Broccoli Cheese Soup Recipe (2024)

Why It Works

  • Charring broccoli florets and simmering the stems builds in layers of broccoli flavor.
  • Adding a potato to the simmering soup provides a natural thickener that helps the cheese emulsify and gives the soup a creamy texture.

In the world of cheaty foods, broccoli cheese soup has always seemed like one of the cheatiest. Yes, "broccoli" is the first word in the name, and "soup" sure sounds healthy, but let's get real: When you go up to the counter and tell the order-taker, "I'd like a bowl of broccoli cheese soup, please," what you're really saying is "Thank you for making it easy and acceptable to drink a bowl of nacho cheese sauce for lunch."

Broccoli Cheese Soup Recipe (1)

There's nothing wrong with owning it. Cheese is delicious, and not every single lunch has to be virtuous. Still, I sometimes wish that thebroccolipart of the whole thing was taken a little more seriously, if only for the purely selfish reason that I love broccoli.

My goal here was to create a recipe for broccoli cheese soup that was as comforting as the ultra-cheesy kind you typically find, but simultaneously really tasted like broccoli.

The Best Way to Build Layers of Broccoli Flavor

For my first test, I used a very common technique: Sauté onions and carrots in butter until softened but not browned, since browned onions and carrots become distractingly sweet. Add some chicken stock to the pot—water also works fine, though chicken stock lends more flavor—along with some dairy. (I tested heavy cream, regular milk, and skim milk and found that straight-up whole milk was best; it provided creaminess without an overwhelming amount of extra dairy fat, which can dull flavors.) Thicken with starch. Simmer. Blend in cheese. Add broccoli and cook just until tender.

With this approach, I wound up with a soup that tasted like what it was: cheese soup, with bits of broccoli floating in it.

Next, I went the opposite route, testing a few recipes that called for simmering the broccoli for a long, long time (these tended to be slow-cooker recipes). These soups ended up tasting very much like the chafing-dish version you're probably familiar with if you ever eat lunch at Panera: broccoli flavor built right into the soup, but no brightness or freshness to speak of.

This wasn't surprising. Anybody who has made mypasta with braised broccoli, or the braised broccoli rabe recipe frommy book, knows that the flavor of broccoli will change dramatically based on how long it's cooked. Cook it for a short period of time, and it stays grassy and bright. Cook it for a very long period, and it turns rich and savory.*

*Interestingly, a recent recipe from America's Test Kitchenfor cauliflower soupfound that the same holds true for cauliflower. I'm guessing it's a common trait in all brassicas.

Each style has its appeal, but what Ireallywanted was both: deep broccoli flavor worked into the soup, along with pieces of bright, fresh, grassy broccoli. So how do we get the best of both worlds? Simple: Just add the broccoli in two different stages.

I started by separating heads of broccoli into stems and florets, cutting the florets into bite-size pieces. Next, I chopped up the stems and sautéed them in butter, along with onion and a carrot. (I also tried leek and celery, but found them unnecessary.) I added some sliced garlic to the blend as well, sautéing it just until aromatic.

After adding my stock and dairy and giving the soup base a good long simmer to fully tenderize the broccoli stems, I puréed the whole thing using animmersion blender, adding grated cheddar cheese to the pot as I blended. The texture of the soup wasn't exactly where I wanted it to be (a little grainy), but I figured I could focus more on that after I'd worked out the broccoli flavor issue.

The resulting soup was delicious, with nicely layered broccoli flavor, but it could have been even better. I'd already enhanced the flavor of the vegetable by playing with the variable of time—what if I were to also play with the variable of heat? Just likeBrussels sprouts, broccoli gets an intensely sweet, nutty flavor when subjected to very high heat. There had to be a good way to take advantage of that.

How could I incorporate that flavor into the soup? My first thought was to roast the broccoli stems, asDaniel does for his roasted-broccoli soup, but roasting and then simmering seemed a little fussy for a single recipe. Instead, I decided to do it all on the stovetop by searing the broccoli florets in a bit of oil right at the start, then transferring them to a baking sheet to cool while I constructed the rest of the soup base.

Doing this allowed me to add those browned florets back to the soup before serving, pulsing them with the immersion blender just enough to break them apart and spread some of that sweet, nutty flavor around. The resulting soup had great, multilayered broccoli flavor. Now it was time to turn my attention to the other important element: the cheese.

Chasing Maximum Cheesiness: For a Creamy and Emulsified Soup, Add a Potato

Broccoli Cheese Soup Recipe (2)

I went with a combination of grated sharp cheddar and chunks of American cheese that I got from the deli case. (Check out this article onAmerican cheesefor more details about the difference between the deli and the presliced stuff.) This combo provides a nice mix of sharp, "flavorful" cheese and the more comforting, dairy-forward character of mild American. (There's nothing stopping you from using all cheddar, all American, or any other young, moist cheese, of course.)

It's easy to think "Just add more cheese!" if you want a cheese soup to be cheesier, but anyone who's ever tried dumping grated cheese into a pot of simmering liquid knows that it doesn't quite work like this. Your cheese ends up clumping in a solid mass, with a slick of fat breaking out and floating on the surface. Why does this happen?

Let's take a quick look at what cheese is made of:

  • Wateris present to varying degrees. Young cheeses, like Jack, young cheddars, or mozzarella, have a relatively high water content—up to 80%. The longer a cheese is aged, the more moisture it loses, and the harder it becomes. Hard cheeses, like Parmigiano-Reggiano or Pecorino Romano, may be as little as 30% water after several years of aging.
  • Milk fat, in the form of microscopic globules kept suspended in a tight matrix of protein micelles (more on those in a second). Under about 90°F, this fat is solid. Because of this, and because of their suspension, the globules don't come into contact with each other to form larger globules, so cheeses stay creamy or crumbly instead of greasy.
  • Protein micellesare spherical bundles of milk proteins. Individual milk proteins (the main ones are four similar molecules called caseins) resemble little tadpoles (or sperm, if you will), with hydrophobic (water-avoiding) heads and hydrophilic (water-seeking) tails. These proteins come together headfirst in bundles of several thousand, protecting their hydrophobic heads and exposing their hydrophilic tails. These micelles link together into long chains, forming a matrix that gives the cheese structure.
  • Salt and other flavoringsmake up the rest of the cheese. Salt can have a profound effect on the texture of the cheese—saltier cheeses have had more moisture drawn out of the curd before being pressed, so they tend to be drier and firmer. Other flavorful compounds present in cheese are mostly intentional by-products of bacteria and aging.

Normally, these four players work together in relative harmony. But heat messes the whole thing up. Here's what Harold McGee has to say inOn Food and Cooking:

"First, at around 90°F, the milk fat melts, which makes the cheese more supple, and often brings little beads of melted fat to the surface. Then at higher temperatures—around...150°F/65°C for Cheddar...enough of the bonds holding the casein proteins together are broken that the protein matrix collapses."

The key to making a cheese soup that stays creamy and emulsified is to find a way to ensure that the fat globules don't band together and that the proteins don't tighten up too much. Fortunately, after developing my recipes forcheese sauceandultra-gooey stovetop mac and cheese, I have a bit of experience in this field.

Broccoli Cheese Soup Recipe (3)

The common solution is to use a flour-based roux. Flour can thicken up the water phase of the soup, which in turn makes it difficult for fat globules to coalesce. Just like in a creamyMornay sauce, the cheese can't separate. But starch-thickened sauces tend to have a particular texture that I find off-putting. Rather than glossy and smooth, like melted cheese, they end up more pasty and dull. I wanted to avoid using a flour-based roux in my soup.

First, I tried substituting evaporated milk for the whole milk I was using in the recipe. Evaporated milk has a higher concentration of loose milk proteins, which can help to keep the mixture emulsified. The downside is that evaporated milk tastes like cooked milk. This flavor isn't so distracting in a cheese sauce or mac and cheese, both of which have a very high percentage of cheese, but it didn't work for the soup.

Next, I turned to other thickeners and emulsifiers: cornstarch, sodium citrate, and...a potato. (One of these things is not like the other. Consider this foreshadowing.)

Broccoli Cheese Soup Recipe (4)

Cornstarch works much better than flour, especially if you add it by tossing the grated cheese with it, which allows you to incorporate it smoothly, with no chance of clumping. But it's still got the problem of being slightly, well, starchy.

Sodium citrate works incredibly well in this context. It's a salt that works on a chemical level to maintain a stable emulsion between fat and water. A little pinch of it in cheese soup or cheese sauce can make almost any cheese melt with the texture of Velveeta. However, at least until it becomes a more common pantry staple, I wanted to find a solution using ingredients available at any supermarket.

Broccoli Cheese Soup Recipe (5)

That led me to the humble potato. If you've ever made the mistake of trying to make mashed potatoes in a food processor or blender, you know that blending potatoes can turn them incredibly sticky and starchy, almost like bubble gum. For mashed potatoes, this is bad. But, when it's deployed in a controlled manner, this effect can be a powerful tool in your kitchen arsenal. It's the same technique I use to give my dairy-freevegan nacho saucea gooey, cheese-like texture, and it proved to work just as well in this soup.

By adding a few ounces of potato to the soup base along with the stock and simmering it along with the broccoli, I was able to thicken up the broth enough that the cheese stayed perfectly creamy and emulsified when I blended it in at the end. As a final flavor boost, I also added just a teaspoon of dried mustard (tossed with the cheese) and a dash of hot sauce.

I blended it all together, then stirred in my charred broccoli florets.

It was everything I've ever wanted in a broccoli cheese soup: intensely cheesy, but with a strong broccoli backbone. Which, come to think of it, is exactly the way I'd describe Crucifer-Man, the wisecracking, half-man/half-brassica superhero who fights ecoterrorists by flinging extra-crispy baked kale chips.

Unlike this soup, he's not very effective.

Broccoli Cheese Soup Recipe (6)

October 2016

Recipe Details

Broccoli Cheese Soup Recipe

Prep5 mins

Cook50 mins

Active30 mins

Total55 mins

Serves6 servings

Ingredients

  • 1 1/2 pounds (700g) broccoli

  • 2 tablespoons (30ml) vegetable oil

  • Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper

  • 3 tablespoons (45g) unsalted butter

  • 1 medium onion, sliced (about 6 ounces; 170g)

  • 1 medium carrot, peeled and finely diced (about 4 ounces; 120g)

  • 3 medium cloves garlic, thinly sliced

  • 2 cups (475ml) water, orhomemadeor store-bought low-sodium chicken stock

  • 3 cups (700ml)whole milk

  • 1 small russet potato, peeled and sliced (about 4 ounces; 120g)

  • 12 ounces (340g) sharp cheddar cheese, grated (see notes)

  • 8 ounces (240g) deli-style American cheese, diced (see notes)

  • 1 teaspoon (3g) mustard powder

  • Dash of hot sauce, such as Frank's RedHot

Directions

  1. Separate broccoli into florets and stems. Cut florets into bite-size pieces and set aside. Roughly chop stems and reserve separately.

    Broccoli Cheese Soup Recipe (7)

  2. Heat oil in a large Dutch oven over high heat until shimmering. Add broccoli florets and cook, without moving, until charred on the bottom, about 1 minute. Stir, season with salt and pepper, and continue cooking, stirring occasionally, until tender and charred on several surfaces, about 1 minute longer. Transfer to a rimmed baking sheet to cool.

    Broccoli Cheese Soup Recipe (8)

  3. Return Dutch oven to medium heat and add butter, onion, carrot, and broccoli stems. Season with salt and pepper and cook, stirring frequently, until tender but not browned, about 5 minutes, lowering heat if necessary. Add garlic and cook, stirring, until fragrant, about 30 seconds.

    Broccoli Cheese Soup Recipe (9)

  4. Add water or chicken stock, milk, and potato and bring to a boil over high heat. Reduce to a bare simmer and cook, stirring occasionally, until broccoli and potato are completely tender, about 30 minutes.

    Broccoli Cheese Soup Recipe (10)

  5. In a large bowl, toss both cheeses together along with mustard powder. Using an immersion blender or working in batches with a countertop blender, blend soup, adding cheese a handful at a time, until completely smooth. Stir in hot sauce and season to taste with salt and pepper. Stir in reserved broccoli florets and pulse with blender a few more times until a few pieces are broken down, but most bite-size pieces remain. Serve immediately.

    Broccoli Cheese Soup Recipe (11)

Special Equipment

Immersion blender or countertop blender, rimmed baking sheet

Notes

Look for deli-style American cheese at the deli counter of your supermarket. You can use any combination of cheddar, American, and other young, moist cheeses, like Jack or Colby.

  • Soups
  • Gluten-free Mains
  • Cheddar Cheese
  • Broccoli
  • Russet Potatoes
Broccoli Cheese Soup Recipe (2024)

FAQs

Why is my broccoli cheddar soup not creamy? ›

Soup needs some fat to smooth out the texture and help the ingredients bind together. If your soup is too lean, it will taste grainy. Try adding some additional cream or milk to the soup until it reaches the desired consistency.

How do you thicken broccoli cheese soup? ›

The common solution is to use a flour-based roux. Flour can thicken up the water phase of the soup, which in turn makes it difficult for fat globules to coalesce.

What is the best melting cheese for soup? ›

Mild cheddar, Colby, Monterey jack, mozzarella, Swiss and queso blanco can all work well. “The best cheeses to melt into soups are cheeses that are higher in moisture and have a lower melting point,” says Bauer. In addition to cheddar and Monterey jack, he recommends Fontina and Gruyère.

Why won t my cheese melt in my broccoli cheddar soup? ›

Pre-shredded cheese is often coated in anti-caking agents that can prevent the cheese from melting into a lusciously creamy soup. To ensure that your broccoli cheddar soup has the best smooth and creamy texture, buy a block of cheese and grate it yourself.

How can I make my soup more creamy? ›

Method 1: Whisk in a slurry of cornstarch or flour

Add equal parts water or soup liquid to the flour or cornstarch and whisk until they're completely combined in a slurry. Once you've created the slurry, slowly whisk it into soup liquid and bring it back to a simmer.

Does adding milk to soup make it creamy? ›

Whether you use a few tablespoons or a few cups, cream gives soup a silky mouthfeel and rich flavor. You can definitely add milk or other dairy as well, though it will taste gradually less creamy as you go down in percent.

How do you fix bland broccoli soup? ›

Add other vegetables: Incorporate other mild or sweeter vegetables like carrots, cauliflower, or sweet potatoes to balance out the broccoli's taste. Cream or dairy: Adding a splash of cream, milk, or non-dairy alternatives like coconut milk or almond milk can help mellow the flavor of the soup.

Why is my cheese clumping in broccoli cheddar soup? ›

Pre-grated cheese is coated in anti-caking agents which means it won't melt as smoothly. When it's time to add the cheese into the soup, sprinkle it in in batches, stirring until each batch is melted before adding the next batch vs dumping it all in at once. This will ensure there are no clumps in the final soup.

How do you fix watery broccoli cheddar soup? ›

Create A Cornstarch Slurry With Equal Parts Water

For Lindsay Mattison's Panera-style broccoli and cheddar soup recipe, she advises using a tablespoon of cornstarch for every cup of liquid.

How do you keep broccoli cheese soup from curdling? ›

Slowly add the cream or milk and continually stir after adding. This will help prevent it from curdling. Use shredded cheese and always reduce the heat to about low to medium before adding. Don't add the cheese all at once or you risk clumping.

What cheese doesn't melt in soup? ›

Ones to avoid are Parmesan and Pecorino (any hard, aged cheeses), goat and feta (any dry, crumbly cheeses) as they don't melt well.

What is the hardest cheese to melt? ›

Chevre goat cheese, farmers cheese, feta, halloumi, ricotta or paneer do become softer with heat, but they won't spread out and melt. Aged cheeses like Parmigiano Reggiano aren't a great choice, either.

What goes good with cheddar broccoli soup? ›

  • Weeknight Winter Salad.
  • Cheesy Mashed Potato Puffs.
  • Garlicky Roasted Broccoli.
  • Spinach Salad with Warm Brown Butter Dressing.
  • How to Make Pull-Apart Cheese Bread.
  • Carrot Tahini Salad.
  • Fiery Kale with Garlic and Olive Oil.
  • Ina Garten's Parmesan Roasted Zucchini.
Feb 14, 2017

How do you add cheese to soup without curdling it? ›

To prevent cheese from curdling, it's important to add it to the soup slowly and at a lower temperature. Gradually incorporate small amounts of cheese into the hot soup while stirring continuously. Also, avoid boiling the soup after adding the cheese.

Why does cheese get gummy in soup? ›

But when heat is introduced, the protein structure falls apart and the emulsion breaks—the fat globules come together into a greasy pool and the proteins congeal to form a stringy mess. But American cheese is specifically designed to be extremely meltable and nearly impossible to break.

Why is my broccoli cheddar grainy? ›

Basically the proteins in the cheese tighten up and squeeze out the fat. You end up with a grainy, curdled consistency. Unfortunately there is no way to fix it once it's happened, so just be really careful to keep this soup on a very low flame once the dairy has gone in.

Why is my broccoli and cheese soup grainy? ›

If you add cheese to your soup when it's too hot or boiling vigorously, it can become overcooked and develop a grainy or curdled texture rather than melting smoothly. To avoid this, reduce the heat to low or medium-low before adding the cheese.

How do you make soup creamier and thicker? ›

6 ways to thicken soup:
  1. Blend all or part of it. If you've made a broth with chunks of vegetable in it, such as minestrone soup, then pour the soup through a sieve. ...
  2. Add cream or yogurt. ...
  3. Add flour or cornflour. ...
  4. Use a butter and flour paste. ...
  5. Blend in bread. ...
  6. Add lentils or rice.

Why won t my broccoli cheddar soup thicken? ›

Add more cheese – The more cheese you add, the thicker your broccoli and cheese soup will be!

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