30+ Soup Canning Recipes (Pressure Canning Soup) (2024)

Canning soup is an easy way to put ready-to-eat meals right on your pantry shelf.

30+ Soup Canning Recipes (Pressure Canning Soup) (1)

Canning Beef Stew

It’s one thing to can up your garden produce in neat jars, each one beautifully preserved in glass from the growing season. Those individual ingredients, be they home-canned vegetables, fruits, or even canned meat will still need to be prepared into a balanced meal at dinnertime.

Soup canning recipes are just the opposite, and while they lack the versatility of individual ingredients, they sure do save a lot of time on busy weeknights.

While store-bought canned soups are often high in sodium and are rarely filling, homemade canned soup can be made to your family’s tastes. Add in high-quality ingredients, be they homegrown or freshly sourced, and you’ve got something far more appealing than anything you can buy in the grocery store.

Pressure Canning Soup

The most important thing to know about canning soup at home is that it absolutely must be pressure canned. All the ingredients in soup are what’s known as “low acid foods” which means their pH is too high for safe water bath canning.

I’ve been using a 30 quart All-American Canner for the past decade, and my grandchildren will be using this thing someday. It’s an investment, but totally worth it in my opinion. There are also Presto Brand pressure canners, which are a low-cost option if you’re new to pressure canning, but they’re a bit harder to operate and less durable in the long run.

There are a few rare exceptions to the pressure canning rule, like if you choose to can a “fruit soup” as they’re known in Scandinavian countries. Really those are just compote that’s eaten in a bowl like a “soup” at mealtime in a few regions of the world. Fruit soups are more of a novelty, eaten cold with a bit of cream in the summertime, and they’re rarely filling or hearty.

We’re talking real food soup recipes here, and all of those must be pressure canned.

If you’re not familiar with pressure canning, I’d strongly suggest reading my beginner’s guide to pressure canning before you get started. There are literally hundreds of pressure canning recipes, including recipes for canning vegetables and canning meat, so once you know how to use a pressure canner it’s easy enough to keep it full.

Basic Recipe for Canning Soup

I’m going to take you through literally dozens of different soup canning recipes, but I know inevitably the question on your minds is:

“Can I pressure can grandma’s famous homemade soup?”

The answer is, possibly. The National Center for Food Preservation released general guidance for canning soup at home with an adaptable soup recipe for canning that allows you to use (almost) any ingredient.

All ingredients must be approved for canning, meaning that they have their own specific canning instructions. Since canning onions and canning corn on their own are approved, you would be able to use them in the recipe. There are no specific instructions for canning cabbage alone though, so that’s not an option in this “choose your own adventure” soup recipe.

You cannot use thickeners, flour, rice, pasta, or any other starches. Dairy products like milk, cream, and butter are not allowed either. Mostly it’s just meat, vegetables, and beans as options.

(Thickeners, pasta, and dairy products can be added at serving time, but are not safe for canning.)

The basic instructions are to prepare the vegetables/meat as you would for a hot pack, and then load them into prepared canning jars. The catch is, the jars can only be filled about halfway with solids. The rest of the space must be filled with broth, which ensures that your homemade soup recipe isn’t too dense to allow proper heat distribution during canning.

Fill jars halfway with solids from the soup, then fill the rest of the way with broth, leaving 1” headspace. Seal with 2 part canning lids and process in a pressure canner according to the table below:

30+ Soup Canning Recipes (Pressure Canning Soup) (2)

With this general guidance, you should be able to can almost any soup recipe, provided you’re willing to keep the jars no more than half full with solids. That works really well for broth-based soups like chicken soup, especially if you’re going to add cooked pasta at serving time.

Any soup where you’re going to thicken it or add cooked rice or pasta at serving time works wonderfully, since all that extra broth will go to good use with the ingredients added at serving.

That said, if you want a hearty soup that really packs a punch and doesn’t have all that much broth, I’d suggest following a specific tested soup canning recipe. Don’t worry, there are plenty of those!

Broth and Stock Canning Recipes

The simplest “soups” aren’t usually thought of as soup at all, but canning plain broth and stock is the simplest way to can soup (or the base for a soup) at home.

Since there are no solids in the jar, pressure canning times are much quicker than traditional soup canning recipes.

30+ Soup Canning Recipes (Pressure Canning Soup) (3)

Canning Beef Stock or Broth

Vegetable Soup Canning Recipes

Homemade vegetable soups are a great way to preserve the garden harvest right on your pantry shelf. While most vegetable canning recipes process the produce in water, just processing mixed vegetables in stock with seasoning results in a more flavorful finished product.

Instead of a side dish of canned green beans, you can have a main course of mixed vegetable soup.

30+ Soup Canning Recipes (Pressure Canning Soup) (4)

Bean and Pea Soup Canning Recipes

While canning beans alone is perfectly fine and works well for a quick burrito night, you can also pressure can bean soups. Other legumes work as well, and canning split pea or lentil soups are an easy way to preserve a healthy meal in a jar.

Be sure to follow the recipe closely, as density can be an issue in bean and pea soups. You don’t want them too thick or heat won’t be able to penetrate to the center of the jar.

30+ Soup Canning Recipes (Pressure Canning Soup) (5)

Beef Stew and Soup Canning Recipes

A hearty beef stew is an incredibly filling meal, and perfect for a quick work lunch or weeknight meal. I like to make my home-canned beef stew with plenty of potatoes, carrots, and onions, but there are a surprising number of variations that are approved for canning.

Beef stew with red wine or other vegetables is also remarkably tasty, and a vegetable beef stew with summer veggies like green beans takes the meal in a different direction.

30+ Soup Canning Recipes (Pressure Canning Soup) (6)

Home Canned Beef Stew

Chicken Soup Canning Recipes

Nothing’s more comforting than homemade chicken soup, especially when you’re sick. The problem is, who has the time (or energy) to make chicken soup from scratch when they’re sick?

Canning chicken soup is a great way to plan ahead, and you’ll have homemade chicken soup sitting on the pantry shelf when you need it.

Most chicken soup recipes use noodles, rice, or dumplings which must be added at serving time. My favorite is egg noodles, and I’ll boil up the noodles separately while I heat the soup in another pot.

They’re done in just a few minutes, and then I can toss them right into my bowl. Keeping the noodles separate helps prevent them from getting soggy anyway, so it’s really not a big deal that starchy foods are not approved for home canning.

30+ Soup Canning Recipes (Pressure Canning Soup) (7)

Canning Chicken Soup

Pork and Sausage Soup Canning Recipes

You don’t often associate pork with canning, but believe it or not, it’s perfectly fine for canning. Even fatty cuts like sausage are approved for canning, either as patties, links, or lose pack crumbles.

When added into a soup, sausage or regular pork adds incredible richness. I’m especially fond of home-canned soups with sausage.

30+ Soup Canning Recipes (Pressure Canning Soup) (8)

Canning Sausage Potato and Kale Soup (Olive Garden Zuppa Toscana Copycat Recipe)

Wild Game Soup Canning Recipes

Wild game hunters know when the harvest comes in that’s just the beginning. There’s always a lot of meat to preserve all at once, and while you could put it in the freezer, it’s nice to have a few heat and eat options on the pantry shelf.

I’ve had trouble finding wild game soup canning recipes, except for a few venison soup recipes. That’s unfortunate, but not the end of the world.

You can substitute wild game in for other types of meat when canning. Deer, elk, moose, and bear can all be substituted into beef canning recipes. Smaller game like squirrel and rabbit can be substituted in place of chicken.

Meal in a Jar Canning Recipes

It’s hard to know where “soup” starts and other “meal in a jar” recipes start. Chili isn’t technically a soup, but it’s often eaten like one. Thai curry, likewise isn’t quite a “soup” though if it’s canned it can be warmed and eaten from a bowl in minutes with no other ingredients.

I’ve added a few extra recipes here to keep your pressure canner preserving even more tasty meals, just about anything you could heat and eat in a bowl.

Beef Meals in a Jar

Chicken Meals in a Jar

30+ Soup Canning Recipes (Pressure Canning Soup) (9)

Canning Thai Red Curry Duck

Pressure Canning Books

Didn’t find the recipe you were hoping for? There are literally dozens of soup canning recipes that are published in canning books and just aren’t found anywhere on the internet.

These are my favorite pressure canning books, and they each have quite a few wonderful soup canning recipes:

30+ Soup Canning Recipes (Pressure Canning Soup) (10)

Pressure Canning for Beginners and Beyond (my favorite pressure canning book)

Food Preservation Tutorials

Home canning is just one way to preserve food, but there are plenty of other excellent ways to preserve vegetables and meat at home.

  • Freezing Vegetables (A to Z Guide)
  • Beginners Guide to Lacto-Fermentation
  • Beginners Guide to Rootcellaring
  • How to Freeze Dry Food at Home

30+ Soup Canning Recipes (Pressure Canning Soup) (11)

Related

30+ Soup Canning Recipes (Pressure Canning Soup) (2024)

FAQs

Should soup be cooked before canning? ›

If the recipe involves beans or meat, cook them thoroughly before starting the process, as pressure canning and reheating will often not cook these ingredients all the way through. That's because the liquid content in the jar isn't enough to cook the meat or beans contained within it.

How do you make canned soup more flavorful? ›

Herbs: Fresh chives, thyme, or cilantro stirred in just before serving. Spices: Your soup is probably salty enough, but what about simmering a bay leaf in there for a while (don't forget to remove it before serving)? Depending on the soup's flavor profile, you could shake in some cumin or red pepper flakes.

Can homemade soup be pressure canned? ›

Vegetable soups in a broth base may be safely canned using the process time for the ingredient that takes the longest to process as an individual ingredient. Most soups will take 60 to 90 minutes to process in a pressure canner depending upon jar size and ingredients. Never can soup in half-gallon containers.

Can any soup be pressure canned? ›

Ok, so I looked at the National Center for Home Food Preservation's page, and under their section on canning soups, it looks like ***as long as there is no dairy, thickener, or oil*** one can basically pressure can most soups -- including those with some meat, with beans, and with vegetables, for 60 minutes for pints, ...

Can you drink soup straight from the can? ›

Yes, It's Okay To Eat Cold Soup Straight Out Of The Can.

What happens if you don't add water to canned soup? ›

You only need to add water to soup if it is condensed. In other words, they have taken water out of it during the cooking and canning process, so you need to put water back in. If you don't, the soup will be quite salty, and other flavors will also be concentrated.

Why don t noodles in canned soup get soggy? ›

Gluten and alkaline salts react to make a chewier, denser noodle that doesn't soak up water as well. This means noodles can sit in the broth for longer periods of time before they start to get mushy. Fun fact: Alkaline salts, like baking soda, are also the reason these noodles appear more yellow.

Why is soup bad for blood pressure? ›

Avoid canned foods and soups as they tend to contain lots of sodium. Canned beans for example, can contain as much as 500mg of sodium per serving. However, there are some canned foods with lower sodium content. Look out for foods that come with the healthier choice logo.

What vegetables can you not put in soup? ›

any veggie can be used in soup, but unless you're making a very delicate, exceptional soup, I'd steer clear of lettuce. some veggies have a strong flavor, so you may enjoy using them, but in moderation. For me, parsnips and rutabaga fit this category.

How do you jazz up canned soup? ›

The addition of meat and vegetarian replacements like chicken or tofu, as well as carbs like rice or legumes add additional heft to any canned soup. Veggies and a splash of citric acid can brighten up a boring tomato soup.

What ingredient can be added to a soup to make it thicker and richer? ›

Add flour or cornflour

Put a tablespoon of either into a small bowl and stir in 2-3 tbsp of the soup until you have a smooth mixture. Stir this back into the soup and bring it to a simmer. Cook for a few minutes to allow the starch granules to burst to thicken, and to cook out any flour flavour.

How long do you pressure cook when canning? ›

Process filled jars in a pressure canner at 10 pounds pressure 20 minutes for pints and 25 minutes for quarts, adjusting for altitude, according to your pressure canners directions. Turn off heat: cool canner to zero pressure. Let stand 5 more minutes before removing the lid.

Can you over pressure canning? ›

Maintain the correct pressure.

It is okay to keep our canner 2 or 3 PSI higher than the required temperature, but do not let the pressure exceed 4 PSI above what is required or the jars may result in liquid loss from syphoning once you bring the temperature back down to correct the increase.

What happens if you use too much pressure when canning? ›

If the pressure gets too high, the weight jiggles and releases steam and pressure. No blowing up. You do need to monitor your pressure canner while it is building pressure and during processing. Like a deep fryer, you don't just fill it and go in the other room or outside while it is doing its thing.

How long will homemade soup last in a Mason jar? ›

Properly frozen soup in mason jars can last in the freezer for up to 3 months. However, for optimal taste and quality, it is recommended to consume the soup within 1 to 2 months. Make sure to label the jars with the date, so you can keep track of their freezing time.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Zonia Mosciski DO

Last Updated:

Views: 6058

Rating: 4 / 5 (71 voted)

Reviews: 86% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Zonia Mosciski DO

Birthday: 1996-05-16

Address: Suite 228 919 Deana Ford, Lake Meridithberg, NE 60017-4257

Phone: +2613987384138

Job: Chief Retail Officer

Hobby: Tai chi, Dowsing, Poi, Letterboxing, Watching movies, Video gaming, Singing

Introduction: My name is Zonia Mosciski DO, I am a enchanting, joyous, lovely, successful, hilarious, tender, outstanding person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.