This ribollita recipe comes straight from Tuscan tradition, where nothing was ever wasted: yesterday’s bread, beans, and winter greens slowly cooked into the most satisfying and warming soup. Simple, rustic, and at its best when reheated the following day.
Ingredients (raw weight)
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Cooked cannellini beans: 2 cans (400 g each, drained ≈ 500 g total)
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Tuscan kale / cavolo nero: 1 large bunch ≈ 1 kg (after trimming ≈ 700–800 g leaves)
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Savoy cabbage: ½ small head ≈ 500–600 g (≈ 350–400 g net)
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Swiss chard: 1 medium bunch ≈ 800 g (≈ 500–600 g net)
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Leek: 1 large ≈ 250 g
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Onions: 2 medium ≈ 300 g
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Carrots: 2 medium ≈ 250 g
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Celery: 2 large stalks ≈ 200 g
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Potatoes: 2 medium ≈ 400 g
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Peeled tomatoes, crushed = 200 g
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Stale bread: 500 g (ideally unsalted Tuscan bread; if not available, use rustic country-style bread)
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Extra virgin olive oil: 6 tbsp + more for drizzling
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Herbs: 1 sprig of thyme or sage, salt, black pepper
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Cooking liquids: ½ liter stock broth + about 1 liter hot water
Directions
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Prepare the beans• Drain the beans. Purée half of them with a little warm water until smooth, leave the rest whole.
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Make the soffritto• In a large pot (5–6 liters, cast iron or stainless steel), heat 3 tbsp olive oil.• Sauté onion, leek, celery, and carrot (finely chopped) until soft and translucent.
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Add the vegetables• Stir in diced potatoes.• Gradually add Savoy cabbage, Swiss chard, and finally Tuscan kale, stirring to let them wilt down
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Add beans and tomato• Mix in the tomato paste.• Add both the puréed beans and the whole beans.• Pour in ½ liter vegetable stock and about 1 liter of hot water.• Season with salt, pepper, and thyme or sage.
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Slow cooking• Cover and simmer very gently for 2–3 hours, stirring occasionally.• Potatoes should completely break down, giving the soup a creamy body.
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Layer with bread• Use a large earthenware or glass dish (avoid plastic).• Break the stale bread into large chunks (do not soak beforehand).• Layer alternately: bread → hot soup → bread → soup, finishing with soup on top.
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Resting• Cover and let rest at least 6–8 hours, preferably overnight.
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Reboil (“ribollita”)• The next day, return the dish to the pot and gently reboil for 10–15 minutes.• Trick: keep a small pot of hot water or broth nearby. If the soup is too dry and sticks to the spoon, add half a ladle of hot liquid and stir.• The ideal consistency is like soft polenta: creamy, thick, and spoonable, but not solid.
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Serving• Serve hot, with a generous drizzle of extra virgin olive oil and freshly ground black pepper.
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