A culinary education for the home kitchen — from fond to flame
Fond & Flame

Chapters · Kitchen Essentials

Minestrone Soup

Where every culinary journey begins — knife skills, mise en place, and the vegetable techniques that form the foundation of all cooking.

★ Beginner$1 hr
Minestrone Soup — Kitchen Essentials — recipe plated and ready to serve

Foundations Referenced

Ingredients

  • 2 tbsp olive oil
  • 1 onion, medium dice
  • 2 carrots, medium dice
  • 2 celery stalks, medium dice
  • 3 garlic cloves, minced
  • 1 tbsp tomato paste
  • 1 can (14 oz) diced tomatoes
  • 6 cups vegetable or chicken stock (→ foundation)
  • 1 can (15 oz) cannellini beans, drained and rinsed
  • 1 medium zucchini, medium dice
  • 1 cup green beans, cut into 1" pieces
  • 1 cup small pasta (ditalini, elbow, or broken spaghetti)
  • 2 cups kale or spinach, roughly chopped
  • 1 Parmesan rind (save these in your freezer)
  • 1 sachet (→ see spice-blends.md)
  • Salt, pepper
  • Extra-virgin olive oil and grated Parmesan for serving

Method

  1. Build the base: Heat oil in a large Dutch oven over medium heat. Add mirepoix (onion, carrot, celery), cook 8 min until softened. Add garlic, cook 1 min. Add tomato paste, stir 2 min until it darkens slightly.

  2. Add liquids: Add diced tomatoes, stock, Parmesan rind, and sachet. Bring to a simmer.

  3. Layer the vegetables by cook time:

  • Add beans (cannellini) and green beans first — they need the most time. Simmer 10 min.
  • Add zucchini and pasta. Simmer 8–10 min until pasta is al dente.
  • Add kale/spinach in the last 2 min (it wilts quickly).
  1. Finish: Remove Parmesan rind and sachet. Season with salt and pepper. The soup should be thick and hearty — add more stock if you prefer it brothier.

  2. Serve: Ladle into warm bowls. Drizzle with your best olive oil. Grate fresh Parmesan over the top.

What You're Learning

  • Soup construction follows the same logic as sauce: aromatics → liquid → main ingredients → seasoning
  • Layering vegetables by cook time ensures nothing is over- or under-cooked
  • The Parmesan rind is a "free" umami bomb — it melts slightly and enriches the broth
  • Tomato paste, briefly cooked, adds depth without making it a tomato soup
  • This is a template: swap vegetables seasonally (butternut squash in fall, asparagus in spring)
  • Consistent knife cuts (medium dice) ensure even cooking — a direct application of Ch.01 knife skills

Variations

  • Summer: Replace kale with fresh basil, add corn and cherry tomatoes
  • Winter: Add diced potato, swap green beans for root vegetables
  • Ribollita (Tuscan bread soup): Add torn stale bread in the last 10 min, let it absorb the broth. Top with more olive oil.

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