There are soups you make because the weather turned cold and something warm is needed. And then there are soups like this Vegan Spinach and Lentil Soup — the kind that fills the kitchen with the most extraordinary aroma of toasted cumin and caramelized onion and garlic as it simmers, that pours into the bowl a deep, burnished amber-gold with vivid emerald spinach folded through it in a way that makes it look genuinely, beautifully alive, and that delivers with every single spoonful a warmth and nourishment so profound and so genuine that you feel it in your body as much as you taste it on your tongue. This is that soup. The one that has become a weekly ritual in households across the world. The one that is simultaneously the most effortless and the most deeply satisfying thing you will cook all week. The one that is so packed with plant-based protein, iron, fiber, and an almost overwhelming concentration of vitamins and minerals that eating it feels like a genuinely restorative act.
This is a soup of extraordinary simplicity and extraordinary depth — red lentils that cook down into a silky, naturally thickened base of remarkable richness and body, aromatic onion and garlic and ginger caramelized slowly into sweetness, a carefully chosen spice blend of cumin, turmeric, coriander, and smoked paprika that fills the soup with warmth and complexity without overwhelming the clean, earthy character of the lentils, bright lemon that lifts and sharpens everything in the bowl at the very last moment, and generous handfuls of fresh spinach stirred in at the end and wilted just enough to remain vivid and nutritionally intact while contributing their characteristic earthy mineral freshness to every spoonful.
What makes this soup so genuinely outstanding is how much it achieves from so little. Red lentils — one of the most affordable, most accessible, and most nutritionally impressive ingredients available anywhere in the world — dissolve partially during cooking to create a naturally thick, creamy, hearty soup base that requires no cream, no blending, and no thickening agents of any kind. The lentils do all the work themselves, releasing their natural starches into the broth and creating a consistency and body that feels deeply substantial and satisfying despite requiring nothing more than a pot, some water, and time.
This recipe is 100% vegan, naturally gluten-free, extraordinarily high in plant-based protein and iron, ready in just 35 minutes, made in a single pot, and absolutely spectacular served with warm crusty bread, a squeeze of fresh lemon, a swirl of good olive oil, and nothing else required because the soup itself is complete and magnificent exactly as it is.
Recipe Information
| Prep Time | Cook Time | Total Time | Servings | Calories |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 mins | 25 mins | 35 mins | 6 | ~280 kcal |
Ingredients
For the Soup
- 2 cups (400g) red lentils, rinsed thoroughly until water runs clear
- 6 cups (1.4 litres) good quality vegetable broth
- 1 can (400g) crushed tomatoes
- 5 cups (150g) fresh spinach, roughly chopped (or 250g frozen spinach, thawed and squeezed)
- 1 large white or yellow onion, finely diced
- 6 cloves garlic, minced
- 1 tbsp fresh ginger, peeled and finely grated
- 3 tbsp olive oil
- Juice of 1 large lemon
- 1 tsp salt, plus more to taste
- Black pepper to taste
The Spice Blend
- 2 tsp ground cumin
- 1½ tsp turmeric
- 1 tsp ground coriander
- 1 tsp smoked paprika
- ½ tsp chili powder or cayenne (adjust to heat preference)
- ¼ tsp cinnamon
- ¼ tsp black pepper
Optional Add-ins
- 1 medium sweet potato, peeled and diced (adds beautiful sweetness)
- 1 can (400g) chickpeas, drained (adds extra protein and texture)
- 1 medium carrot, diced (adds sweetness and body)
- 2 stalks celery, diced (adds depth)
- 1 medium zucchini, diced
- ¼ cup (15g) fresh cilantro, roughly chopped (stir in at end)
- 1 tbsp tahini (swirl in at end for creaminess)
For the Crispy Spiced Oil Topping (Optional but Extraordinary)
- 3 tbsp olive oil
- 1 tsp cumin seeds
- ½ tsp smoked paprika
- ¼ tsp chili flakes
- 2 cloves garlic, thinly sliced
To Serve
- Warm crusty sourdough or flatbread
- A generous squeeze of fresh lemon
- Drizzle of best quality extra virgin olive oil
- Fresh cilantro or parsley, roughly chopped
- Chili flakes for heat and color
- Vegan yogurt or coconut cream swirled on top
- The crispy spiced oil drizzled over the surface
Instructions
- Rinse the lentils thoroughly. Place the red lentils in a fine mesh sieve and rinse under cold running water for a full 2 minutes, stirring with your fingers, until the water runs completely clear. Rinsing removes surface starches and any dust or debris and produces a cleaner-tasting, clearer finished soup. Red lentils cook very quickly and do not require soaking — they are ready to cook immediately after rinsing.
- Build the aromatic base. Heat the olive oil in a large heavy-bottomed pot or Dutch oven over medium heat until shimmering. Add the finely diced onion and a generous pinch of salt and cook for 6–8 minutes, stirring regularly, until the onion is deeply golden, soft, and beginning to caramelize at the edges. This step cannot be rushed — properly caramelized onion is the flavor foundation of the entire soup and the depth of sweetness it provides is completely irreplaceable. Add the minced garlic and grated ginger and cook for a further 2 minutes until incredibly fragrant.
- Bloom the spice blend. Add all the spices — cumin, turmeric, coriander, smoked paprika, chili powder, cinnamon, and black pepper — to the caramelized onion and stir continuously for 60–90 seconds until the spices are deeply fragrant, darkened slightly, and coating everything in the pot in a rich, aromatic paste. Blooming the spices in the hot oil activates their essential oils and deepens their flavor dramatically — this single step is responsible for a significant portion of the extraordinary depth of the finished soup.
- Add tomatoes and cook down. Pour in the crushed tomatoes and stir well to combine with the spiced onion base. Cook over medium-high heat for 3–4 minutes, stirring frequently, until the tomatoes have darkened slightly and the oil begins to separate around the edges of the mixture — this brief cooking concentrates the tomato flavor and removes any raw, acidic taste that would otherwise carry through to the finished soup.
- Add lentils and broth. Add the rinsed red lentils and stir to coat thoroughly in the spiced tomato base. Pour in the vegetable broth and stir well to combine. Bring to a vigorous boil over high heat then reduce to a steady simmer. Cook uncovered for 18–22 minutes, stirring occasionally, until the lentils have completely dissolved and the soup has thickened to a rich, creamy, naturally thick consistency. Red lentils break down completely during cooking — there should be virtually no whole lentil pieces remaining in the finished soup.
- Add the spinach. Reduce the heat to medium and add the fresh spinach in three or four large handfuls, stirring between each addition to allow the spinach to wilt into the soup before adding more. Cook for 2–3 minutes until all the spinach is wilted and incorporated. Do not overcook the spinach — it should remain bright green and slightly textured rather than turning grey and mushy. The vivid green of the spinach against the golden soup is one of the most beautiful visual qualities of this dish.
- Finish with lemon and adjust seasoning. Remove from heat and squeeze in the lemon juice — this final addition is non-negotiable. The acid from the lemon lifts and brightens the entire flavor profile of the soup dramatically, cutting through the richness of the lentils and amplifying every spice note simultaneously. Taste and adjust the seasoning generously with additional salt, black pepper, lemon juice, or chili powder. The finished soup should taste deeply savory, warmly spiced, slightly tangy from the lemon, and intensely satisfying.
- Make the crispy spiced oil topping. If using heat the olive oil in a small skillet over medium heat. Add the cumin seeds and cook for 30 seconds until they begin to pop and are fragrant. Add the sliced garlic and cook for 60–90 seconds until golden at the edges — watching carefully as garlic can burn quickly. Remove from heat and add the smoked paprika and chili flakes — the residual heat will bloom the spices without burning them. Drizzle immediately over the served soup for an extraordinary finishing touch.
- Serve beautifully and generously. Ladle the soup into warmed bowls and finish each serving with a generous squeeze of additional lemon juice, a drizzle of best quality extra virgin olive oil or the crispy spiced oil, a scattering of fresh cilantro or parsley, chili flakes for color, and a swirl of vegan yogurt or coconut cream if desired. Serve immediately with warm bread alongside for the most complete and satisfying meal imaginable.
Pro Tips for the Most Extraordinary Vegan Lentil Soup
- Caramelize the onion fully and without rushing. The single most important step in this soup is cooking the onion to genuine caramelization — deep golden, soft, and sweet rather than merely translucent. This takes 6–8 minutes at medium heat and produces a depth of sweetness and complexity that is the defining flavor characteristic of a truly great lentil soup. A hurried, undercooked onion produces a flat, one-dimensional soup. A properly caramelized onion produces something genuinely extraordinary.
- Bloom the spices in hot oil before adding liquid. This is the technique that separates a great spiced soup from an ordinary one. The fat-soluble flavor compounds in spices are activated and intensified by contact with hot oil in a way that contact with water cannot replicate. 60–90 seconds of continuous stirring in hot oil before adding any liquid produces spice flavors of dramatic depth and complexity.
- Cook the tomatoes until the oil separates. The brief period of cooking the tomatoes until the oil visibly separates and pools around the edges signals that the tomato base is properly cooked — sweet, concentrated, and free of the raw, tinny flavor that undercooked tomato contributes. This takes 3–4 minutes of active cooking and is completely worth the time.
- Add the lemon juice off the heat at the very end. Lemon juice added during cooking loses its brightness and fresh citrus character during simmering. Added at the very end off the heat it retains its full, vibrant acidity and transforms the flavor of the entire bowl — cutting through the earthiness of the lentils and lifting every spice note simultaneously. Never add it earlier than the final moment.
- Make the crispy spiced oil topping. This optional but extraordinary finishing step — warm olive oil infused with cumin seeds, golden garlic, smoked paprika, and chili flakes drizzled over the bowl at the moment of serving — adds a layer of aromatic warmth, visual drama, and textural interest that elevates a very good soup into something genuinely spectacular. It takes less than three minutes and makes an enormous difference to the finished result.
- Season in layers throughout cooking. Adding all the salt at the end of cooking produces a one-dimensional, surface seasoning. Adding a pinch with the onion, seasoning again after the tomatoes, and tasting and adjusting throughout produces a soup where the seasoning is integrated into every layer of flavor — deeply and uniformly seasoned rather than merely salty on the surface.
The Extraordinary Nutritional Power of Red Lentils
Red lentils are one of the most nutritionally impressive foods available anywhere in the plant kingdom — and the casual accessibility and extraordinary affordability of this ingredient makes them one of the most important foods in plant-based cooking.
A single serving of this soup provides approximately 18 grams of plant-based protein from the lentils alone — equivalent to a significant portion of the daily protein requirement for most adults and comparable to the protein content of a substantial serving of chicken or fish. Lentils achieve this remarkable protein density while simultaneously providing virtually no saturated fat — making them nutritionally superior to animal protein sources for cardiovascular health in every meaningful metric.
The iron content of red lentils is one of their most important and most underappreciated qualities. A single serving of this soup provides approximately 6–8mg of non-heme iron — representing 30–45% of the daily recommended intake for adult women and up to 75% for adult men. The addition of lemon juice at the end of cooking is not merely a flavor decision — the Vitamin C in lemon juice dramatically increases the bioavailability of the non-heme iron in the lentils through a specific chemical interaction that converts the iron to its more absorbable ferrous form. This is why the lemon juice is non-negotiable in this recipe from a nutritional as well as a culinary perspective.
The fiber content of this soup is equally extraordinary. A single serving provides approximately 12 grams of dietary fiber — nearly half the daily recommended intake — including both soluble fiber that feeds beneficial gut bacteria and reduces cholesterol absorption, and insoluble fiber that promotes healthy digestive transit and reduces the risk of colorectal cancer.
Turmeric — used generously in the spice blend — provides curcumin with its well-documented anti-inflammatory properties. Cumin contributes thymoquinone with antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties alongside enhanced iron absorption from its naturally occurring compounds. Ginger provides gingerols and shogaols with potent anti-nausea, anti-inflammatory, and immune-supporting properties. Spinach provides Vitamins K, A, C, and folate alongside iron and calcium. Together these ingredients create a soup of extraordinary medicinal as well as culinary value.
Flavor Variations
- Coconut Lentil Soup: Replace one cup of the vegetable broth with full-fat coconut cream and add a teaspoon of curry powder to the spice blend for a richer, creamier, more tropical version with a beautiful golden color and a subtle sweetness from the coconut that is particularly extraordinary with fresh cilantro and toasted coconut flakes on top.
- Moroccan Lentil Soup: Add half a teaspoon of ras el hanout, a pinch of saffron dissolved in hot water, and a quarter cup of dried apricots roughly chopped to the soup for a Moroccan-inspired version with extraordinary complexity and a beautiful sweet-savory balance that is spectacular with warm flatbread and a dollop of harissa.
- Lemon and Herb Finished: Stir in a generous handful of fresh cilantro, fresh parsley, and fresh mint at the very end alongside the lemon juice for a brighter, more herbaceous version with a beautiful freshness that lifts the earthy lentil base into something lighter and more vibrant — particularly beautiful in spring and summer.
- Chunky Vegetable Version: Add diced sweet potato, carrot, and celery with the lentils for a chunkier, more substantial version with additional sweetness from the vegetables and a more complex textural experience — perfect for anyone who prefers a heartier soup with more body and variety in every spoonful.
Nutritional Highlights (Per Serving)
| Calories | Protein | Carbs | Fiber | Fat |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ~280 kcal | 18g | 40g | 12g | 6g |
At just 280 calories per serving this soup delivers one of the most impressive nutritional profiles of any single dish in plant-based cooking — 18 grams of plant-based protein, 12 grams of dietary fiber, and an extraordinary concentration of iron, folate, potassium, magnesium, and B vitamins from the red lentils alongside Vitamins K, A, and C from the spinach, powerful anti-inflammatory compounds from the turmeric and ginger, and meaningful antioxidant protection from the smoked paprika and tomatoes. This is food that heals as it nourishes — a soup of genuine medicinal character that happens also to be one of the most deeply comforting and satisfying bowls imaginable.
Storage
- Refrigerator: Store cooled soup in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 6 days. This soup is one of those genuinely extraordinary recipes that improves significantly with every passing day — the spices deepen and bloom further during storage and the lentils continue to absorb the surrounding flavors producing an even richer, more complex soup by day 3 than on the day it was made. Add a splash of vegetable broth when reheating as the soup thickens considerably during refrigeration.
- Freezer: This soup freezes beautifully for up to 4 months — making it one of the finest batch-cooking recipes available. Cool completely before transferring to freezer-safe containers in individual or family-sized portions. Thaw overnight in the refrigerator and reheat gently in a pot over medium heat, stirring frequently and adding vegetable broth or water to restore the original consistency. The flavor is virtually indistinguishable from freshly made after freezing and thawing.
- Meal prep: This soup is one of the most outstanding meal prep recipes available — make a full pot on Sunday and have genuinely nourishing, deeply satisfying lunches and dinners available for the entire week with zero additional cooking effort. Portion into individual containers, refrigerate, and reheat as needed throughout the week.
- Reheating: Reheat over medium heat in a pot with a generous splash of vegetable broth or water, stirring regularly. The soup will be significantly thicker after refrigeration — thin to the desired consistency with additional liquid before serving. Do not boil aggressively during reheating as this can affect the texture of the lentils.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I use green or brown lentils instead of red?
Yes — green and brown lentils produce a different but equally delicious soup. They do not dissolve during cooking the way red lentils do — they retain their shape and produce a chunkier, more textured soup with a slightly earthier, more robust flavor. Green and brown lentils also take longer to cook — approximately 35–40 minutes rather than the 18–22 minutes needed for red lentils. Both are nutritionally outstanding choices.
Why did my lentil soup turn out too thick?
Red lentils absorb liquid voraciously during cooking and particularly during storage — a soup that seems perfectly consistency when cooked can become very thick indeed after refrigeration. Add additional vegetable broth or water in generous splashes during cooking or reheating and stir well to incorporate until the desired consistency is achieved. The soup will continue to thicken as it cools — aim for a slightly thinner consistency than desired when hot.
Can I make this soup in an Instant Pot?
Yes — this soup adapts beautifully to pressure cooker preparation. Sauté the aromatics and bloom the spices using the sauté function then add the rinsed lentils, broth, and tomatoes. Cook on high pressure for 12 minutes followed by a natural pressure release of 10 minutes. Add the spinach and lemon juice after releasing pressure and stir until the spinach wilts. The result is a soup of identical flavor to the stovetop version produced in significantly less time.
Is this soup suitable for freezing with the spinach already added?
Yes — spinach freezes well in this soup without any significant degradation in flavor or texture after thawing. The spinach will be slightly softer after freezing and reheating than when freshly added but still delicious and nutritionally intact. For the most vibrant color and freshest flavor in a reheated frozen soup stir in a fresh handful of spinach during reheating rather than relying on the spinach that was frozen with the soup.
How do I make this soup more filling?
For a more substantial meal stir in a drained can of chickpeas in the final 5 minutes of cooking — the combination of red lentils and chickpeas produces a soup of extraordinary protein density and incredible staying power. Serving with a thick slice of seeded sourdough bread adds complex carbohydrates and additional fiber. A swirl of tahini stirred in at the end adds healthy fats that promote satiety and give the soup a beautiful creamy richness.
Can I make this soup without tomatoes?
Yes — replace the crushed tomatoes with an additional cup of vegetable broth and add a tablespoon of tomato paste for concentrated flavor without the bulk of canned tomatoes. The soup will be lighter in color and slightly less complex in flavor but still deeply delicious. Alternatively replace the tomatoes with a cup of roasted red pepper purée for a sweeter, more vibrant version with a beautiful color and a different but equally appealing flavor character.
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