Hearty Lentil Soup with Spinach and Lemon Juice Recipe

Hearty Lentil Soup with Spinach and Lemon Juice Recipe - Hearty Lentil Soup with Spinach and Lemon Juice
Hearty Lentil Soup with Spinach and Lemon Juice Recipe
  • Focus: Hearty Lentil Soup with Spinach and Lemon Juice
  • Category: Drinks
  • Prep Time: 30 min
  • Cook Time: 30 min
  • Servings: 5

Love this? Pin it for later!

Today this soup is my weeknight superhero—it comes together in under an hour, uses pantry staples, and somehow tastes even better on the second day. It’s vegan by default, gluten-free, and packed with plant-powered protein and iron. Whether you’re meal-prepping for a busy week, feeding a crowd after soccer practice, or simply craving something wholesome that doesn’t scream “health food,” this recipe delivers. The lemon juice added right at the end is non-negotiable; it’s the highlighter pen that makes every other flavor pop. Trust me, you’ll want crusty bread for sopping and maybe an extra wedge of lemon on the side.

Why This Recipe Works

  • One-pot wonder: Minimal dishes, maximum flavor—everything simmers in a single Dutch oven.
  • Pantry heroes: Lentils, canned tomatoes, and spices you probably have on hand right now.
  • Bright finish: Fresh lemon juice added off-heat keeps the soup vibrant and balances earthy lentils.
  • Green power: Baby spinach wilts in seconds for a hit of color and nutrients without overcooking.
  • Texture contrast: A quick blend of just one ladleful creates creamy body while retaining hearty whole lentils.
  • Freezer-friendly: Double the batch and freeze flat in zip bags for up to three months.
  • Customizable: Swap greens, add roasted vegetables, or stir in coconut milk for richness.

Ingredients You'll Need

Ingredients

Each ingredient here pulls its weight, so let’s break them down and talk quality cues and smart swaps.

Brown or Green Lentils (1½ cups): These varieties hold their shape yet soften nicely. Avoid red lentils—they’ll dissolve into mush. Look for plump, uniformly colored legumes; shriveled or faded ones cook unevenly. Rinse and pick out any tiny stones—nobody wants a dental adventure.

Extra-Virgin Olive Oil (3 Tbsp): A fruit-forward oil adds depth for sautéing and a silky finish. If you’re out, avocado oil works, but skip neutral canola; you want flavor here.

Yellow Onion (1 large): The aromatic backbone. Dice small for quick, even cooking. Sweet onions are fine; red onions can turn the broth murky.

Carrots (2 medium): Peel if the skins look dry or bitter; otherwise a good scrub is enough. Cut into ¼-inch coins so they cook through in the soup’s 30-minute simmer.

Celery (2 ribs): Adds subtle herbal bitterness. Use the leaves too—they’re packed with flavor. Fennel stalks are a creative swap if celery is absent.

Garlic (4 cloves): Smash, then mince to release allicin, the compound that gives garlic its punch. Jarred garlic is convenient but lacks brightness; use 1½ tsp per fresh clove if you must.

Tomato Paste (2 Tbsp): Buy in a tube for fridge longevity. It caramelizes in the pot, lending umami depth and a russet hue. No paste? Swap ½ cup crushed tomatoes, but reduce broth slightly.

Ground Cumin (1 tsp): Toast briefly to awaken nutty notes. Whole seeds ground fresh are magnificent—use ¾ tsp if grinding your own.

Smoked Paprika (½ tsp): Adds whisper-smoke without heat. Regular paprika works; add a pinch of chipotle powder for extra oomph.

Vegetable Broth (4 cups): Low-sodium lets you control salt. Homemade is gold; if using cubes, taste before adding extra salt. Chicken broth is an omnivore’s fine substitute.

Fire-Roasted Diced Tomatoes (14 oz can): Their charred edges lend complexity. Plain diced tomatoes suffice; add ¼ tsp sugar to balance acidity if needed.

Bay Leaf (1): The stealth flavor enhancer. Fresh bay leaves are more floral; if that’s what you have, halve the quantity.

Fresh Baby Spinach (3 packed cups): Triple-washed bags save time. If using mature spinach, remove tough stems. Kale or chard are sturdy alternatives; add 2 minutes earlier to soften.

Lemon Juice (2 Tbsp): Use fresh—bottled tastes flat. Add off-heat to preserve vitamin C and aromatic oils.

Kosher Salt & Black Pepper: Season in layers, starting with the aromatics and finishing just before serving. Diamond Crystal and Morton have different densities; taste as you go.

How to Make Hearty Lentil Soup with Spinach and Lemon Juice Recipe

1
Warm the pot

Place a heavy 4-quart Dutch oven over medium heat for 1 minute. Add olive oil and swirl to coat the base; the oil should shimmer but not smoke. This ensures even sautéing and prevents sticking.

2
Sauté aromatics

Stir in diced onion, carrot, and celery with a pinch of salt. Sweat 5–6 minutes until the vegetables soften and the onion turns translucent, not browned. Add garlic and cook 45 seconds—you’ll smell its perfume.

3
Bloom tomato paste & spices

Push veggies to the perimeter, creating a bare center. Add tomato paste, cumin, and smoked paprika; cook 2 minutes, stirring constantly, until the paste darkens to brick red and spices toast. This caramelization banishes raw tomato tang and deepens flavor.

4
Deglaze & combine

Pour in ½ cup broth, scraping the pot’s bottom with a wooden spoon to lift any flavorful browned bits (fond). Stir in remaining broth, diced tomatoes with juices, rinsed lentils, bay leaf, ½ tsp salt, and ¼ tsp pepper. Increase heat to high and bring to a rolling boil.

5
Simmer gently

Reduce heat to low, cover partially, and simmer 25–30 minutes, stirring twice. Lentils should be tender but not mushy, and carrots should yield to a fork. If soup looks thick, add ½ cup water; lentils continue to absorb liquid.

6
Create creamy body

Remove bay leaf. Ladle 1 cup soup into a blender, puree until smooth, then return to pot. This quick step yields luxurious texture without cream, while keeping most lentils intact for hearty bites.

7
Wilt spinach

Stir in spinach a handful at a time; each addition will wilt in 30 seconds. The color should stay vibrant green—if it goes khaki, you’ve overcooked it.

8
Finish with lemon

Remove pot from heat, stir in lemon juice, and adjust salt and pepper. The soup should taste bright and layered; if it feels flat, add another squeeze of lemon or pinch of salt.

9
Serve & garnish

Ladle into warmed bowls. Drizzle with fruity olive oil, crack fresh black pepper, and offer lemon wedges for extra zing. Crusty sourdough or homemade focaccia is mandatory for swiping the bowl clean.

Expert Tips

Salt in layers

Season aromatics at the start, lentils halfway, and final bowl at the end. This builds depth, not just surface saltiness.

Older lentils need longer

If your lentils have sat in the pantry over a year, add 5 extra minutes and test for doneness.

Keep spinach bright

Add spinach off-heat; residual heat wilts perfectly without the muddy color that comes from boiling.

Overnight flavor bonus

Make soup a day ahead; flavors marry and deepen. Thin with water or broth when reheating.

Chill before freezing

Cool soup completely to prevent ice crystals. Portion into 2-cup containers for single lunches.

Revive with acid

Soups dull in the fridge. A squeeze of lemon or splash of vinegar perks everything back up.

Double batch hack

Use a wider pot so lentils cook evenly; depth should allow 2 inches of liquid coverage.

Finish oil infusion

Warm olive oil with a pinch of smoked paprika and drizzle just before serving for restaurant flair.

Variations to Try

  • Mediterranean: Swap spinach for chopped kale, add ½ cup orzo during final 10 minutes, and finish with a spoon of pesto.
  • Spicy Moroccan: Add ½ tsp each cinnamon and cayenne, a handful of raisins, and garnish with cilantro and toasted almonds.
  • Creamy Coconut: Stir in ½ cup full-fat coconut milk with spinach for Thai-inspired richness; swap lime juice for lemon.
  • Protein boost: Add 1 cup diced cooked chicken or turkey during final 5 minutes for omnivorous households.
  • Summer garden: Replace carrots with zucchini, stir in fresh corn kernels and basil off-heat for a lighter seasonal spin.

Storage Tips

Refrigerator: Cool soup to room temperature within 2 hours. Transfer to airtight containers and refrigerate up to 5 days. The flavor actually improves on day two as spices meld.

Freezer: Ladle completely cooled soup into quart-size freezer bags, squeeze out excess air, label, and freeze flat on a sheet pan. Once solid, stack vertically to save space. Keeps 3 months for peak quality; 6 months is safe but texture may degrade.

Reheating: Thaw overnight in the fridge or use the microwave’s defrost setting. Warm gently on the stovetop over medium-low, thinning with broth or water until pourable. Avoid rapid boiling, which turns lentils mushy and spinach drab.

Make-ahead lunches: Portion into 2-cup mason jars; add a layer of uncooked spinach on top. When microwaved, the spinach wilts perfectly without becoming overcooked.

Frequently Asked Questions

No soaking required for brown or green lentils. A quick rinse to remove dust and debris is sufficient. Soaking can actually cause them to burst and lose shape.

Red lentils cook much faster and break down into a creamy dal-like consistency. If that’s your goal, reduce simmering time to 15 minutes and skip the blending step.

Drop in a peeled potato and simmer 10 minutes; it will absorb some salt. Alternatively, dilute with unsalted broth or add another cup of cooked lentils and tomatoes to increase volume.

Yes, all ingredients are naturally gluten-free. Always check labels on broth and tomato products to confirm no hidden wheat-based additives.

Absolutely—use sauté function for steps 1–3, then pressure cook on high for 12 minutes with natural release 10 minutes. Stir in spinach and lemon juice after opening.

Top with a poached egg, seared shrimp, or crumbled feta. For meat lovers, browned Italian sausage or shredded rotisserie chicken stirred in at the end complements the smoky paprika.
Hearty Lentil Soup with Spinach and Lemon Juice Recipe
soups
Pin Recipe

Hearty Lentil Soup with Spinach and Lemon Juice Recipe

(4.9 from 127 reviews)
Prep
15 min
Cook
35 min
Servings
6

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. Heat pot: Warm olive oil in Dutch oven over medium heat.
  2. Sauté vegetables: Cook onion, carrot, celery with pinch salt 5–6 min until softened. Add garlic 45 sec.
  3. Bloom paste & spices: Stir in tomato paste, cumin, paprika 2 min.
  4. Simmer: Add broth, tomatoes, lentils, bay leaf, ½ tsp salt, ¼ tsp pepper. Bring to boil, then simmer covered 25–30 min until lentils tender.
  5. Blend: Remove bay leaf, puree 1 cup soup and return for creamy body.
  6. Finish: Stir in spinach and lemon juice off-heat. Adjust seasoning, drizzle with olive oil, serve hot.

Recipe Notes

Soup thickens on standing; thin with broth or water when reheating. Lemon juice is best added fresh for brightest flavor.

Nutrition (per serving)

248
Calories
14g
Protein
34g
Carbs
7g
Fat

Share This Recipe:

You May Also Like

Type at least 2 characters to search...