
Chicken, bean and orzo soup with walnut pesto
This hearty chicken and bean soup from food writer Debora Robertson is packed with nuggets of filling orzo pasta. Finish with a generous swirl of homemade walnut pesto.
Ingreadient
- 2 tbsp olive oil
- 2 skin-on chicken breasts
- 1 large onion, chopped
- 2-3 thyme sprigs
- 1 bay leaf
- 2 celery sticks, chopped
- 2 carrots, chopped
- 3-4 garlic cloves, halved and finely sliced
- 1 litre chicken or vegetable stock
- 400g tin white beans (such as butter, haricot or cannellini), drained and quickly rinsed
- 80g orzo
- Small bunch (10g) parsley, leaves and fine stalks only, chopped
- Finely grated zest 1 small unwaxed lemon, plus ½ the juice (save the other half for the pesto)
- 60g baby spinach
- 40g parmesan, finely grated
- 2 garlic cloves
- Juice ½ lemon
- ½ tsp salt
- 100ml olive oil
- 60g toasted walnuts
Instruction
- Warm the oil in a large, heavy-bottomed saucepan over a medium heat and brown the chicken all over, starting skin-side down. When it’s golden, remove to a plate.
- Lower the heat slightly and fry the onion with the thyme sprigs, bay leaf and a good pinch of salt, stirring from time to time, until the onion is soft and translucent (about 15-20 minutes). Add the celery, carrots and garlic and fry gently for a couple of minutes, then add the stock and bring to a gentle simmer.
- Return the chicken to the pan along with any juices and poach for 15 minutes until tender. Remove and shred with a fork or cut into pieces with a knife, then return it to the pan. You can discard the skin at this point if you prefer – it has done its job, helping to flavour the soup.
- Taste the soup and add more salt and pepper as necessary. Add the white beans and the orzo to the pan and simmer gently until the orzo is cooked (7-10 minutes depending on the brand).
- While the soup is simmering, make the pesto. In a blender, pulse together the spinach, parmesan, garlic, lemon juice and salt until just coarse. Trickle in the olive oil, pulsing as you go. Finally, add the walnuts and pulse briefly – you still want it to have some texture to it.
- When the orzo is cooked, stir the parsley, lemon zest and juice into the soup. Serve in warmed bowls, with some of the pesto spooned over the top.