, is typically "chunkier." It contains just enough liquid to cover the main ingredients.

What gives vegetable soup that depth of flavor? ›

Dried herbs and seasonings: homemade seasoned salt, black pepper, Italian seasoning, and dried bay leaves lend flavor to the soup.

How to make soup more flavorful? ›

7 Easy Ways to Make Any Soup Better
  1. Brown or Sear the Meat.
  2. Roast the the Veggies.
  3. Mix up the Texture.
  4. Use Homemade Stock Whenever Possible.
  5. Put Your Cheese Rinds to Work.
  6. Perk up a Bland Soup With Simple Pantry Staples.
  7. Add Fresh Herbs or Dairy When Serving.
  8. Recipes Pictured.

How to fix a bland vegetable soup? ›

If a soup is tasting bland in the bowl, consider adding acid rather than salt. A squeeze of lemon or lime, or a dash of yogurt or sour cream can add brightness to the bowl.

Is it better to use stock or broth in soup? ›

As a result, stock is usually a healthier product, delivering a richer mouth feel and deeper flavor than broth. Stock is a versatile culinary tool that can deliver taste to any number of dishes. Darker in color and more concentrated in flavor than broth, it's ideal for use in soups, rice, sauces and more.

Is stew supposed to be thicker than soup? ›

Thickness. Like we've already covered, stew tends to be thicker than soup. While soup is normally made with mostly liquids and some solid foods, stew is essentially the reverse – more solids and less liquid.

What makes a bowl of soup more flavorful? ›

"Ground paprika, turmeric, nutmeg, ground ginger, and other powdered spices add a touch of color and spiciness to broths," she says. As a general rule, use fresh herbs at or near the end of cooking and dried herbs and spices early on. This helps you get the flavors you're looking for in the right balance.

Should you put olive oil in vegetable soup? ›

It's time to ring the changes: out with butter, in with extra-virgin olive oil. Swapping the saturated fats in butter for the (heart-friendly) unsaturated fats in extra-virgin olive oil for tastier, healthier vegetable soup. It's all good, so what are you waiting for!

What is the most important ingredient in soup? ›

For clear, brothy soups, stock is your most important ingredient. If you want to make a good soup, you need to use an excellently flavored stock — otherwise, the entire pot could be tasteless.

How to get depth of flavor in soup? ›

Garlic and roasted onions add depth. Simmering mushrooms down concentrates flavors for mushroom soup. Simmering most vegetables down also adds more concentrated flavors and reduces the water in them. Herbs, salt and pepper also help.

How to make Campbell's soup taste better? ›

Garlic and onions make everything tastier! While the soup is cooking on the stove, sautee onions and garlic, adding them into the soup towards the end of cooking. Or for an aromatic that'll give a refreshing flavor, add chopped ginger into the soup while it's still cooking, stirring it in to blend the flavors together.

What not to put in soup? ›

The Worst Things to Put in Your Soup
  1. By Sara Butler. If there's one good thing about fall and winter, it's soup. ...
  2. Heavy Cream. Heavy cream creates an inviting texture for soups but that's where its positive contributions end. ...
  3. Juice. ...
  4. Turkey Bacon. ...
  5. Cheese. ...
  6. Croutons.

Should you saute onions before adding to soup? ›

While certain vegetables can work just fine added directly to simmering soups and stews (say, carrots and celery), other vegetables (onions, garlic, and the like) will almost always need at least a brief sweat in a fat-based liquid before adding the remaining ingredients.

Can you add Worcestershire sauce to soup? ›

Adding Worcestershire sauce to soups

It will work in a broad range of dishes from your favorite French onion soup to velvety tomato bisque. It definitely does a great job of amping up the meaty flavors of a beef stew as well as giving vegetable soups a flavor lift, too.

At what point does a soup become a stew? ›

A soup could become a stew if cooked long enough that most of the liquid boils off or is absorbed by the ingredients. Or you could add more liquid to a stew to make it soupier.

What is the liquid in stew called? ›

Broth is a thin soup made of the water in which flavor-enhancing ingredients like meat, vegetables, and herbs and spices have been simmered. The liquid is strained after cooking to remove the flavoring ingredients. The broth can be served on its own or used as the base for a heartier soup or stew.

What makes a stew a stew? ›

Another way to look at it: Soup is any combination of ingredients cooked in liquid. Stew is any dish that's prepared by stewing—that is, submerging the ingredients with just enough liquid to cook them through at a simmer in a covered pot for a long time.

Can you turn stew into soup? ›

Leftovers like curries and stews can either be turned into a soup with the addition of tomatoes and stock for a chunky soup, or blended and mixed with coconut or regular milk to turn it into a smooth soup. Almost any vegetable – cooked or raw – can be turned into a soup.

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