My current favourite chicken soup! Creamy broth, juicy little bits of chicken, pasta shells and swirls of spinach with a sprinkle of sun dried tomato I use in place of croutons. Think – under the Tuscan Sun. Except – sweater weather food!
Creamy Tuscan Chicken Soup
Let me just say upfront – I call this Tuscan but there’s nothing authentically Tuscan about it (as far as I know). To me, it has Tuscan vibes, so I gave it a cute name with the hopes to pique your interest. Just in case my photos and writing doesn’t do the job well enough to convince you that you really need to try this creamy chicken soup!!!
In all honesty, I was gazing longingly at my Tuscan Chicken Pasta Bake from my cookbook, trying to muster up the energy to make it. Because that big bubbling pasta bake does require a semi-modest commitment of time to make. Worth it, but sadly, time is not always on my side.
This Tuscan Soup was born from similar ingredients. A faster, soup version of the pasta bake. I hope you fall in love with this soup as much as I have!
Ingredients in Creamy Tuscan Chicken Soup
Those of you who have made the Tuscan Chicken Pasta Bake will recognise most of these ingredients. All the star players are present – sun dried tomato, spinach, chicken, pasta, cream, cheese!
Things in the soup
Here are the things that are bobbing about in the creamy soup broth:
Chicken – I prefer thigh because it’s juicier, has better flavour and is thin enough to cook whole, so no raw meat chopping called for. But breast can be used too. If using chicken breast, slice horizontally into thin steaks to sear. The thick whole breasts are too thick.
Pasta – I use small shells. Any small pasta is fine here. Think – ditalini, small macaroni, risoni/orzo (you’ve got half the packet left from last weeks’ salad, right!?). Anything small enough to be easy to scoop up with a spoon that cooks in around 10 minutes. Broken spaghetti or other long pasta will also work – break into 4cm / 1.5″ pieces.
Sun dried tomato – This is the garnish for this soup! Instead of using croutons, nuts etc. 🙂 Little chewy pops of concentrated savoury tomato flavour with swirls of the red oil from the sun dried tomato jar.
Garlic and onion – Flavour base!
Celery – Vegetable of choice here. I like it because the colour sort of blends into the soup, keeping it lovely and white so the bright red sun dried tomato and swirls of spinach stand out. Plus, celery is a classic flavour base for many savoury things. Substitute with other cook-able vegetables. Think: diced zucchini, corn, carrots.
Butter – The cooking fat of choice, because it’s got more flavour than oil.
Creamy chicken soup broth
A splash of white wine, good handful of parmesan and finishing with cream gives the Tuscan soup broth great flavour!
Cornflour/cornstarch – This is what is used to thicken the soup. I opted to use this over flour for calorie control reasons. Using flour, I would’ve needed an extra 30g/2 tbsp of butter to stir the flour into at the beginning to make a roux. With cornflour, you just mix with a bit of water then stir it into the soup right at the end. Also, cornflour makes the soup nice and shiny, which I like in this soup (flour makes broths dull).
Wine – Just 1/2 a cup, adds extra depth of flavour so you there’s enough flavour using half stock, half water, rather than 2 litres / quarts of water. Money saving tip. 🙂 It’s like free stock! Doesn’t make the broth taste winey, because we cook out the alcohol, just leaving behind lovely savoury flavour.
Can’t consume alcohol? Switch half the water for more chicken stock/broth.
Cream – Gives the soup a lovely creamy mouthfeel finish as well as making the soup white. You can opt to use milk instead, but reduce water by 1/2 cup and use 1 1/2 cups milk (else soup colour not as white). To get a nice finish, I’d add a knob of butter!
Parmesan – Another flavour boost. Normally I recommend shredding your own but I used store-bought pre-shredded for convenience here and it melted fine in the hot soup (unlike in cheesy sauces). The sandy-type, from the fridge (not aisle please! If it ain’t in the fridge, it ain’t real cheese! 🙂 )
How to make Creamy Tuscan Chicken Soup
Searing our own chicken makes this soup tastier than just adding pre-cooked chicken into the soup broth. Because colour on the chicken = tastier chicken, and the soup broth gets extra (free!) flavour from the golden bits left in the pot from searing the chicken.
Sear the chicken in the butter, just to get some colour on the surface. It doesn’t matter if it’s not cooked all the way through because after we chop it, it gets added back into the soup. As noted above, cooking our own chicken gets us on the path to a more delicious soup!
Chop the chicken once it’s cool enough to handle. I do this while the pasta is cooking. Don’t worry about raw bits, they will cook through quickly once added back into the hot soup broth.
Sauté the onion, garlic and celery in the same pot using the residual butter.
Broth & pasta – Deglaze the pot by simmering the white wine rapidly until reduced by half. Deglazing just means to dissolve the chicken-searing golden bits on the base of the pot into the liquid for extra flavour in the soup broth.
Pasta – Once the broth is brought back up to the boil, add the pasta and cook it for the time per the packet directions (10 minutes for the small shells I used).
Chopped chicken – Once the pasta is in, I chop the chicken then just add it into the broth about halfway through the pasta cooking time.
Thicken soup – Mix together the cornflour/cornstarch with a smidge of water then stir it into the soup broth. We only use a bit of cornflour because the soup gets thickening help from the gluten in the pasta and the cream.
Soup finishes – Then stir in the parmesan, follow by the cream and spinach. Once the spinach has wilted, which should only take a minute or so, the cornflour will have thickened the soup. And that’s it – ready to serve!
Sun dried tomatoes – Chop sun dried tomatoes into scattering-size-pieces.
Ladle the soup into bowls. Sprinkle with sun dried tomato and a little drizzle of the oil from the sun dried tomato jars (love how the red looks against the white soup). A sprinkle of extra parmesan wouldn’t hurt either. Then dig in!
Pasta soup storage matters!
Pasta loves to absorb liquid. So if you leave the pasta overnight in the broth, it will bloat and become overly soft.
So to store leftovers, it’s best to separate the broth from the pasta. Just use a slotted spoon to scoop out the pasta bits then store the pasta and broth in separate containers in the fridge. They will keep for 3 to 4 days.
Making ahead intentionally
This is a great soup to prepare ahead to reheat later! Just cook the pasta, drain, thicken the soup , then store the chicken with pasta and soup broth separately. They can be refrigerated for 4 days or frozen for 3 months. Reheat the soup broth first, then add the pasta and chicken to reheat. I’ve popped these directions in the recipe card too.
Hope you enjoy! – Nagi x
Watch how to make it
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Creamy Tuscan Chicken Soup
Ingredients
- 500 g/1 lb chicken thighs , skinless boneless (Note 1 for breast)
- 1/2 tsp each salt and pepper
Soup:
- 30g / 2 tbsp unsalted butter
- 1 onion , finely chopped
- 2 garlic cloves , minced
- 2 large celery stems , finely sliced (sub 2 carrots)
- 1/2 cup chardonnay or other dry white wine, optional (Note 2)
- 4 cups chicken stock/broth , low sodium
- 3 cups water
- 1 tsp cooking/kosher salt
- 1/2 tsp black pepper
- 250g/8 oz small pasta shells (or other small pasta, rice, potato etc – see Note 3)
- 1 cup (tightly packed) parmesan, finely grated or store bought pre-grated (sandy type) (Note 4)
- 1 cup thickened/heavy cream (Note 5 for milk sub)
- 2 packed cups baby spinach , chopped kale or similar
- 1/2 cup sun dried tomato strips , chopped into 1cm pieces, plus bit of oil drizzling (Note 6)
Soup thickener (cornflour slurry):
- 2 tsp cornflour/cornstarch mixed with 2 tsp water
Instructions
- Cook outside of chicken – Sprinkle each side with the salt and pepper. Melt butter in a large pot over medium high heat. Once foamy, place the chicken in and cook the first side for 3 minutes or until light golden, then the other side for 2 minutes – it's fine if the inside is still raw, it cooks more later. Remove onto a plate.
- Soup flavour base – Turn the stove down to medium low. Add garlic, onion and celery into the same pot then cook for 3 minutes or until the onion is softened.
- Deglaze – Turn up to high, add wine, stir, then let it simmer until the wine reduces by half.
- Broth & pasta – Add stock/broth, water, salt and pepper. Bring to a boil then add the pasta. Cook for the time per the pasta packet directions (~10 minutes), stirring every now and then so the pasta doesn't stick to the base of the pot.
- Add chicken partway – While the pasta is cooking, chop the chicken into 1.5cm / 1/2" pieces then add into the pot to finish cooking.
- Finish soup – Once the pasta is cooked, turn heat down to low. Stir in parmesan until melted. Stir in the cornflour-water mixture, cream and spinach. Stir for a minute until spinach is wilted and soup thickens slightly.
- Serve – Ladle into bowls. Sprinkle with sun dried tomato strips (and a bit of oil looks nice for finishing). Eat!
- Storing – Separate pasta from soup so it doesn't bloat, refrigerate both. Just scoop out with slotted spoon. (Note 6)
Recipe Notes:
Nutrition Information:
More soup love
Life of Dozer
Licking up drips from dirty dishes. He’s such a grot.
Ashley says
This has to be one of my favorite soups on your site! This is my family’s most requested soup and it’s so simple to make. An absolutely hit in our home. Thank you!
Collette Brown says
My family and I loved this soup, even my very fussy 7 year old. I added chopped carrots with the celery and frozen peas at the end, to increase her vegetable intake. I used Risoni as my pasta of choice. She loved it so much that she asked for it the next day as well!! Definitely going on my do again list!!
Carrie Timko says
This soup was delicious. My whole family enjoyed it even my picky 10yr old. I only made a slight variation, I added basil and oregano to the spice mix and added a head of roasted garlic to the veggie mix. Other than that followed exactly. My daughter even requested it go in her lunch today. Thank you!
Pat Q says
Best soup ever
Recipetineats is my go to website for delicious meals
Lauren Cornejo says
Just made this and ate a bowl with my husband and toddler (I didn’t give her the sun dried tomatoes though). Very good! Even picky toddler said “I like it!” I used about half the chicken and more than doubled the veggies (I used onion, garlic, celery, carrot, and zucchini). Added extra liquid too (I used homemade vegetable broth because I didn’t have chicken stock; I used 1.5 cups of milk instead of cream, adding in a bit of butter as suggested). I used less spinach because I didn’t have as much as was called for. Used orzo because that’s the only small pasta we had. I was considering putting potatoes too but completely forgot while putting the soup together. Planning to add it next time.
Thank you for the recipe!
Chloe Pickering says
Quick, easy, delicious and filling! So good my soup-hating husband will eat plenty and ask for more. It is a little hard to store as refrigerating for more than an hour or so will mean the pasta absorbs the soup and becomes gluggy – to avoid this I freeze in portions straight away, and add water when thawed if needed. Thank you Nagi!
Laura says
This is by far my favourite soup. Amazing. Another banging recipe by Nagi!
Darice Yonker says
I wasn’t thrilled. found it a bit tasteless. needed a lot more seasoning.
Diana S says
Another winning recipe in our house! Thanks Nagi! I added some Tuscan seasoning to the chicken which gave a next-level flavour to the soup – and completely agree, don’t skip the sun-dried tomatoes on top, they were perfect!
J-Mom says
Loved this soup! Though I did go ‘virtuous’ 😉 and used chickpeas instead of chicken. I also put the sun-dried tomatoes in soon because I love it and I wanted to soup infused with the flavor. Will try it with chicken at another time but there’s no doubt it’s going to be great, too. Thank you for the recipe!
Emily Thoreson says
This was great. I did make some adjustments, like using tortellini. I also ended up adding some lemon juice, Italian herb seasoning, fresh basil and a generous topping of a good olive oil on top, it’s wonderful. Thank you for another great recipe that didn’t even NEED any of the additions.
Conny says
Wow, that hit the spot on a cool and rainy day!! Very, very tasty!! Only change – we have some sun-dried tomato haters in the family, so we used bacon bits instead. Was a hit with everyone, thanks Nagi!
Roz says
Absolutely sensational!
this is the second time I have made this meal and tonight I shared it with my neighbors. Don’t mess with this. It’s perfect. The sundried tomatoes take this dish to the next level.
Catherine says
Oh Nagi, I made this again and it is so delish. Wow. Thanks
Chris W. says
This was insane good – don’t omit the sun-dried tomatoes with a bit of the oil! We absolutely loved this soup and will pass it on to a neighbor who has swiss chard and kale coming out of the seams in their garden. I used spinach but that is what I had – would any of the three in the future.
Sammie G says
Five stars for the excellent flavor! But I’m wondering what I did wrong. The cheese ended up being very stringy and clumpy. I used fresh grated Parmesan from the deli. Even with this minor mishap, I will definitely make this, again and again! Thanks again for another wonderful recipe!
Nagi says
HI Sammie – Was it definitely parmesan?? Parmesan doesn’t stretch and go stringy because it’s a hard cheese! I’m glad you enjoyed it though – N x
Linda Simpson says
Love all your recipes. In the ingredient photo, the spinach isn’t shown.
Nathan Taylor says
mmmm delicious!!!
The creaminess is unmatched. I could feel me insides screaming from the pleasure of the creaminess delight.
Dennis says
Most excellent recipe. Only had light cream and Pinot Gregio. Loved the sun-dried tomatoes.
Thanks!
Frank says
I remember being tormented at work eating pasta dishes that the cheese stuck,now the Australian eat pasta more then us italian.