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Minestrone Recipe

Minestrone Recipe

Make Minestrone Recipe tonight: cook Minestrone Recipe in one pot for a cozy, veggie-packed soup in 60 minutes.

Ingredients

Instructions

Step 1: Gently render and soften the aromatics

Warm the extra-virgin olive oil until it shimmers, then add the finely diced pancetta (if using) and let the fat render until the meat is lightly browned and glossy but not crisp. Add the finely diced onion, carrots, celery and fennel to the warm fat and sauté gently until the vegetables are softened and the onion turns translucent — tender, slightly glossy pieces that yield under a spoon but show no browning. This stage builds the flavor base: soft, juicy vegetable textures bathing in a warm, amber lipid sheen.

Step 2: Brighten and deepen with garlic, tomato paste and herbs

Stir in the minced garlic just long enough for it to perfume the pot, then fold in the tomato paste and the dried herbs and crushed red pepper. Cook, stirring constantly, until the tomato paste darkens and clings to the vegetables, leaving a tacky, umami-rich coating across every dice and a faint rusty tint across the surface — an aromatic, concentrated paste that signals a deeper, savory turn in the soup’s personality. Keep the wooden spoon close; you’ll see it streaked with the reddish-brown paste.

Step 3: Add the root vegetables and early summer squash, combine

Add the cubed potatoes, zucchini, yellow squash and trimmed green beans and stir thoroughly so each cube and spear is slicked with that herb-and-tomato coating. The scene should read as a mix of soft white potato cubes, pale green zucchini, sunny yellow squash and vibrant emerald beans — all neatly cubed and showing distinct edges, their starchy and vegetal textures promising a tender bite after simmering. This is the moment the soup becomes a textured mosaic of shapes and colors.

Step 4: Pour in tomatoes, broth and beans, bring to a gentle simmer

Add the canned diced tomatoes with their juices, the broth and water, then nestle in the bay leaf, the Parmesan rind and the drained cannellini and kidney beans. Scrape up any fond so the liquid is flecked with browned bits and aromatics. Increase heat until the pot reaches a gentle boil, then immediately lower to maintain a steady, quiet simmer. The pot’s surface should show slow, regular movement — floating tomato chunks, pale beans bobbing near the surface, and a clear, savory broth that’s begun to take on color and body.

Step 5: Finish with pasta, leafy greens, bright herbs and acid, then rest and serve

Once the potatoes and beans are tender, stir in the small pasta and the shredded cabbage (or spinach) and simmer just until the pasta is al dente and the greens have softened. Remove the bay leaf and Parmesan rind, fold in the chopped parsley and basil, then stir in fresh lemon juice to brighten. Taste and adjust salt and pepper. Let the soup rest off heat for several minutes so the textures settle and the flavors meld. Ladle into warm bowls and finish each serving with a generous grating of Parmigiano-Reggiano and a light drizzle of extra-virgin olive oil.

Notes