Creamy Potato Leek Soup (Print page)

Velvety potatoes and sweet leeks in creamy broth. Easily customizable with seafood or bacon for extra flavor.

# What You Need:

→ Vegetables

01 - 2 tablespoons unsalted butter
02 - 1 tablespoon olive oil
03 - 2 large leeks (white and light green parts only), cleaned and sliced
04 - 1 medium yellow onion, diced
05 - 3 cloves garlic, minced
06 - 4 medium Yukon Gold potatoes, peeled and diced (approximately 1.3 pounds)
07 - 2 stalks celery, diced

→ Liquids

08 - 4 cups low-sodium vegetable broth or chicken broth
09 - 1 cup whole milk or heavy cream

→ Seasonings

10 - 1 bay leaf
11 - 1 teaspoon fresh thyme leaves or 0.5 teaspoon dried thyme
12 - 0.5 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
13 - 0.75 teaspoon kosher salt, adjusted to taste

→ Optional Garnish

14 - 7 ounces cooked seafood such as shrimp, scallops, or white fish
15 - 4 strips cooked bacon, crumbled
16 - Fresh chives or parsley, chopped

# Directions:

01 - In a large pot, heat butter and olive oil over medium heat. Add leeks and onion, cooking for 5 to 6 minutes until softened but not browned.
02 - Add minced garlic and diced celery, sautéing for 2 minutes until fragrant.
03 - Stir in diced potatoes, bay leaf, thyme, salt, and pepper. Pour in the broth and bring to a boil.
04 - Reduce heat to low, cover, and simmer for 20 to 25 minutes until potatoes are very tender.
05 - Remove the bay leaf. Use an immersion blender to purée the soup until smooth, or leave slightly chunky according to preference.
06 - Stir in the milk or cream and gently reheat. Adjust seasoning as needed.
07 - For seafood chowder, fold in cooked seafood and heat through for 2 to 3 minutes. For bacon garnish, ladle soup into bowls and top with crumbled bacon.
08 - Garnish with fresh chives or parsley if desired. Serve hot.

# Expert Advice:

01 -
  • It tastes like you spent hours cooking when you actually didn't, which is the dream.
  • The base is vegetarian, but it's secretly begging for bacon or shrimp if you want to get fancy.
  • One pot, minimal cleanup, maximum comfort in a bowl.
02 -
  • Don't skip cleaning your leeks properly; grit between the layers is the kind of surprise nobody wants, so slice them and rinse thoroughly under running water.
  • The soup thickens as it cools, so if it seems too thin when it's hot, that's actually perfect; reheat gently with a splash of broth if needed the next day.
03 -
  • If your cream breaks or the soup looks separated, don't panic—turn off the heat and whisk in a splash of cold broth to bring it back together.
  • Make it ahead and freeze it in portions without the cream, then add fresh cream when you reheat; it thaws faster and stays fresher that way.
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