Broccoli pasta soup

I'm sorry about dropping off the face of the earth last week. I really had no intention of going silent, but Hugo stopped napping – just stopped, yes, the horror – from one day to the next and the days went by in a blur. I was trying to keep things together while Hugo was flying on what must have been fumes and one evening, after he'd finally gone to bed, I sort of sat and whimpered in defeat in the kitchen for a bit. There might have been some cheese.

Anyway! Luckily for us all, but, let's face it, mostly me, Hugo has started napping again (praisegodthealmightyforeverandeveramen). And better yet, I have found the best soup of the year. I know it's only February 25, but I'm going to wager that this is it for the rest of 2013.

People, it is fabulous.

Blanched broccoli

Okay, now you're going to think it seems a little fussy to start. And you would be right, technically. There's the dissection of the broccoli, the blanching in two steps, the pan-frying, the pureeing. Yes. But that's really it for the work – the soup itself is a silly little throw-together. Put broth and broccoli stalk purée in a pan, then add some pasta to cook, then add the remaining sautéed broccoli. Parmesan on top of each serving and that's it! See? Not so bad, after all.

Because you cook the broccoli so briefly (you must follow Marcella Hazan's cooking directions to the minute, lest you want pallid results), it retains vibrant color, a fresh flavor and its wonderful just-tender quality – you know, almost rubbery, but in a good way? The pasta adds pleasing nubbiness to each spoonful and the Parmesan and garlic and broth all come together in the way they should, reliably producing the taste of Italy in your soup spoon. Magic.

Pureed broccoli

I imagine this is not news to most of you, but just in case there's someone out there who has yet to figure it out, Marcella Hazan's cookbook, The Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking, is sort of a non-negotiable acquisition if you want to know what Italian food really tastes like. It has no photos and Marcella's tone is severe – she doesn't want to pal around with you, she wants you to do what she says, just like any bossy Italian lady worth her salt – but it is such a valuable resource.

(Since I can pretty much guarantee that Marcella doesn't read this blog and I therefore won't incur her wrath, I shall confess the following: the original soup calls for homemade meat broth and homemade pasta. I, er, used my trusty Better Than Bouillon (scraping the bottom of the jar! thank goodness we fly to the States on Friday) and Barilla soup pasta. The soup was divine, life is short, do what your conscience tells you.)

(Oh! And one more thing: a certain 8-month old ate more of this soup than he did of his dinner. So it's baby-approved, too.)

Marcella Hazan's Broccoli and Pasta Soup
From The Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking

Serves 6

1 medium bunch of broccoli
Salt
1/3 cup olive oil
1 teaspoon chopped garlic (or two whole cloves)
2 cups beef or chicken broth
1/2 cup small, coarse soup pasta (I used these)
Freshly grated Parmesan cheese

1. Detach the broccoli florets from the stalks. Trim away about 1/2 inch from the tough end of the stalks. With a sharp paring knife, peel away the dark green skin on the stalks. Split very thick stems in two lengthwise. Wash and set aside.

2. Bring 3 quarts of water to a boil. Add 2 tablespoons of salt, which will keep the broccoli green, and put in the stalks. When the water returns to a boil, wait 2 minutes, then add the florets. If they float to the surface, dunk them from time to time to keep them from losing color. When the water returns to a boil again, wait 1 minute, then retrieve all the broccoli with a slotted spoon. Do not discard the water in the pot.

3. Choose a sauté pan that can accommodate all the stalks and florets without overlapping. Put in the oil and garlic, and turn the heat to medium. Sauté the garlic until it turns pale gold. Add all the broccoli, some salt, and turn the heat up to high. Cook for 2 to 3 minutes, stirring frequently.

4. Using a slotted spoon, transfer the broccoli florets to a plate and set aside. Do not discard the oil from the pan.

5. Put the broccoli stalks into a food processor, pulse for a moment, then add all the oil from the pan plus 1 tablespoon of the broccoli water. Finish processing to a smooth purée.

6. Put the purée into a soup pot, add the broth, and bring to a moderate boil. Add the pasta. Cook at a steady, gentle boil until the pasta is tender, but firm. Depending on the thickness and freshness of the pasta, it should take about 10 minutes. You will probably need to dilute the soup as it cooks, because it tends to become too dense. To thin it out, use some of the reserved broccoli water. Take care not to make the soup too runny.

7. While the pasta is cooking, separate the broccoli florets into bite-size pieces. As soon as the pasta is done, put the florets in the soup and continue cooking for 1 more minute. Taste and correct for salt, and serve the soup promptly with the grated Parmesan on top.

Posted in , , ,

64 responses to “Marcella Hazan’s Broccoli and Pasta Soup”

  1. J. Doe Avatar

    Marcella Hazan’s book taught me more about the basics of cooking than any other I can think of. I still refuse to use a garlic press because of her strong opinions against them. Now I’ll have to go revisit this treasure, since I’ve never made this soup!

    Like

  2. Christine Avatar
    Christine

    I love Marcella, and it’s totally unrequited. Marcella, call me!
    I love the look of this recipe, my family always made a similar pasta soup, only sans pureeing or the extra step of sauteeing. They would just basically boil the very chopped up broccoli and some curly endive too if you have it, a for a bit before throwing in the pasta.
    Is the serving suggestion based on a first course serving? Because looking it over, I’m pretty sure I could polish off a soup with a head of broccoli and two cups of broth all on my own. But…I’ve never been known for my dainty eating habits. Alas.

    Like

  3. Jennifer Avatar

    an aversion to a garlic press? interesting. Other than being really difficult to clean I don’t mind them?
    Soup sounds delicious. I shall try!

    Like

  4. Luisa Avatar

    The six servings would be for a first course if you were following it with meat or fish as the main, I imagine. If it was all you were having for dinner, then I’d say it serves two adults. (It’s filling and the broccoli water plumps it up.)

    Like

  5. Katherine Avatar
    Katherine

    I love love love The Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking and trying to decide whether to upgrade my battered paperback copy for a nice durable hardback… It is definitely worth the investment, I think!

    Like

  6. Little Kitchie Avatar

    Well this is a beaut… that green color! I love it!

    Like

  7. Sissy Avatar
    Sissy

    Marcella’s two essentials cookbooks taught me how to make and cook pasta and Italian food when I was first married. Those cookbooks are still my favorite cookbooks even though I own many other cookbooks now. I still remember the looks on people’s faces when I made her spinach lasagne — sheer heaven. I think you cook the Bolognese sauce for 3 or 4 hours, but it’s worth it. And handmade spinach lasagne is a must for that dish. Broccoli soup is a fave of mine so I’ve got to try her recipe. I posted on her son’s blog a response to something she said and she was furious with me! I don’t remember what it was now — something about the difference is fresh and canned I think. Should have kept my mouth shut!

    Like

  8. StellaP Avatar
    StellaP

    Marcella Hazan taught me one very handy trick – when onions are a touch too hot, and you intend to use them raw in a salad, slice the onion, and soak in ice water for ten minutes of so, then drain and pat dry. The onion is crisp, and has lost the sharp bite.

    Like

  9. NantucketDaffodil Avatar

    Oh yes….looks amazing! I will try to find a gluten free soup pasta….I wonder if quinoa would work…..

    Like

  10. Dana Avatar
    Dana

    Interesting soup but loved the story about Hugo’s naps :)It reminded me of my son J when he was a baby; I always felt that my sanity depended on these naps and they were always too short and infrequent. He stopped napping at 12 months and even now at 4 years, he is the only kiddo in his class who doesnt nap after lunch. The upside, he sleeps a good 12 hours with no waking up from 7:30pm-7:30am 🙂

    Like

  11. dervla @ The Curator Avatar

    Phew, so glad he’s napping, cause I’ve missed you here. Also, how did he get to be 8 months already? That soup looks yummy!

    Like

  12. caroline Avatar
    caroline

    hi i have a question!! i have everything in the pantry except that tiny pasta you used…. can i use either orzo or arborio risotto rice?? thank you!!

    Like

  13. caroline Avatar
    caroline

    …or orzo?

    Like

  14. Christine Avatar
    Christine

    Gotcha. Thanks!

    Like

  15. caroline Avatar
    caroline

    …i mean cous cous. yowza, long morning.

    Like

  16. Eileen Avatar

    This soup does sound fabulous. All broccoli all the time–hooray! I love how such a simple preparation (blanching etc notwithstanding. It’s still only 6 ingredients) can make such an amazing soup. 🙂

    Like

  17. anja Avatar

    dear luisa, am just reading your book and do not want it to end, which is a very good sign. the soup looks lovely. best from one end of berlin to another end of berlin:),anja

    Like

  18. EmmaK Avatar

    So pleased that Hugo has started napping again!! Fanfare of heavenly trumpets. Love the look of this soup. So yummy. I have just started reading your book and am loving it. I am half Austrian but also have visited Berlin a few times. Will visit Berlin in the summer and your recipes have started making my mouth water so well done.

    Like

  19. Luisa Avatar

    Of those three, I think I’d use the orzo. The rice would take too long and make the soup too thick.

    Like

  20. Luisa Avatar

    Thank you! That is such a lovely thing to hear. Viele Grüße zurück… 🙂

    Like

  21. Luisa Avatar
  22. Becky Avatar
    Becky

    Or maybe ditalini..

    Like

  23. Stephanie Avatar

    This looks wonderful and I have just the perfect little GF pasta to put in it . . .
    NantucketDaffodil, I’ve had great success with La Veneziane GF corn pasta — I can even throw it right in the soup to cook (and it doesn’t get sludgy! yay!). It’s Italian, but I find it in Canada, so hopefully you can find it where you are, too . ..

    Like

  24. Payal Shah Avatar

    Dear Luisa, this looks very promising. I made your Marcella Hazans smothered cabbage with rice and that was excellent! I am thinking of using farro as the pasta substitute?

    Like

  25. Sally Avatar
    Sally

    Picking up broccoli and soup pasta tomorrow and then making this — and bread. Finding the pasta may be the biggest challenge. If I have trouble, I’ll use orzo.

    Like

  26. Kathleen Avatar
    Kathleen

    I made the soup last night and used orzo and it was delicious! Did you have good results?

    Like

  27. Kathleen Avatar
    Kathleen

    Luisa,
    I made this last night, and my husband, an Italian American whose mama was a killer cook,gobbled it up. Delicious! Marcella H’s almond cake and pasta with cauliflower and anchovies are among my favorite recipes. The almond cake has almost no flour and is not too sweet. The cauliflower sauce is salty and hot. Thanks for a great blog, and best to Baby Hugo.

    Like

  28. Amanda Avatar
    Amanda

    I made this tonight and it was delicious — even my 3 year old and 6 month old agreed. But there simply was not enough of it. My husband and I easily could have eaten it all ourselves and would have been left hungry. I will try and double it next time.

    Like

  29. Naomi Avatar

    This looks great – and healthy, too. I can’t wait to try it 🙂

    Like

  30. Molly Avatar

    oh, those erratic babies! good for you, hugo, for finally coming to your senses. keep them. for your own sake, and your poor dear saintly mother’s.
    broccoli! parmesan!! in the same soup bowl? oh, yes please, and do pass seconds.
    good luck to you all on your trans-atlantic flight! off to text the travel gods, to request a free upgrade in small spirits, on your behalf…
    xo,
    M

    Like

  31. Monster Librarian Avatar

    Luisa,
    I just read your book, My Berlin Kitchen, and loved it! I wanted to share my blog review of it. Thank you thank you!
    http://misadventuresofmonsterlibrary.blogspot.com/2013/02/cooking-people-and-places-to-us.html
    -Monster Librarian 🙂

    Like

  32. Sylee Avatar

    That vivid green needs to be in my kitchen!

    Like

  33. Heather Avatar
    Heather

    Just made this, so very delicious! Thank you for sharing this recipe, I can tell already it will be a family favorite!

    Like

  34. Torrie @ a place to share... Avatar

    awwww… thank you. i had no idea what to make for dinner. we have better than bouillon and broccoli, so i’m off to print the recipe and get started!
    {new follower… look forward to purchasing/reading your book!}

    Like

  35. Marcella Hazan Avatar
    Marcella Hazan

    Thank you! I was very happy to read this. For the record, i am not a snob about bouillon cubes and in my life I must have used a bushel or two of them when I was out of broth. Barilla pasta I never use, even if you are making your own, it is so easy to find something better than Barilla. Marcella

    Like

  36. Marcella Hazan Avatar
    Marcella Hazan

    correction: … even if you are not making your own,

    Like

  37. Diana Avatar

    The green looks so delicious. This is healthy and delicious food. I think…

    Like

  38. Luisa Avatar

    Marcella!!! I am currently knocked over with a feather. Thanks for your comment! My mother is also horrified that I have this box of Barilla in my cupboard – if it’s any consolation, it’s the only one? I promise I won’t buy it again. 🙂

    Like

  39. Zoe Avatar

    I also always feel the need to apologize when using vegetable broth out of the jar in any recipie on my blog… and that is I never ever make my own broth, just because I don’t have the time AND I actually happen to like the one in the jar! But now, when even you do it, I think there’s no need for explanations anymore! Thank you so much for that!
    Zoe

    Like

  40. Tricia Avatar

    Love the image of you with your feet on the radiator looking out – past terrors and present bliss of a place. Very moving.

    Like

  41. julieqlivingston@gmail.com Avatar
    julieqlivingston@gmail.com

    I’ve always loved your blog, and of course Berlin on a Platter for a year when I lived in Berlin (usually I live in NYC). And now we know that Marcella Hazan — MARCELLA HAZAN!!! reads it too. Am making this soup for dinner tonight (with fregola — no pasta in the pantry) in celebration of you both.

    Like

  42. Torrie @ a place to share... Avatar

    wow… came back to tell you how wonderful the soup was and saw the comment just below mine from the one & only(!!!)… very, very cool.

    Like

  43. Emily @ Tips on Healthy Living Avatar

    This cookbook was the first time I really LOVED a cookbook. I felt like I had made this big discovery–of a magical cookbook that no one else knew (ha ha, so naive I was) where every single recipe worked. It is my go-to for all Italian food. I thought the Silver Spoon would replace it, but it never did. The good feelings started with the chicken fricasee recipies, and by the time I hit spaghetti ala carbonara, it was love. Thanks for the post–this soup is one I have glossed over in the past, but not for long.

    Like

  44. Annie Avatar
    Annie

    This soup will be in my belly this weekend. And probably in my hair, and on my walls and floor, courtesy of my 9-month-old who has yet to encounter a food he dislikes, and who naps. For which I am eternally grateful as my 3-year-old doesn’t. Nor has she ever.

    Like

  45. Emily Avatar
    Emily

    Wow wow wow wow wow this is good. I made my own soup pasta to go with it, and the whole thing had me constantly groaning in happiness at the table. Thanks for posting this — a recipe I’d overlooked in one of the best cookbooks of all time! 🙂

    Like

  46. Bobbie Avatar
    Bobbie

    Definitely planning to try this one – beautiful, yummy, and healthy. I agree completely about Marcella’s book – my go-to authority on anything Italian in the kitchen. And welcome to this side of the pond!

    Like

  47. Yuki - Japanese Cooking Avatar

    Wow, now there is a hearty soup for the winter! Loving the colour, I might spice it up with some extra chilly! Yuki

    Like

  48. Tara Avatar

    This soup was DELISH! However, I have two questions: 1) how much broccoli are you using, like weight-wise? I prepped one medium bunch and thought, huh, this does not look like enough, so I prepped a second. It still didn’t seem like very much. 2) 6 people!? My hubby and I chowed it down, he went in for seconds but I made him put a little schluck aside for Ben (10.5 months) for lunch. Is it 6 as an appetizer? In any case, it was delicious and it’s definitely going into the repertoire (despite the longish prep with the aforementioned Ben 🙂 ). Thanks!

    Like

  49. Alex Avatar
    Alex

    I just made this, and it was delicious! However, following the recipe I only managed to come out with three modest servings rather than six. Did anyone else have that experience?

    Like

  50. Alex Avatar
    Alex

    Haha…nevermind. I should have looked up.

    Like

Leave a reply to Emily @ Tips on Healthy Living Cancel reply