Classic Potato Leek Soup
Classic Potato Leek Soup made with leeks, onions, and potatoes simmered in broth and cream is so incredibly easy to make and ready in only 30 minutes!
Homemade Soup Recipes are some of my favorite to make in the winter, especially Instant Pot Chicken Stew, Crockpot Corn Chowder, and Slow Cooker Kale and White Bean Soup!
Classic Potato Leek Soup is perfect for the cold weather, and for a quick and easy weeknight dinner. It’s ready in just 30 minutes, and pairs really well with gluten free grilled cheese and a side salad. I use a dutch oven to make mine, because the way a dutch oven heats the food helps a lot with flavor.
I highly recommend having an immersion blender for this potato leek soup recipe, but you can also get away with using a regular blender in batches. It’s also really versatile, and you can try different spice combinations to mix it up!
What You’ll Need
Leeks and Onion. Leeks are one of the main flavors in this dish. But if you don’t have them, you can use only onions. It will taste a little different but it would still be tasty.
Yellow or white onion will work for this dish. You can also try Vidalia onions for a little more sweetness.ย
For a quick chop, quarter the onions and roughly pulse them in the food processor.ย
Potatoes. Obviously the other most important ingredient here! The type of potato you use can make a big difference. If you use a potato that’s too starchy, likeย Russets, the texture will turn out wrong! ย
I recommend using Yukon Gold Potatoes, which is a classic all-purpose potato that works in most dishes.ย
Half and Half. This is what gives the soup a really creamy texture. If you can’t have dairy, you can leave this out entirely and just use broth until you reach the desired thickness.
You can also substitute with heavy cream, or regular milk. I like to use half and half because it’s not quite as much fat as heavy cream, but you still get a good texture when it’s done.ย
Unsalted Butter. The butter adds some flavor and creaminess to the dish. I use unsalted, so I can add whatever amount of salt I’d like later.
You can use extra virgin olive oil if you don’t want to use butter.
Spices.ย You can season with salt and black pepper to taste here. The cayenne pepper is option, and will add a little bit of spice to the dish. You can also add small a dash of nutmeg, or some curry powder for a different flavor.ย
I’ve used kosher salt and sea salt, both work fine.ย ย If you want to use garlic powder instead, the rule is that 2 cloves garlic = 1/2 teaspoon garlic powder.
Vegetable broth.ย I think this works the best for flavor, but you can also substitute chicken broth.ย
Just make sure it’s gluten free.ย Vegetable stock is basically the same thing, so you can use that, too.ย
How to Make Potato Leek Soup
- Melt the butter over medium heat and add onions, garlic, and leeks. After they start to soften, add spices and stir.
- Add the potatoes and cook for another 5 minutes, until the potatoes start to soften.
- Add the broth and simmer until the potatoes are soft enough that a fork goes through easily. Use an immersion blender to puree the soup (or puree the soup in batches in a regular blender). Puree everything for a creamier soup, or stop just beforehand for a chunky soup.
- Stir in the half and half and cook for another 3-4 minutes, stir in chives, and serve.
Jacqui’s Tip! This is great topped with cheddar cheese, sour cream, crispy bacon, or gluten free croutons with a drizzle of extra virgin olive oil!
More Potato Recipes to Try
- Loaded Baked Potato Casserole
- Cheesy Hamburger Potato Casserole
- Baked Potato Bar Ideas
- Crispy Air Fryer Potato Wedges
Facts & Questions
Usually a gummy texture comes from too much mixing, either with the blender or the immersion blender. I recommend only blending until you have a nice smooth texture and a few bigger pieces of potato left.
If you don’t want any chunks of potato, watch closely and only blend until just smooth.ย
There are a few ways to get grainy potato soup.ย
1. It’s overcooked. If you boiled the potatoes too long in the broth, they may become grainy because they’ve absorbed too much moisture.ย
2. The skins of the potatoes weren’t removed. You might not have grainy potatoes, but just pieces of the skin that don’t puree as well as the inside of the potato. I like to peel my potatoes for this dish.ย
3. Wrong potatoes. Different potatoes can have different starch levels, and using a starchy potato can produce a grainy potato soup, while a waxy potato will have a smoother texture when blended.
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4.ย Freezing.ย Freezing can give this a grainy texture that is unpleasant. I don’t recommend it.ย
For potato leek soup, you want to use a waxy or in-between potato, and avoid starchy potatoes. Try using red bliss potatoes (any size), fingerlings, or a medium-waxy potato like Yukon gold (my personal favorite for its flavor and smooth texture).
Avoid potatoes that have a higher starch level, like Russet potatoes (aka baking potatoes) and Idaho potatoes. These are better suited for things like French fries or gnocchi.ย
Refrigerated.ย Store your potato soup in an airtight container in the refrigerator for 3-4 days. Reheat in a saucepan over medium heat. You can also add a splash of cream if the soup thickened.
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Don’t freeze it. I do not recommend freezing this soup. The potatoes have a tendency to be grainy after being frozen, and the texture won’t be as nice.
If you already frozen your soup, I would defrost it in the refrigerator, then reheat it in a saucepan over medium-low heat.
Then add a small amount of cream and use an immersion blender or a standard blender to try and bring the texture back as much as possible.ย
Cooking Tips
- You can turn this into vegan potato leek soup by substituting the butter with extra virgin olive oil and either leaving out the half and half, or replacing it with coconut milk (the type in a can, whisked first until smooth).
- You can change up the flavor by adding different spices like red pepper flakes, fresh thyme, or a dash of curry powder for more depth of flavor.
- Top with fresh chives, a spoonful of sour cream, and crispy bacon!
- If you use a standard blender, be really careful and ladle your soup in a small amount at a time, because it will be very hot!
- You can swap the chives with green onions for a great flavor.
- You can substitute the garlic cloves for powdered garlic. 1 clove is 1/4 tsp garlic powder.
- Serve this with gluten free crusty bread, or with a side salad.
If you loved this recipe, be sure to leave a 5 Star review below, and tag me with a photo of your finished recipe on Instagramย @Jacqui_DishingDelish!
Classic Potato Leek Soup
Ingredients
- 3 tbsp unsalted butter
- 2 cloves garlic, minced
- 1 medium yellow onion, chopped
- 3 large leeks, washed and dark green parts/roots removed, chopped
- 3 large Yukon gold potatoes, peeled and chopped into 1-inch pieces
- 1/2 tsp salt, or to taste
- 1/2 tsp black pepper
- 1/4 tsp cayenne, optional
- 4 1/2 cups vegetable broth, gluten free
- 1/4 cup half and half
- 2 tbsp chives, chopped
Equipment
- pot or dutch oven
Instructions
- Melt butter in 3-quart pot over medium heat.
- Add garlic, onion, and leeks. Cook until softened (about 5 minutes).
- Add potatoes, salt, pepper, and cayenne. Stir ingredients together, cover pot and cook an additional 5 minutes, or until potatoes begin to soften (about 5 minutes).
- Add broth, stir and bring to a boil. Reduce heat to a slow simmer. Cook until potatoes are completely soft (about 10 minutes).
- Either use an immersion blender, or ladle soup into a big food processor or blender. Blend until pureed and return to pot. You may have to work in batches, depending on how big your appliance is.
- Once pureed soup is returned to pot, reduce heat to low and stir in half and half. Cook for an additional 3-5 minutes or until hot.
- Top with chives and serve.
Notes
- Make this vegan by substituting the butter with extra virgin olive oil and either leaving out the half and half, or replacing it with coconut milk.
- You can change up the flavor by adding different spices like red pepper flakes, fresh thyme, or a dash of curry powder for more depth of flavor.
- You can substitute the garlic cloves for powdered garlic. 1 clove is 1/4 tsp garlic powder.ย
- If you use a standard blender, be really careful and ladle your soup in a small amount at a time, because it will be very hot!
- You can swap the chives with green onions for a great flavor.ย
- Top with fresh chives, a spoonful of sour cream, and crispy bacon!
- Serve this with gluten free crusty bread, or with a side salad.
Nutrition
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Yup, totally soup making weather now! I love this basic ingredients list. Your soup looks delicious!
I’m hosting a link party on my blog and we’d love for you to come link up with us! http://winsteadwandering.com/the-alder-collective-link-party-no-3/
Thanks for letting me know about your linkup, I’m totally heading over there now to add my links! I hope you’ll check out ours, too! ๐
http://www.dishingdelish.com/linky-party-10-23-15/
It is most definitely soup weather, nothing beats a warm bowl of soup in your comfy clothes this time of year! Leeks and potatoes are anoedrct combination, thanks for the wonderful recipe X
Thank you! I definitely agree, Adriana!
This soup looks sumptuous and hearty. I will make mine extra spicy! Lol, my Mom and Hubby think I trying to burn them with spicy food.
Hi Stacey, lol! Mine do, too! I’m lucky that my dad and Andrew really like spicy food. My mom doesn’t though, so I usually try to make some on the side for her. For me? Extra spice!
I love potato leek soup and a little kick of spice every now and again. I never thought to add cayenne. I’ll be trying that soon.
Oh and I love that it is soup weather but not that excited about it getting darker earlier.
Thanks! Yes, with daylight savings time, I’m definitely craving comfort food more than ever now!
Cayenne kick sounds good to me! This soup looks delish! ๐
The photos look amazing! I can’t wait to try this….the cayenne pepper is something that is so simple, but I think it will add so much!!
Thank you! I love the cayenne in this dish, I think it adds a great kick that goes well with the savory potatoes and leeks in this dish. It’s definitely an ingredient for those who like spicy food, though. Let me know how it goes, I love hearing feedback!
Jacqui, all around really cool. Pic, recipe, all of it. Thanks!
Thank you, Derek!
I love soups. And I love leeks and potatoes. This looks like comfort food of my dreams!
Me, too! You definitely have to try this. It’s SO good!
I love soup weather and this looks so scrumptious. I’m definitely going to try this…love the photos too btw!
Thank you! Let me know how it goes, I love hearing feedback! ๐
Really want to make this but I have a question, can I use frozen leeks instead of fresh? It’s soup weather for me here in London too, so I could do with a nice big bowl of this!
Hi Whitney, I think frozen leeks would work just fine. Fresh is always best, but I have been known to use a frozen vegetable or two in the past ๐
I have a dairy -intolerance. Do you think I could use coconut milk or something else instead? It looks delicious!
Hi Rachel, I’ve never tried it with coconut milk, but I think it would be good! You can also just leave the cream out. I tried it before the cream and I would totally eat it that way, too! ๐
Ditto to what Jacqui said. One can easily omit the cream and itโs just as hearty and wholesome. I just made this today (end of July, am I crazy? maybe a little but it was still an awesome dinner) and tried it before I added in the cream. Scrumptious. Would definitely make this for any of my vegan/vegetarian/lactose free friends any day.ย
This looks amazing! Thanks so much for linking up with The Alder Collective! Hope to see you again this week! Have an awesome night!
I just finished making the potato and leek soup, I also added cooked chicken to the soup, turned out delicious. I love your recipes and ideas, thank you for sharing. ?
Hi Nancy, Thank you so much, I’m really glad you liked it! Cooked chicken sounds delish! ๐
I’ve been looking for a god potato leek soup recipe and I think I have now found it! Pinning!
Thank you!
hey what could i substitute for the light cream? could i use milk or something else instead? thanks!
Hi Pkar, You could use milk, it just won’t be quite as creamy as it would be with actual cream. I would also suggest just leaving the cream out entirely, as it is still really good without it. ๐
Made this today for lunch throughout the week. So easy and very tasty! I had to amp up the salt, pepper, and cayenne but I was a little light handed with the better than bouillon today, so that’s probably my fault. I also agree that it doesn’t need the cream at all. I did add it but I too tasted before adding and thought it was very good. I don’t know if adding coconut milk/cream would mesh very well with the flavors.
Hi Alix, I’m so glad you liked it! Yes, I could definitely eat it without the cream. I think it’s in there more for a nice creamy texture than for flavor, which my family likes. I think coconut milk would really depend on the brand and how sweet it is, but I’ve never tried. Now I’m curious!
Can’t wait to try this on a rainy, cold day! I agree with you on the Dutch oven. I bought my Lodge on Amazon also. It’s bright purple and awesome! I think it was maybe $75.
I love the Lodge dutch ovens from amazon! I just bought the bright red one from the pictures above, but I have a HUGE blue one that’s been with me since my first apartment a few years ago that I LOVE! I didn’t see the bright purple, that sounds awesome!
great recipe
Thank you! ๐
This is, no joke, the best soup I have ever made. I haven’t even added the cream yet, and it’s already heavenly! I was making 2 other recipes at the same time, and may have simmered it a little too long, reducing the liquid by quite a bit, but I think it made it even better! I can’t wait for hubby to get home so we can dig in! Thanks so much! Slรกinte!
Thanks so much, I’m so glad you liked it!! ๐
Hi, thanks for this 8s, but i was wondering if you could make extra and keep some in the freezer?
Hi Kryn! I’ve never tried it with this recipe, but if you were to freeze it I would suggest letting it cool down first, then making sure it’s sealed really tight before putting it in the freezer. Depending on how it unfreezes, I might have a little bit of cream to add to it just in case ๐