Set a large, heavy bottomed soup pot over medium heat. Once it's nice and hot, pour in the olive oil and swirl it around. Add the onions and sauté, stirring here and there for about 10-12 minutes. You want them super soft and quite transparent. If the onions are browning too quickly, lower the heat. Season with salt and pepper.
Add the celery and carrots to the pot and sauté for another 8-9 minutes, or until the edges of the carrots and celery are softened. Season again with salt and pepper.
Add the rosemary, paprika, and garlic to the pot and stir. Keep stirring and sautéing until spices are very fragrant, about 2 minutes.
Add the tomato paste to the pot and stir. Keep stirring and mixing it up into the vegetables until the raw, tin-like flavour is cooked out, about 1 minute.
Add the chickpeas to the pot and stir to coat in the seasoning and vegetables. Then, pour in the vegetable stock. Season liberally with salt and pepper. Bring the chickpea soup to a boil. Then, lower the heat to a light simmer.
Place the lid ajar on top of the pot and simmer the soup for about 40 minutes, stirring here and there.
Remove about 2 cups of the soup and transfer it to an upright, vented blender. To the blender, add the miso. Blend this mixture on high until creamy. Add the puréed portion of the soup back to the pot and stir. Bring the soup back up to a strong boil for about 5 minutes. At this point, if you would like to thin out the soup a bit, add more vegetable stock.
Stir the red wine vinegar and the Tamari into the soup. Give the chickpea soup a taste and adjust the seasoning if necessary (more salt, pepper, vinegar, Tamari etc). Serve the soup hot with chili oil and extra black pepper.
Equipment
Blender
Recipe Notes
This soup is minimal on the ingredient side, so I went in with chickpeas that I cooked from their dried state as well as homemade vegetable stock. If you’re going store bought on stock, I find that the concentrated stocks or pastes (that you dilute in water before cooking) are usually a good bet
I know that up to 12 minutes sounds like a long time to sauté onions, but it really pays off and if I can, I start most of my soups this way. It helps the fine cuts of onion to almost “dissolve” into the soup.
I'm putting Momofuku chili crunch on top of everything these days, and it really is delightful on this soup along with lots of black pepper. Something spicy/tingly on top just hits nicely with the earthy flavours.
This simple chickpea soup hovers around 10 key ingredients, has a creamy texture, and is flavored with rosemary, smoked paprika, garlic, and miso for umami. Cooked slowly on the stove top, this easy vegan soup is hearty and comforting.