Italian Wedding Soup

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If you like a soup with a hearty combination of vegetables and meat in a deeply flavorful broth, this is for you.

We love making the chicken broth in advance and then the rest of this incredibly satisfying soup comes together quickly and easily. When the temperature starts to drop outside, this is the ticket for warming hearts on the inside!

Italian Wedding Soup in a white bowl on a small white plate with a couple of pieces of bread on it.

How To Make Italian Wedding Soup

Once you’ve got your homemade chicken broth ready to go, the rest of putting this soup together is fairly straightforward and simple.

And the smell, while it’s simmering on the stove, is just amazing.

Homemade Chicken Broth Is Easy To Prepare

You may be wondering is chicken stock the same as chicken broth? They are very, very similar, and are used in many of the same types of recipes.

Typically, stock is slow-simmered with bones (usually that have been roasted) with a little meat on them. And then also a mirepoix (onion, celery, carrots) and aromatics are added to water with the bones and slow simmered. This soup recipe would also be great with our Roasted Chicken Stock.

A broth is cooked with meat pieces (i.e., bone-in, skin-on chicken breasts) and also a mirepoix and aromatics. Broths are usually seasoned with salt, whereas stocks usually are not.

EXPERT TIP: We recommend making the broth a least one day in advance of preparing the soup. Let the broth cool for 24 hours in the refrigerator. The rendered fat will rise to the top of the broth and then congeal, making it easy to skim off with a spoon the next day.

A hand using a spoon to skim congealed chicken fat from the surface of a pot filled with chilled chicken stock.

The Ingredients You Will Need

If you were to ask most people what is Italian Wedding Soup, they would say it’s a soup that’s served at Italian weddings.

Well, that may be true, but it actually means “minestra maritat”, which translates to: “married soup.” It’s the perfect marriage of vegetables and meat!

Speaking of vegetables, we love using a combination of carrots, celery, and spinach. Other wonderful greens could be used in place of the spinach, such as kale, endive, cabbage, or escarole.

Two glass bowls, one filled with sliced celery and carrots and the other with spinach, both over a stock pot.

If you want an authentic Italian wedding soup recipe, you’ve come to the right place.

Homemade meatballs add incredible taste and texture to this amazing soup.

EXPERT TIP: You need to start off with a total of 2 pounds of ground meat. We recommend using a combination of any of the following: Beef, veal, pork, Italian sausage. Ground turkey or chicken or good options, as well. If you like your meatballs a little larger, roll them to about 2 inches in diameter, if you like them small, roll them to about 1 inch in thickness.

3 images with 1st a bowl filled with ground meat, eggs, and cheese, and the next a hand holding a formed meatball, and last meatballs cooking in a hot skillet.

Choosing the Right Pasta

Cooked pasta rounds out the flavor profile of this ultimate comfort soup.

We recommend going with a small pasta such as ditalini, gigli, orecchiette, orzo, or small elbow.

Once the veggies have been simmering for 15 minutes, it’s time to add the pasta for another 15 minutes of simmering.

A glass bowl full of uncooked elbow pasta being dropped into a large stock pan.

After the pasta and vegetables have simmered a total of 30 minutes, it’s time to add the seared meatballs.

When searing the meatballs, you want them to be nice and browned on the outside, but not 100% cooked on the inside.

Simmering the seared meatballs in the broth for another 20 minutes will cook them to juicy perfection.

A large ladle filled with soup containing a meatball, pasta, spinach, and chicken stock.

How To Serve Italian Wedding Soup

This soup is so hearty, it makes a wonderful meal when served with a nice crusty loaf of bread.

If desired, sprinkle the individual bowls of soup with a pinch of red pepper flakes.

Grated Parmesan cheese on the top of each serving is beautiful and adds another wonderful layer of flavor.

A hand scraping a block of Parmesan cheese across a microplane over a bowl of Italian wedding soup.

This is the quintessential comfort soup.

If you don’t make the broth (or stock), seek out a good-quality purchased broth. The meatballs can be made up to 3 days in advance.

Talk about a spoonful of deliciousness with every single bite!

A hand holding a soup spoon with a meatball, some pasta, and spinach on it and over a bowl of the soup.

Other Classic Soups to Try

We are just crazy about homemade soup. We’ve seldom met a well-made soup that we didn’t absolutely love. Here are a few other favorites you’ll want to check out:

But in the meantime, you’ve got to make this incredible soup! Just look at this bowl of yumminess!

A white soup bowl filled with Italian wedding soup with a spoon in it and piece of bread nearby.

Ready to make a soup that is the perfect marriage of vegetables and savory meat? Go for it!

And when you do, be sure to take a photo of it, and post it on Instagram, and tag @HowToFeedaLoon and hashtag #HowToFeedaLoon!

Two white soup bowls filled with Italian wedding soup on small plates with pieces of bread on them.

Italian Wedding Soup

This Italian Wedding Soup is the perfect marriage of veggies and meat. It will warm you to the bone and make you smile with every satisfying bite! Perfect for when loved one's are coming to visit!
5 from 2 votes
Print Pin Rate
Course: Soup
Cuisine: Italian
Keyword: easy Italian wedding soup recipe, how to make Italian wedding soup, Italian wedding soup ingredients
Prep Time: 20 minutes
Cook Time: 1 hour
Total Time: 1 hour 20 minutes
Servings: 10 people
Calories: 532kcal

Equipment

  • 6 to 10 quart stock pan

Ingredients

  • 1 gallon chicken broth 16 cups
  • 12 oz spinach fresh
  • 3 large carrots peeled and sliced
  • 4 stalks celery sliced
  • 12 oz pasta dried, such as dilatini or small elbow

FOR THE MEATBALLS

  • 1 lb ground beef 85% lean is good
  • 1 lb Italian sausage sweet of hot
  • 2 eggs lightly beaten
  • ½ cup onion finely chopped
  • 3 cloves garlic minced
  • 2 tbsp parsley fresh, flat-leaf, chopped
  • ½ cup bread crumbs plain, dried
  • ½ cup Parmesan cheese plus more for garnish
  • Sea salt and black pepper
  • 3 tbsp olive oil

Instructions

  • Bring the broth to a boil over high heat.
  • Add the carrots, celery, and spinach and turn to low. Simmer for about 30 minutes, until tender
  • About 15 minutes into the simmering, add the pasta.

Make the Meatballs

  • In a large bowl, combine the beef, Italian sausage, eggs, onion, garlic, bread crumbs, cheese, and 1 teaspoon of salt and pepper (each). Mix until fully combined.
  • Moisten hands and shape medium-small meatballs. Place them on a platter.
  • In a large frying skillet over medium heat, warm the oil.
  • Working in batches, add the meatballs to the hot oil and brown on all sides, about 6 - 8 minutes. The insides won't be completely cooked at this point.
  • Finish Off the Soup
  • Using a slotted spoon, carefully add the meatballs to the soup and simmer gently over low heat until they are cooked through, about 20 minutes.
  • Taste, and add salt accordingly, usually anywhere from 1 tablespoon to 2 tablespoons, depending on if the broth was seasoned or not. Taste and then add in increments, continuing to taste until just right.
  • Ladle soup into warmed soup bowl and top with grated cheese.

Video

Notes

The broth can be made up to 4 days in advance.  It can be frozen for up to 2 months.
You need about 1 gallon of broth, which is 4 quarts (16 cups).  Be careful when seasoning with salt.  Some purchased broths are already seasoned with salt.  Just before serving, taste, and add salt in smaller amounts, tasting after each addition, until it's to your liking.
Kale, escarole, and cabbage are wonderful in this soup, as well as spinach.
Any combination of ground beef, pork, Italian sausage, or veal makes great meatballs.  Ground turkey or chicken are good options, too, though they won't make as juicy of a meatball. 
The soup keeps in the fridge for up to 1 week and freezes for up to 2 months.  

Nutrition

Calories: 532kcal | Carbohydrates: 36g | Protein: 25g | Fat: 26g | Saturated Fat: 9g | Cholesterol: 103mg | Sodium: 1937mg | Potassium: 963mg | Fiber: 3g | Sugar: 3g | Vitamin A: 7028IU | Vitamin C: 41mg | Calcium: 172mg | Iron: 4mg
Tried this recipe? Take a Picture!Mention @HowToFeedALoon or tag #HowToFeedALoon!

POST UPDATE: This recipe was originally published in November 2015, but was updated with improved tweaks to the recipe with new tips and photography, and a fabulous new video in September 2020!

8 Comments

  • 5 stars
    I made this soup for Christmas. I made it exactly just the way you both did. Delicious Delicious. Thank you both and Merry Christmas & Happy New Year

    • Hi Larua! Yay! We are thrilled you made the Italian Weddin Soup and had such great success! That is one of our favorites and it would be PERFECT for a Christmas heart-warming soup. Thank you so so much for sharing and we hope you and your loved ones had a beautiful Christmas! Happy New Year!!! xoxo Kris & Wesley

  • 5 stars
    Nummy nummy!!!!
    I didn’t have spinach, so I subbed Swiss Chard!!
    I also added the parsley to the meatballs, lol, saw it in the ingredients but not the instructions, so I made an executive decision !!
    As usual extra garlic too!!
    Hope you are both well!

    • Hi Lydia!! We are so so happy you loved the soup and thank you SO MUCH for letting us know about the parsley!! Yikes! So sorry but sounds like you handled it like the pro that you are!! Hope you are well, too!! xoxo Kris & Wesley

  • I’ve always loved Progresso’s Italian Wedding Soup, so I went on a mission to recreate it. Ina Garten has a super recipe but it was bland. I’m curious to try yours (love your blog), but wonder if a pinch or rosemary or oregano would give it a punch?

    Thanks for all your great recipes, and best of all, your tips!

    • Hi Jane!

      Sure! A pinch of rosemary and/or oregano would be delicious, too! We think making the chicken broth from scratch is a big deal-breaker for this soup! Let us know if you make it and what you think!! And thanks so much for your support!! Stay in touch!! All the best, Kris & Wesley

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