Curried Root Vegetable Soup
This week I thought it was time I updated my Curried Root Vegetable Soup which I posted back in my blog’s infancy after a fridge clear out. So along with some new pictures I also made a few tweaks to the recipe as I decided it needed to be a bit sweeter.
Hence I upped the amount of garlic and opted for Korma curry powder in place of the madras, which has a lovely sweet note to it and compliments the existing turmeric, cumin, coriander and garam masala beautifully.
The resulting soup (I should probably have called it potage) is thick, mildly spiced, sweet and delicious.
When I gave my hubby a teaspoon to taste such was his enthusiasm that he asked if we were having it for lunch and wanted to know how long it would be as he couldn’t wait to have a bowl full!
So what do you need to watch out for when making Curried Root Vegetable Soup?
Having made this a couple of times to get it just right the first important thing to get right is cooking the vegetables thoroughly.
Swede take longer to cook than the rest of the vegetables so it’s a good idea to cut them smaller so that they cook in the same amount of time. Under-cooked swede tastes very bitter so check it’s cooked by crushing a piece with a wooden spoon on the side of the pan. If it doesn’t break easily you need to carry on cooking.
Could you make this soup with leftover cooked root vegetables?
Yes! Plus I think it would be worth cooking extra vegetables with your Sunday roast just to make this soup. Or how about using your Christmas dinner leftovers to make this Curried Root Vegetable Soup on Boxing Day?
You would just scale back the simmering time to a few minutes with the stock in order for the vegetables to heat through and then blend.
Is it important to use good quality spices and stock?
A big fat yes. My Curried Root Vegetable Soup is only as good as the quality of ingredients that are put in it so please use the best quality spices and stock available.
Is Curried Root Vegetable Soup suitable for vegans?
I have included alternative vegan ingredients ie rapeseed oil in place of butter and vegetable stock in place of chicken stock. But if you’re not a vegan the butter does add a lovely creaminess to the soup and the chicken stock marries very well with the korma spices.
More Curried Soup Recipes
I do hope you try my Curried Root Vegetable Soup which is perfect for autumn and winter as it’s super warming and comforting! For more curried soups you might like to check out the following:
- Curried Parsnip & Coriander Soup
- Quick Curried Cauliflower Soup
- Curried Pumpkin Soup
- Jerusalem Artichoke & Celeriac Soup with Coconut & Chilli
- Spiced Parsnip Spinach Soup with Apple & Turmeric
- Root Veg & Lentil Thai Coconut Soup
- Creamy Vegetable Curry Soup
- Healthy Malaysian Laksa Soup with Grilled Prawns & Tenderstem
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Curried Root Vegetable Soup
Ingredients
- 2 Onions
- 4 Garlic cloves crushed
- 50 g Unsalted butter (or 4 tbsp rapeseed oil if vegan) unsalted
- 300 g Swede (rutabaga)
- 300 g Parsnips
- 300 g Carrots
- 200 g Potatoes
- 1 tbsp Ginger root grated
- 1 tbsp Korma curry powder
- 1 tsp Turmeric
- 1 tsp Cumin
- ½ tsp Coriander
- ½ tsp Garam Masala
- 1200 ml Chicken or vegetable stock
- Freshly ground pepper
- Freshly ground salt
Instructions
- Peel and dice the vegetables (cut swede smaller as takes longer to cook), keeping the onion separate.
- Melt the butter in a large pan and on a gentle heat gently sweat the onion, garlic and ginger under a lid for 10 minutes, stirring occasionally.
- Next turn the heat up a little and stir in the spices and cook for 2 minutes.
- Add the vegetables and cook for a few minutes whilst stirring to coat in the spices.
- Add the stock, salt and pepper.
- Bring to the boil and simmer with the lid on for about 25 - 30 minutes or until the vegetables are tender (push a piece of swede against the edge of the pan with a wooden spoon and if it breaks in half easily you're good to go).
- Blend (don't over blend or soup will turn gloopy).
- Taste, and adust seasoning if necessary.
- Reheat and serve with crusty bread.
Caroline
I love making root vegetable soup and agree it’s a great way to use whatever is lurking at the back of the fridge. Curry flavor works so well as well. Love the new pics!
Camilla
Thanks Caroline, the old pictures were terrible:-)
Sandi
We are always looking for more recipes that use mainly veggies. Thank you for the vegan alternative as we are cutting out dairy. Lovely soup recipe.
Camilla
Thank you Sandi:-)
Jessica Formicola
This looks so comforting and delicious! Perfect for fall!
Camilla
Thank you, it really is:-)
Adriana Lopez Martin
What a wonderful soup I love the combo with the curry and the root vegetables. I prepare at home a carrot soup with curry and it is to die for. Need to try your version too.
Camilla
Thank you Adriana:-)
Katie
This looks like the perfect soup for fall! What a serious batch of comfort food!!
Camilla
Thanks Katie, it really is perfect for fall!
Claudia Lamascolo
Hi Camilla this soup looks fantastic!
Camilla
Thanks Claudia:-)
Corina Blum
I love curried soups like this and this one sounds so lovely and warming! It’s exactly the kind of thing I love making for lunch at the moment.
Camilla
Thanks Corina, it is great for this time of year:-)
Mandy
This sounds great Camilla and I love th photos. Couldn’t be more autumnal if it tried! Thanks for including a link to my soup x
Camilla
Thank you so much Mandy:-)
Paul Wilson
Just the thing to warm me up.
Quinta
Lovely alternative to plain vegetable soup. Do you think it would work with sweet potatoes instead of swede or possibly squash? Thank you
Camilla
I think you can pretty much put what you like in soup with a few exceptions but those sound like they’d be fine, perhaps the squash better as it’s not going to thicken the soup like the starchy sweet potato will!