Spring Minestrone! A springtime version of the classic Italian minestrone, with peas, new potatoes, artichoke hearts, asparagus and spring greens.
Minestrone is one of my favorite soups, and it is infinitely malleable with the seasons. This version celebrates springtime, when fresh, new vegetables begin to show up at the market.
I know to make this soup whenever I can get asparagus, artichokes and peas all at the same time. These vegetables form the backbone to the soup.
Another good thing about this minestrone is that it takes only about an hour to make, from start to finish, including prep time. Classic minestrone takes at least a couple hours to make. There’s something to be said for a quick version.
Keep in mind that the ingredients below are a guide. Minestrone is supposed to be free-form, with whatever looks good at the produce market.
Don’t like artichoke hearts? Skip them. Despise chickpeas? Use some other bean. Just be sure to use lots of different kinds of vegetables and you’ll be fine.
The other key to this recipe is to build the soup like a house. Don’t toss everything in all at once, or some vegetables will be overcooked and some undercooked. This is why when you read the recipe below you will see that I add ingredients little by little.
Feel free to use canned or frozen vegetables in some cases. I use canned chickpeas and will often use frozen peas, which are almost as good as fresh. For a special occasion, use all fresh ingredients, though, as you can definitely taste the difference.
Check out our other minestrone recipes
Spring Minestrone Soup Recipe
- Prep time: 20 minutes
- Cook time: 40 minutes
- Yield: Serves 4-6
You can either make fresh pesto for this recipe, or you can just buy some high-quality pesto in the market.
Ingredients
- 2 Tbsp olive oil
- 6 green onions
- 2 green garlic stalks, or 2 large garlic cloves
- 1 pound baby potatoes, or Yukon gold potatoes cut into 1-inch chunks
- 1 15-ounce can of diced tomatoes
- 4 cups vegetable stock or chicken stock (use vegetable stock if cooking vegetarian or vegan)
- Salt
- 1/2 pound artichoke hearts (fresh or frozen), chopped roughly
- 1 15-ounce can of chickpeas (garbanzo beans), rinsed and drained
- 1 cup peas (fresh or frozen)
- 1/2 pound asparagus, cut into 1-inch chunks
- 2 cups greens (dandelion, chard, spinach, kale, arugula, etc), sliced into thin ribbons
- Up to 1/4 cup pesto
- Grated parmesan or pecorino cheese for garnish (omit for vegan version)
- 1 teaspoon black pepper
Method
1 Prep green onions, green garlic, potatoes, artichoke hearts: Chop the green onions and green garlic and separate the white and light green parts from the green tops. If you are using regular garlic cloves, put them with the white parts of the green onions.
Scrub potatoes and cut them into 1-inch chunks. Either trim fresh artichokes down to their hearts and chop the hearts (see How to Trim Artichokes) or chop up defrosted frozen artichoke hearts.
2 Sauté white parts of green onions and garlic, add potatoes: In a large pot set over medium-high heat, warm the olive oil for 1 minute. Add the white parts of the green onions as well as the garlic and sauté for 1 minute.
Add the potatoes, and cook 1 minute more.
3 Add tomatoes, stock, salt, then simmer: Add the diced tomatoes with their liquid and the quart of vegetable or chicken stock.
Bring to a simmer, add salt to taste, then cover and cook over medium-low heat for 10 minutes.
4 Add artichoke hearts (if using fresh) and cook another 5 minutes
5 Add the chickpeas and green peas and cook another 5 minutes.
6 Add the asparagus and artichoke hearts (if using frozen), then the greens: Add the asparagus and artichoke hearts (if using frozen artichoke hearts). Cook 2 minutes.
Add the greens and the green parts from the green onions and green garlic, if using. Stir well to combine and cook 1 minute.
7 Add pesto, salt, pepper: Turn off the heat and stir in the pesto. Add black pepper and more salt to taste (depending on how salty your stock is, you may need to add 1 to 2 teaspoons of salt).
Serve topped with grated cheese.
Links:
Summer Minestrone – here on Simply Recipes
Classic Minestrone – here on Simply Recipes
Spring Green Minestrone – from La Tartine Gourmande
Spring Ragout – from 101 Cookbooks