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I made Ina Garten’s minestrone soup, and it’s the best cure for a cold or the winter blues

  • I made Ina Garten’s winter minestrone soup. 
  • Her recipe is packed with veggies, including carrots, celery, butternut squash, and spinach. 
  • The colorful soup was hearty and comforting, exactly what you need during the winter. 

The dropping temperatures, canceled plans, and empty shelves can only mean one thing — winter is definitely here.

And nothing helps the winter blues, or the flu, more than a piping hot bowl of soup.

There are few celebrity chefs I find more comforting than Ina Garten, so I whipped up her winter minestrone soup to brighten my day.

Here’s how to make it.

Ina Garten’s winter minestrone soup is packed with colorful veggies.

Garten’s winter minestrone soup features butternut squash, carrots, celery, and pancetta.

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To make 6-8 servings of Garten’s soup, you’ll need:

  • 2 cups of cooked small pasta, such as Tubetti
  • 1 26-ounce can or box of chopped tomatoes, such as Pomi
  • 1 15-ounce can of cannellini beans
  • 6 to 8 cups of chicken stock, preferably homemade
  • 8-10 ounces of fresh baby spinach leaves
  • 2 ½ cups of peeled butternut squash, ½-inch diced
  • 2 cups of celery, ½-inch diced
  • 2 cups of carrots, ½-inch diced
  • 1 ½ cups of chopped yellow onions
  • ½ cup of good dry white wine
  • 4 ounces of diced pancetta
  • ½ tablespoon of minced garlic (about 4 cloves)
  • 2 tablespoons of store-bought pesto
  • 2 teaspoons of fresh chopped thyme leaves
  • 1 bay leaf
  • Freshly grated Parmesan cheese, for serving

My prep began with plenty of chopping.


Chopped veggies for Ina Garten's winter minestrone soup

First, I chopped all of my veggies.

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Garten’s recipe requires a lot of prep, but it makes a lot of soup. And all those veggies make the broth so hearty and comforting.

If you can, recruit a loved one or friend to help you chop everything — just bribe them with leftovers.

I also cooked the pasta ahead of time.


Cooked pasta for Ina Garten's winter minestrone soup

I cooked my pasta so it would be ready for the soup.

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Garten recommends using Tubetti pasta for this recipe, but I couldn’t find any at my local supermarket. I went with a similar shape and cooked my noodles until they were al dente.

To begin my soup, I first threw some olive oil and pancetta into a large pot.


Cooking pancetta for Ina Garten's winter minestrone soup

Garten says to cook the pancetta for 6 to 8 minutes.

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I added 2 tablespoons of olive oil to the pot, which was placed over medium heat.

Then I added the pancetta, cooking it over medium-low heat for about six minutes until it had lightly browned.

Then I added the veggies and herbs.


Adding butternut squash for Ina Garten's winter minestrone soup

I added my peeled and diced butternut squash.

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I threw my chopped onions, carrots, celery, squash, garlic, and thyme into the pot.

Garten says it’s best to use fresh thyme if you can because it “really makes a difference.”

I cooked everything over medium heat, making sure to stir occasionally.


Veggies in pot for Ina Garten's winter minestrone soup

I cooked my veggies for 10 minutes, until they began to soften.

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Garten says you should cook the mixture for eight to 10 minutes, until the vegetables begin to soften.

Then I added the chopped tomatoes and six cups of chicken stock.


Adding chicken broth for Ina Garten's winter minestrone soup

Then I added the chicken stock.

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Garten recommends using her homemade chicken stock, which I didn’t have time to whip up for this dish.

I will confess that the soup’s broth wasn’t very exciting or rich with store-bought stock. You could add some chicken bouillon to amp up its flavor, but nothing will taste as good as the homemade stock. It’s worth the extra effort!

I added the bay leaf and seasoned my mixture.


Adding bay leaf to broth for Ina Garten's winter minestrone soup

I seasoned the broth with salt and pepper.

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I added 1 tablespoon of salt and 1 ½ teaspoons of freshly ground black pepper to the pot.

I brought the broth to a boil, then lowered the heat and simmered it uncovered for 30 minutes.


Simmering Ina Garten's winter minestrone soup

My boiling broth.

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Garten says you should allow the mixture to simmer until the vegetables are tender, so I let my soup simmer for an additional 15 minutes.

Once my broth was done simmering, I took out the bay leaf.


Taking out bay leaf for Ina Garten's winter minestrone soup

No one wants to eat the bay leaf.

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Garten says you can use a fresh or dry bay leaf for this recipe.

Then I added the beans and pasta and allowed them to heat through.


Adding beans to Ina Garten's winter minestrone soup

My broth with the pasta and beans.

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Make sure you drain and rinse the cannellini beans before adding them to the broth.

The pasta will likely absorb a lot of the broth. If your soup looks too thick at this stage, add more chicken stock.


Simmering Ina Garten's winter minestrone soup

My soup was almost ready.

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Garten recommends adding two more cups of chicken stock if you’re unhappy with the consistency.

Once I was ready to serve, I added the spinach to my soup.


Adding spinach to Ina Garten's winter minestrone soup

Adding the spinach to my soup.

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Garten recommends tossing the spinach with two big spoons to help cook the leaves until they’ve wilted in the broth.

Then I added the white wine.


Adding wine to Ina Garten's winter minestrone soup

I chose a pinot grigio wine for this recipe.

Anneta Konstantinides/Business Insider

Garten says you should select a nice white wine that you’d want to drink for this recipe.

This is also where you should add the pesto if you’re using it. (I skipped it because my sister is allergic to pine nuts.)

I mixed everything together and gave my soup a quick salt check.


Ina Garten's winter minestrone soup

Check the saltiness of your soup before serving.

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I was happy with the saltiness of my soup, but Garten recommends adding another teaspoon or two if you feel the broth needs more.

After a drizzle of olive oil and a sprinkle of Parmesan cheese, my soup was ready.


Ina Garten's winter minestrone soup

Garten’s winter minestrone soup is packed with bright bursts of color.

Anneta Konstantinides/Business Insider

Garten’s winter minestrone soup is a much-needed burst of color on a cold and dreary day. I loved seeing the rainbow of hues from all the vegetables — the soup couldn’t have looked more inviting.

It was time for my first sip.

Garten’s winter minestrone soup is really hearty and comforting.


Ina Garten's winter minestrone soup

Garten’s winter minestrone soup is packed with so much flavor.

Anneta Konstantinides/Business Insider

I’m a huge soup fan. I love soup so much that I’m even in a group chat dedicated to sharing photos, recipes, and daily appreciation for soup and its various forms (shout-out to my soup girlz). But minestrone has never been my favorite.

Garten finds a way to infuse this often lackluster soup with flavor. The taste of the tomato shines through, adding a richness to the broth that’s amplified by the final touch of Parmesan and olive oil on top. All the veggies tasted delicious and maintained their texture, even when I ate leftovers a few days later. I also enjoyed the burst of freshness from the spinach and thyme, and how the soup still tasted healthy and light.

Winter is a tough season for everyone. So, if you’re under the weather or just feeling blue, I recommend a bowl of Garten’s colorful winter minestrone soup.




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OpenAI’s chief researcher says Mark Zuckerberg ‘hand-delivered soup’ to an employee in a recruiting effort

It’s been said that the way to one’s heart is through their stomach. It sounds like Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg wanted to see if the AI talent war, or at least one skirmish, could be won the same way.

Mark Chen, chief research officer at OpenAI, recently said that Zuckerberg personally delivered homemade soup to an OpenAI employee as part of a campaign to recruit the unnamed worker to Meta.

“It’s been kind of interesting and fun to see it escalate over time. You know, some interesting stories here are Zuck actually went and hand-delivered soup to people that he was trying to recruit from us,” Chen told Ashlee Vance on the author’s “Core Memory” podcast.

Chen said Zuckerberg’s move was “shocking to me at the time” but since then, he said he’s returned the favor.

“I’ve also delivered soup to people we’ve been recruiting from Meta,” Chen said, laughing.

The poaching efforts focused on OpenAI’s researchers and engineers underscores the company’s position in the AI race, Chen said.

“We’re always under attack,” Chen told Vance. “This is how I know we’re in the lead, right? Any company starts, where do they try to recruit from? It’s OpenAI. They want the expertise, they want our vision, our philosophy of the world. And we’ve made so many star researchers, right? I think OpenAI, more than anywhere else, has been a place that makes names in AI today.”

Arguably, no other rival tech company has been as aggressive in the so-called AI talent wars against OpenAI as Zuckerberg’s Meta.

In June, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said that Meta tried to lure some of his engineers with $100 million signing bonuses. The CEO said at the time that none of his top talent was poached, but ChatGPT co-creator Shengjia Zhao later joined Meta’s Superintelligence Lab.

Chen said that Meta tried to recruit “half” of Chen’s direct reports unsuccessfully, but that OpenAI has been “fairly good” at retaining top talent. A Meta spokesperson declined to comment.

Top AI researchers have become a hot commodity in the AI race, as it’s generally believed that there is a relatively small number of researchers and engineers capable of achieving breakthroughs or building new LLMs from the ground up.

“It’s like looking for LeBron James,” Databricks’ vice president of AI, Naveen Rao, told The Verge’s Command Line newsletter last year. “There are just not very many humans who are capable of that.”




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