Olive Garden Pasta e Fagioli
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A super easy, no-fuss copycat recipe that’s wonderfully hearty and comforting, except it tastes 100x better than the restaurant-version!
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what is pasta e fagioli?
Pasta e fagioli is a classic Italian soup literally translating to “pasta and beans”. This is typically made with vegetables, a variety of beans and pasta in a tomato broth.
why i love this recipe
- One pot dinner. This is one of those soups that come together so easily on the stovetop in a single pot, even the uncooked pasta gets cooked right in (unless you’re cooking it separately for leftovers). One pot means less clean up, less dishes!
- Uses pantry staples. The ingredient list may seem long, but most of the ingredients use pantry essentials, sparing you from that emergency grocery run.
- Freezer-friendly. Pasta e fagioli freezes very well sans pasta, making it perfect to stock up the freezer for those cold winter nights, for new moms or for those recovering from surgery.
tips and tricks for success
- Use short cut pasta. Ditalini, macaroni or a small shape pasta similar in size to the vegetables and beans is ideal.
- Save leftover Parmesan rinds. Get more out of those expensive Parmesan cheeses by using up the leftover rinds! Adding a Parmesan rind slightly thickens the broth and adds a level of nutty richness to the soup.
- Add leafy greens. Pasta e fagioli is a great way to sneak in some greens for those picky eaters. Stir in kale, spinach, cabbage, swiss chard or collard greens near the end of cooking time until wilted.
- Stir in more stock with leftovers. When reheating leftovers, stir in more stock as needed as the pasta will continue to soak up the broth. The pasta can also be cooked and stored separately.
- Serve with crusty bread. Serve with all the homemade crusty bread for dipping, sopping and dunking!
what to serve with pasta e fagioli
Tools For This Recipe
Dutch oven
Olive Garden Pasta e Fagioli: Frequently Asked Questions
Ground beef or ground turkey will work very well here. Pancetta or bacon are also great additions.
Pasta e fagioli can absolutely be made in the crockpot, cooked low and slow for 7-8 hours. Recipe here.
Yes! You can freeze the leftovers without the pasta (or else they will get mushy) in individual freezer bags, thaw overnight, and reheat on the stovetop, adding freshly cooked pasta and a splash of broth (if needed) when serving.
Olive Garden Pasta e Fagioli
Ingredients
- 1 tablespoon olive oil
- 1 pound spicy Italian sausage, casing removed
- 1 onion, diced
- 3 carrots, peeled and diced
- 2 ribs celery, diced
- 3 cloves garlic, minced
- 1 teaspoon dried basil
- 1 teaspoon dried oregano
- ¾ teaspoon dried thyme
- 3 cups chicken broth
- 1 (16-ounce) can tomato sauce
- 1 (15-ounce) can diced tomatoes
- 1 cup water
- 1 cup ditalini pasta
- 1 (3-inch) Parmesan rind
- Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste
- 1 (15-ounce) can red kidney beans, drained and rinsed
- 1 (15-ounce) can Great Northern beans, drained and rinsed
- ½ cup shaved Parmesan
Equipment
Instructions
- Heat olive oil in a large stockpot or Dutch oven over medium heat. Add Italian sausage to the skillet and cook until browned, about 3-5 minutes, making sure to crumble the sausage as it cooks; set aside.
- Add onion, carrots and celery, and cook, stirring occasionally, until tender, about 4-5 minutes.
- Stir in garlic, basil, oregano and thyme until fragrant, about 1 minute.
- Stir in Italian sausage, chicken broth, tomato sauce, diced tomatoes, water, pasta and Parmesan rind; season with salt and pepper, to taste.
- Bring to a boil; reduce heat and simmer, stirring occasionally, until pasta is tender, about 10-15 minutes.
- Stir in beans until heated through, about 1-2 minutes.
- Serve immediately, topped with Parmesan.
Did you make this recipe?
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There is one big problem I have with this recipe and that is, after I’ve gotten used to making and eating this delicious soup, the real Olive Garden version I get at the restaurant seems somewhat bland. I guess that’s kind of a good problem to have.
Perfectly delicious! Easy to follow. Wouldn’t change one thing. Everything I have made using this website has been fantastic. You haven’t failed me yet.
We are so happy to hear that!
This was fantastic! A huge hit with both my husband and daughter! A great recipe that’s easy to follow and simple to make for a delicious weeknight meal. Five stars for sure!
Thank you, Jennifer!
Wow that looks so tasty!! The perfect bread dunking dish!!
Do u think I can make this soup with gound meat instead of itslian sausage …
What a great idea! But unfortunately, without further recipe testing, I cannot answer with certainty. As always, please use your best judgment when making substitutions and modifications.
Of course you can! That’s the only way my Mom made it. Keep the grind course and you will love it.
I’ve made this over and over…love your recipe!!! My family could eat this every week….thanks so much for your amazing recipes.
Thanks, Denise! We love it!
Sorry, may be overlooking, but what is the serving size? One cup?
About 1-2 cups.
OMGOODNESS…this soup is DELICIOUS…Having worked at Olive Garden for several years…i can not tell you how good this soup is…! Thank u sooo sooo sooo very much for this recipe. I thought your version is excellent. I will definitely try your other rcipes now that this one was do incredible…thank u again from the bottom of my heart. My husband is having dental issues…and this is easy for him to get a nice warm delicious meal with great ingredients. I love the fact the kidney and navy beans offer additional protein. One thing I do is grate reggiano parmesan or parmesan cheese over the top just like Olive Garden does. 10 star review…PERFECT…!!!
Thank you for sharing with us, Robin!
Very easy and tasty soup. I added spinach, cannelloni beans instead of northern beans. And I had to use rotini instead of ditalini pasta( it had bugs in it)YUCK! Better than Olive Garden!
Oh no – sorry to hear about the bugs! Glad you had a backup plan!
I have made it before and always comes out good. I use slivered carrots. Going to make tonight. thank you for sharing.
Oh awesome! Let us know how you like it.
It’s “da bomb”. I shared what I made and received comments like “restaurant quality” and “better than any soup I’ve ever made”. I’ll make liquid adjustments, but everything else really works. Thank you.
Wow thank you for that feedback Walt! Awesome 🙂
Hi! Can you elaborate on the calories? In this recipe (and some others), it’ll say 8 servings 340 calories. What is a serving size? It seems to be a lot of calories for 1 serving at 8 oz. I’m trying to lose weight and choose my dishes carefully. I’ve aleays loved your recipes! Thanks for your help:)
Each serving is roughly 1-2 cups.
I made this soup for dinner last night and it was fantastic. I couldn’t wait for lunch today and it tasted even better.
The only thing I did extra is add a Parmesan cheese rind I had in the fridge waiting for a perfect soup or stew.
This is going in the saved recipes file!
Fantastic!
Excellent. I made this exactly as written and served it with some crusty ciabatta. SO good – thanks!
This soup was delicious! My family loved it. I made a double batch and served the macaroni on the side.
I added two more cups of chicken broth, it wasn’t enough at all. Otherwise delicious. My husbands fav.
This was very good. I made minor changes-less sausage, (mild: drained and rinsed), mix of beef and chicken stock, no tomato sauce, white wine deglaze, great northern beans instead of kidneys and a spoon of pesto subbed for the herbs. We enjoyed it but to me it was more like minestrone than the pasta e fagioli I’m used to. I’ve never had the OG version and I get that this is a copycat of that. We’ll have this again (love all the recipes I’ve seen on your site) but for pasta e fagioli I’ll stick to the less chunky veg/creamier version.
This is my go-to recipe for Pasta e Fagioli. It’s delicious every time!
This looks great and very close to the real Olive Garden recipe. I worked at Olive Garden eons ago and used to make this very soup. The actual recipe calls for both ground beef & Italian sausage (equal proportions of each) as well as a hint of Tabasco. Can’t wait to try this. Thanks for posting it.
Absolutely delicious. I made a second batch just to freeze-minus the pasta. No more canned soup or the overly salted Olive garden version. Thank you for a wonderful way to warm up without feeling bloated and overly full. I wonder do you have any recipes using ground lamb? I recently purchased some in bulk when it was on sale. Any recommendations would be great.
I actually do not at this time – sorry!