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Fat-Free No-Cream Asparagus Soup (Vegan)

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Fat-free vegan asparagus soup with onions, leeks, and vegetable stock. No cream, no butter, just bright spring vegetables blended silky and strained smooth.

YIELD

8 servings

PREP

30 min

COOK

15 min

READY

45 min

A naturally creamy asparagus soup with no cream, no butter, no oil, and no fancy techniques. Just two pounds of fresh asparagus, softened onions and leeks for sweetness, vegetable stock, and a fine-mesh strain that turns the puree silky-smooth. The fat-free trick works because asparagus has enough natural starch to give the soup body once pureed; the strain catches any tough fibers the blender misses.

Water-saute or microwave the aromatics. This skips the usual oil-saute step that adds calories and fat without contributing much in a soup that gets fully pureed. The leeks (especially the pale green parts) add a softer, sweeter base than onions alone.

Don’t skip the strain. It’s the difference between a rustic asparagus puree and a silky, restaurant-quality bisque-style soup. A fine mesh sieve and a few minutes of pushing the puree through with a ladle is all it takes.

Pro Tips

  • Snap off the woody asparagus ends; they break naturally where the tough part starts.
  • Reserve a few asparagus tips, blanch separately, and float on top as a garnish.
  • Use homemade or low-sodium vegetable stock; commercial stocks can be very salty.
  • Serve with garlic croutons as the recipe suggests for crunch and contrast.

Variations

Ingredients

2 2
MEDIUM EACH ONIONS
2 2
MEDIUM EACH LEEK
white and pale green parts only, chopped *
6 1.4
2 907.2
POUNDS G ASPARAGUS
each cut into 4 pieces
1
X WHITE PEPPER
to taste *
1 1
EACH EACH BUTTER BUD
package, optional *

Directions

Microwave the onions and leeks until tender or sauté in water over medium heat until tender.

Add stock and the asparagus and simmer until tender, about 15 minutes.

Purée soup in blender in batches and strain through a fine strainer.

Return to pot and season with white pepper to taste.

You may now add the butter buds if you desire a butter flavor.

Makes about 8 cups.

Can be served hot or cold.

Keeps well in the refrigerator for several days.

I use this as my basic soup recipe and have successfully replaced the asparagus with beets, broccoli, carrot, acorn squash, butternut squash, and red kuri squash.

You can make quite an impression by making both the acorn and butternut squash soups at the same time and serving them in the same bowl.

Just slowly pour both soups into opposite sides of the bowl at the same time.

I usually serve this with garlic croutons.

* not incl. in nutrient facts Arrow up button

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Nutrition Facts

Serving Size 319g (11.3 oz)
Amount per Serving
Calories 39 4% from fat
 % Daily Value *
Total Fat 0g 0%
Saturated Fat 0g 0%
Trans Fat 0g
Cholesterol 0mg 0%
Sodium 7mg 0%
Total Carbohydrate 2g 2%
Dietary Fiber 3g 11%
Sugars g
Protein 6g
Vitamin A 17% Vitamin C 14%
Calcium 5% Iron 14%
* based on a 2,000 calorie diet How is this calculated?
 
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