A delicious spring soup filled with roasted red peppers, zucchini noodles, and other vegetables and seasoned with fresh tarragon and rosemary. This roasted red pepper zucchini noodle soup is loaded with fresh ingredients, perfect for the spring.
It’s spring! Which means it’s time to whip out the fresh ingredients.
While I was grocery shopping yesterday, I was sooo excited to see heirloom tomatoes! And as I continued to shop, I added rosemary, tarragon, mushrooms, bell peppers, butter lettuce, and so much more to my basket. And yes, I almost always shop with a basket instead of a shopping cart when I’m by myself because I don’t want to buy more than I can carry. It limits how much food I buy (and money I spend on food). Flawed logic? Maybe. But it works for me.
Filled with roasted red peppers, zucchini noodles, mushrooms, onions, celery, corn, rosemary, and tarragon, this soup is amazingly delicious, healthy, and embodies the flavor of spring. Each bite (or maybe slurp is a better word?) has the taste of roasted red peppers and a hint of rosemary and tarragon. You can always add more herbs if you want the soup to be more aromatic.
I loved that this soup also gave me an opportunity to use my spiralizer for the first time to make zucchini noodles, which I was excited about. Unfortunately, I’m not very good at. But practice makes perfect, right?
Preheat the oven to 400F. Line a 9×9 inch baking pan with foil and drizzle the bottom with olive oil. Cut the bell pepper into fourths and place them on the baking pan. Roast the bell peppers for about 15 minutes, then turn them over, and roast for another 15 minutes. Once the red bell peppers are soft and slightly blackened, remove them from the oven and allow them to cool before cutting them into small pieces.
While the red bell peppers are roasting in the oven, prepare the rest of the ingredients. Slice the onions, cut the celery, slice the mushrooms, spiralize the zucchini, and chop both the tarragon, the rosemary, and the salt. You can add more of the herbs or the salt according to your tastes.
In a medium sized pot, add about a tablespoon of olive oil over low to medium heat. Allow the olive oil to warm for about a minute before adding the onions, celery, and mushrooms. Cook them until they’ve softened.
Pour the broth into the pot carefully to avoid splashing. Add the finely chopped tarragon and rosemary. Allow the broth to come to a simmer.
Add the roast red bell peppers and the zucchini noodles.
Remove the pot from heat, and serve the soup warm.
Enjoy!
Come join me and some of my blogger friends at Fiesta Friday where you’ll find tons of great recipes! This week’s link up is hosted by Selma @Selma’s Table and Margy @La Petite Casserole.
- 1 medium to large red bell pepper, quartered and deseeded
- 1 tablespoon olive oil
- 1 tablespoon olive oil
- ½ small to medium onion, sliced
- 1 large celery stalk, chopped
- 1 cup sliced mushrooms (about 3 large ones)
- 4 cups vegetable broth (or chicken broth)
- 1 sprig of rosemary (about ½ teaspoon chopped)
- 1 ½ tablespoon tarragon, chopped
- ¼ teaspoon salt, more as needed
- 1 medium to large zucchini, spiralized or sliced
- Preheat the oven to 400F. Line a 9x9inch baking pan with foil and drizzle olive oil on the bottom. Place the quartered red bell peppers on the baking pan, and roast the red bell peppers for 15 minutes, turn them over, and roast the other side for another 15 minutes. The red bell peppers will appear slightly blackened and will have softened. Allow the red bell peppers to cool before slicing them into smaller pieces.
- While the red bell peppers are roasting, prepare the rest of the ingredients.
- Add olive oil to a medium to large pot, and allow them to warm for about a minute before adding the sliced onions, chopped celery, and sliced mushrooms.
- Once the vegetables have softened, pour in the broth. Add the rosemary, the tarragon, and salt. Season with more fresh herbs and salt as needed.
- Let the soup simmer before adding the zucchini noodles and the roasted red bell peppers. Combine the ingredients well.
- Remove the pot from heat.
- Serve the soup warm in bowls.
missraychanel84 says
I think you can use “bite” or “slurp” when it comes to soup. Depending on how big your pieces are, you can do both.
This looked so delicious; I wanted to reach into the screen and take the bowl! Do you make your own broth? Is it a vegetable broth? Just curious.
Andrea| Cooking with a Wallflower says
I don’t usually make my own broth. I use either vegetable broth or chicken broth. But occasionally, I even just use water and let the ingredients help flavor the soup.
sylvieamesee says
That’s right, it’s an ideal spring soup, healthy and nicely colored!
Lori's Culinary (@snowluvnferret2) says
Congratulations!! Your recipe has been featured at Tickle My Tastebuds on my blog, Lori’s Culinary Creations. Hop on over and grab a feature button and link up your latest culinary creations. Congrats again.
http://bit.ly/1aFCDG4
Lori
mommermom says
I love making soups almost as much as I love eating them. Great looking recipe!
cattan2011 says
Oh!! yummy bowl of hot soup…thanks for sharing and have a wonderful Sunday.
lapetitecasserole says
I’m huge fan of soups (did I already told you, didn’t I?). Your soup is very original and I bet delicious… keep a bowl aside for me at FF, I’m sure is going to finish in a few seconds! thanks a lot for being at the party!
Selma's Table says
Hi Andrea – I am with you on the shopping basket thing – when I push a trolley around, I tend to get more than I can comfortably carry home and definitely spend more too! Love the sound of your soup – full to bursting with spring flavours. Thank you so much for sharing this with us at Fiesta Friday!
Sinfully Tempting says
I’m drooling at these soup recipes this week at FF! This looks amazing! Thanks for sharing. 🙂
Jewels says
This soup looks delish Andrea! I recently got one of those zucchini noodle making thingies and I love it! 🙂