Pasta fa*gioli-Hearty Bean Soup Recipe on Food52 (2024)

Serves a Crowd

by: ibbeachnana

May14,2011

4

6 Ratings

  • Prep time 12 hours
  • Cook time 2 hours 30 minutes
  • Serves 8-10

Jump to Recipe

Author Notes

What is dirt cheap anymore? Inexpensive or economical and feeds many, I recall a big pot of bean soup going a long way to feed a big family on a skinny budget. Without a doubt I immediately go to "beans" and a big pot of pasta fa*gioli for my cheap but wonderful dinner for eight. Beans because I heard how cheap they were in the Great Depression.

Today is sausage making day and the soup is on, no time for anything fancy here today. I have to have something ready for the two day process and this is one of my go to recipes.

I would love to say that this is a family recipe and it is, mine, I didn't have the advantage of growing up with my Italian relatives so I don’t know what their recipes are and dad was a sailor you know so we spent little time with relatives. When he cooked, he threw in elements of what he remembered on his plate and in his bowl. He was a good cook; I miss his face and his food! Then again I would love to give credit to my mother and her version I do, a slight nod, for adding cabbage and calling it cabbage and beans to serve 7 of us.

Over the years to create a more expensive version and fancy things up a bit for a company dinner, I added chicken and/or beef broths, still economical because I make my own stocks and broths and freeze. Select greens and garnished with pesto. My notes later in the recipe mention other additions, not necessarily budget friendly.

Great for a casual dinner, serve a fresh loaf of bread and a salad.

Most definitely better the second day.

ibbeachnana

What You'll Need

Ingredients
  • 1 poundbags of dried navy beans, picked over and rinsed
  • 2-3 cloves of garlic, minced
  • 3 tablespoonsolive oil
  • 1 large onion, diced
  • 2 ribs celery, diced
  • 2 carrots, chopped in large chunks
  • 1 leftover ham bone or 2 ham hocks
  • 12 cupswater 2 cups less if using broth
  • 1/2 teaspooneach of dried basil and oregano (or can use fresh herbs)
  • 1 bay leaf
  • 1 pinchred pepper flakes
  • 28 ouncescan whole tomatoes and juice, rough chopped
  • 1/2 poundor more of tubetti pasta
  • 1 cheese rind, optional
  • 2 cupsbeef broth, optional
  • 1 cupchicken broth, optional
  • 2 cupsGreens of your choice, Swiss chard, kale, or spinach, sauteed in garlic and olive oil. Add to just about finished soup
Directions
  1. Rinse beans, soak overnight and drain. To a very large stock pot add about 3 tablespoons olive oil and briefly sauté the celery, garlic, carrot, onion and ham bone or ham hocks. Break up the canned tomatoes and add to pot with all of the juices from the can. Let it all heat up while you add beans, water (optional broths if using), herbs and bay leaf. Season with a little red pepper flakes, salt and pepper to taste.
  2. Simmer until beans are tender about 2-3 hours on a medium low to low simmer. Remove bay leaf. Remove bones and pick meat off to add back into the soup. Season to your taste.
  3. Cook and drain tubetti, return to cooking pot, add some of the soup broth to the pasta. At this point you can take half of the beans and puree, but I like the thinner broth and whole beans. First night soup is my favorite; everyone else likes the soup thicker or the next day.
  4. Notes for basic pasta fa*gioli: Once you have your basic soup ready you can get pretty creative adding in sautéed favorite greens to the simmering soup for several minutes before serving. Tiny meat balls, crispy pancetta, or prosciutto, and sausage are favorite additions for a second soup meal. Keep in mind all additions = more expense. I love freshly grated cheese in my bowl of pasta fa*gioli. Freeze leftover soup without pasta.
  5. Since it was sausage making day, I left some meat on the pork butt bones and added them to the soup as well, nice bits of tender pork in the soup along with the ham bits.

Tags:

  • Soup
  • Pasta
  • American
  • Italian
  • Celery
  • Bean
  • Carrot
  • Serves a Crowd
  • Fall
  • Entree
  • Dinner
Contest Entries
  • Your Best Dirt Cheap Dinner
  • Your Best Greens

See what other Food52ers are saying.

Popular on Food52

7 Reviews

sarajojojo February 13, 2019

Same question - what size bags of dried beans? I happily buy lots of dried beans but this gives literally no indicator on how much I should more or less plan on using for this recipe.

Anne September 18, 2018

Would like to make this for the first time, but two questions: what size bag of dried beans, and, what size can of whole tomatoes? Thank you.

ibbeachnana October 1, 2022

1 lb beans for 8 and 1- 28 ounce can San Marzano whole hand squished

Nancy January 24, 2017

I will leave out the pasta next time just as a personal preference. But tasty overall.

ibbeachnana October 14, 2014

Recently made the bean soup with a wonderful apple wood smoked pork shank (about 2 lbs. bone and all) delicious and really meaty.

darksideofthespoon March 5, 2013

We ate this soup over Christmas. It is DELICIOUS. Can't wait to try it again!

ibbeachnana March 5, 2013

Thanks. I'm always changin the recipe a little here and there as I did the last two times, one with braised bacon and another with the the ham bone of a "preacher's ham. Both delicious

Pasta fa*gioli-Hearty Bean Soup Recipe on Food52 (2024)

FAQs

What is pasta e fa*gioli soup made of? ›

Pasta e fa*gioli, sometimes shortened to pasta fa*gioli (or pasta fazool if you're a Sopranos fan), is a classic Italian soup. Its name literally translates to “pasta and beans,” and it consists of tiny pasta, creamy beans, and tender vegetables in a fragrant tomato broth.

What is pasta e fa*gioli soup Wikipedia? ›

While the dish varies from region to region, it is most commonly made using cannellini beans, navy beans, or borlotti beans and a small variety of pasta, such as elbow macaroni or ditalini. The base typically includes olive oil, garlic, minced onion, celery, carrots, and often stewed tomatoes or tomato paste.

Did Olive Garden discontinue pasta e fa*gioli soup? ›

Love the Olive Garden. Never disappoint!! fa*gioli has been taken off the menu.

What does pasta fa*gioli mean in English? ›

Pasta e fa*gioli means “pasta and beans” in Italian—this recipe is much more than that! This hearty vegetarian stew is full of irresistible fresh flavor. It's vegan, too, as long as you don't top it with cheese. Recipe yields 6 bowls or 8 cups of soup.

What does fazool mean in Italian? ›

1. Italian for bean . 2. Term used for money or a bill .

Does pasta fa*gioli contain meat? ›

this pasta fa*gioli Olive Garden recipe contains ground beef. It adds plenty of protein and flavor, plus it helps make the soup extra hearty. Other versions may use a different variety of ground meat, and some include bacon or pancetta.

What are the ingredients in Progresso pasta fa*gioli? ›

Water, Tomato Puree (water, tomato paste), Great Northern Beans, Kidney Beans, Mezzanini Rigati Pasta (semolina wheat, egg whites).

Is pasta fa*gioli the same as minestrone? ›

Pasta fa*gioli and minestrone are both Italian soups with similar flavors that make use of whatever vegetables you have on hand. The main difference is the beans in the pasta fa*gioli that result in a thicker soup than minestrone, which is traditionally very brothy.

Is pasta fa*gioli high in carbs? ›

Olive Garden Pasta E fa*gioli (1 serving) contains 21g total carbs, 17g net carbs, 6g fat, 9g protein, and 180 calories.

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Roderick King

Last Updated:

Views: 5670

Rating: 4 / 5 (71 voted)

Reviews: 86% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Roderick King

Birthday: 1997-10-09

Address: 3782 Madge Knoll, East Dudley, MA 63913

Phone: +2521695290067

Job: Customer Sales Coordinator

Hobby: Gunsmithing, Embroidery, Parkour, Kitesurfing, Rock climbing, Sand art, Beekeeping

Introduction: My name is Roderick King, I am a cute, splendid, excited, perfect, gentle, funny, vivacious person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.