11 Mistakes You May Be Making with Soup (2024)

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11 Mistakes You May Be Making with Soup (1)

ByKelsey Dimberg

Taste of Home's Editorial Process

Updated: Mar. 09, 2023

    Do your homemade soups wind up watery, bland or just a bit mushy? These are the common mistakes people make when cooking soup, and how to make a great pot every time.

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    11 Mistakes You May Be Making with Soup (2)

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    Not Starting With Aromatics and Fat

    A bit of fat, usually in the form of butter and olive oil, is essential to making a robust soup. Fat is also a vehicle for flavor, and helps to brown vegetables. Almost all soup recipes begin with aromatics cooked in hot fat: aromatics are vegetables that add an overall flavor to the soup but aren’t the primary ingredients. They’re the supporting actors, not stars. Think onions, garlic, leeks, celery and herbs.Here’s every soup recipe you’ll ever need.

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    11 Mistakes You May Be Making with Soup (3)

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    Not Browning Vegetables

    It may be tempting to toss all your chopped ingredients into a pot, add the broth and simmer until tender. But if you take the time to brown all your ingredients before adding the broth, you’ll be rewarded with extra flavor and sweetness. After the aromatics have cooked, drop in your chopped vegetables and allow to brown on all sides.Our favorite vegetable soups let veggies shine.

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    11 Mistakes You May Be Making with Soup (4)

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    Not Cooking Onions Through

    Onions are strong enough to be the star of French onion soup, and they add an undeniable sweetness to the base of any soup. The trick: onions must be cooked thoroughly before any acidic ingredients, such as tomatoes or wine, are added. Once they’re cooked, you can add any ingredients. As a bonus, the longer cooking time draws out extra sweetness.

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    11 Mistakes You May Be Making with Soup (5)

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    Underseasoning

    Many cooks wait until the end of cooking to taste and season their soup. But adding salt and other spices early in the cooking process allows their flavors to blend into the entire soup—and adding salt to veggies right away actually pulls out more flavor from them. These are the essential seasonings every cook should have.

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    11 Mistakes You May Be Making with Soup (6)

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    Forgetting the Umami

    Savoriness can come from other ingredients besides salt. (Especially if you need to watch your sodium intake.) Adding umami-rich ingredients like tomato paste or a parmesan rind to the soup will add a deep, rich savoriness and body to the soup. (Here’s what umami means.)

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    Overseasoning

    There’s also a possibility you may have accidentally oversalted your soup (especially if you’re using a salty store-bought broth). You can save it by adding a few cups of plain broth or water. If you don’t want to water the soup down, you may add one or two unseasoned potatoes and simmer them in the mix. They’ll soak up lots of the salty broth, and you can add a bit of water to balance it out. Tip: Avoid oversalting by making one of these low-sodium soup recipes.

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    11 Mistakes You May Be Making with Soup (8)

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    Not Using Broth or Making a Quick Broth

    You can certainly make soup with water, but it’s surprisingly easy to make a quick broth using the scraps from the vegetables you’re cutting up to use in the soup. For example, butternut squash or sweet potato peels simmered in water for a few moments makes a quick broth that’s much more flavorful than plain water—and it uses only food scraps you had on hand anyway. If you have more time, consider making homemade chicken stock.

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    11 Mistakes You May Be Making with Soup (9)

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    Cooking Grains in the Soup

    It’s easy to toss a bit of pasta or rice directly into the simmering soup to cook it. But the grain will soak up tons of liquid as it cooks, and even more as the soup cools. For the best results, cook grains or pasta separately, and then ladle into soup bowls. If you have leftovers, store them in separate containers in the fridge. You can also try out this french onion pasta recipe. For a hearty pasta soup, try this recipe.

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    11 Mistakes You May Be Making with Soup (10)

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    Not Using an Immersion Blender

    Need to puree a soup? Pouring soup into a blender can be a precarious activity. Simplify the operation by using our favorite soup-making tool: an immersion blender, or stick blender. This handheld device sticks right into the soup pot to blend, making the work much simpler and tidier. This is the immersion blender our Test Kitchen recommends.

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    11 Mistakes You May Be Making with Soup (11)

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    Not Adding Acid

    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. Our Lemony Chicken Soup will make your mouth water.

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    11 Mistakes You May Be Making with Soup (12)

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    Always Following a Recipe

    Some foods require an exact recipe, like baked goods. Foods like soup allow for some creativity in the kitchen. Take advantage of a soup’s inherent flexibility. Have vegetables languishing in your crisper drawer? Dice them up and add them to the soup. Leftover chicken or cooked meat? Add them to the soup. Need extra time out of the house? Throw the soup in the slow cooker. Here are a few tricks for cooking without a recipe.

    Originally Published: November 20, 2019

    Author

    Kelsey Dimberg

    A former in-house editor at Taste of Home, Kelsey now writes articles and novels from her home in Chicago. After going gluten-free more than a decade ago, Kelsey turned to home cooking and baking as a way to re-create her favorite foods. Her specialties include gluten-free sourdough bread, pizza and pastry.

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    11 Mistakes You May Be Making with Soup (13)

    11 Mistakes You May Be Making with Soup (2024)

    FAQs

    What is a common mistake that cooks make when preparing soup? ›

    Common Mistakes Everyone Makes With Soup
    • Failing to thicken it properly. Marian Curko/Shutterstock. ...
    • Forgetting to add an acidic component. ...
    • Sticking to salt and pepper. ...
    • Overcooking your vegetables. ...
    • Forgetting to garnish. ...
    • Adding your aromatics too late. ...
    • Forgetting to caramelize your onions. ...
    • Adding grains too early.
    Mar 24, 2023

    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.

    What vegetables can you not put in soup? ›

    Some vegetables that don't do well in stock are:
    • Leafy green parts of carrots and celery.
    • Brassicas, including cabbage, Brussels sprouts, broccoli, cauliflower, turnips, rutabagas, collard greens, kohlrabi, and kale.
    • Artichokes.
    • Beets.
    • Potatoes and sweet potatoes.
    • Squash flesh, including winter squash and zucchini.
    Apr 10, 2024

    What are the common problem of the soup? ›

    The 7 Biggest Mistakes You Make Cooking Soup
    • Boiling instead of simmering. You want a small bubble or two to rise to the surface of the liquid every few seconds. ...
    • Not using enough salt. ...
    • Ignoring water. ...
    • Overcooking the vegetables. ...
    • Adding tomatoes at the beginning. ...
    • Neglecting to garnish. ...
    • Not trying a pressure cooker.
    Nov 19, 2014

    Why shouldn't you boil soup? ›

    Boiling soup leads to mushy veggies and tough meat

    According to Patch, boiling soup can make your vegetables fall apart, and your meat overcooked and tough. Boiling causes rapid movement for the food in the pot, which allows your ingredients to bump into each other and start to break down, Bake Instinct explains.

    Why is my soup turning brown? ›

    As the soup cools, enzymes present in the meat continue to act on these proteins, causing them to oxidize and change color. The longer the soup sits, the more pronounced this effect can become, resulting in a darker color. This color change is not harmful and is typically just a cosmetic issue.

    What is the unhealthiest soup? ›

    Just avoid these five soups listed below, and swap them out for the healthier alternatives we've provided:
    1. Clam chowder. Anything with the word "chowder" in it is probably going to be high in cream, fat, and calories. ...
    2. Potato soup. ...
    3. Lobster bisque. ...
    4. Chili. ...
    5. Broccoli and cheese soup.
    Jan 12, 2012

    Why is soup bad for blood pressure? ›

    3 Foods to avoid for high blood pressure

    Avoid canned foods and soups as they tend to contain lots of sodium. Canned beans for example, can contain as much as 500mg of sodium per serving. However, there are some canned foods with lower sodium content. Look out for foods that come with the healthier choice logo.

    What is the secret to soup? ›

    7 Tips for Successful Soup Making
    • Use a Sturdy Pot. It is worth investing in a heavy pot with a thick bottom to use for making soup. ...
    • Sauté the Aromatics. ...
    • Start with Good Broth. ...
    • Cut Vegetables to the Right Size. ...
    • Stagger the Addition of Vegetables. ...
    • Keep Liquid at a Simmer. ...
    • Season Just Before Serving.
    Oct 9, 2022

    Can I put Worcestershire sauce in 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.

    How do you make soup taste better? ›

    Perk up a Bland Soup With Simple Pantry Staples

    Add a splash of vinegar (any kind!), or a squeeze of citrus. Chances are, you could use a little more salt. Go ahead—it's ok. Salt perks up flat flavors and helps balance out bitter-tasting ingredients.

    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.

    Why put butter in soup? ›

    A bit of fat, usually in the form of butter and olive oil, is essential to making a robust soup. Fat is also a vehicle for flavor, and helps to brown vegetables.

    When should you add celery to soup? ›

    But once those vegetables are exhausted, they're strained and switched out for a fresh set of thinly sliced celery and carrot. These are added for the final 4–5 minutes of cooking so that they're tender but nowhere near mushy. You get the sweet luxury of long-cooked vegetables and the freshness of crisp-tender ones.

    What bacteria grows in soup? ›

    Soup may become unsafe to eat/ cause food poisoning if a coliform (Salmonella, escherichia coli) grows in it and produces enough toxin to make you ill or if bacillus cereus (grows in cereals) produces a toxin that is, in most cases, lethal.

    What are the common mistakes we make while cooking food? ›

    Here are 14 mistakes to avoid while cooking:
    • Not Preheating Your Oven. This is one of the most common mistakes people make when baking. ...
    • Overcrowding Your Pan. ...
    • Using Too Much Oil. ...
    • Not Seasoning Your Food. ...
    • Cooking On Too High of a Heat. ...
    • Not Using Fresh Ingredients. ...
    • Not Letting Meat Rest. ...
    • Overcooking Vegetables.
    Jan 3, 2023

    What are the common faults in food preparation? ›

    Food Safety Mistakes & Rules
    • The 5 Most Common Food Safety Mistakes & How to Avoid Them.
    • Mistake #1: Cross-Contamination of Raw and Cooked Foods.
    • Mistake #2: Not Cooking Food Thoroughly.
    • Mistake #3: Leaving Food Out at Room Temperature.
    • Mistake #4: Improper Handwashing Practices.
    • Mistake #5: Failing to Wash Vegetables.

    Why does some soup sink when cooked? ›

    At the surface, the warm soup spreads out and cools, becoming denser. Then, gravity pulls this cooler, denser soup back down to the bottom of the pot, where it is heated again. A constant flow begins as the cooler soup continually sinks to the bottom of the pot and the warmer soup rises.

    What causes curdling in a soup? ›

    Dairy or egg-y sauces can curdle for several reasons: There might not be enough fat in the sauce; skim milk will curdle much more easily than other, fattier dairy products. High heat can also cause sauces to curdle; low and slow is the safest option. You should never let a dairy-based sauce boil.

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