Ribollita
Updated Jan. 29, 2026

- Total Time
- About 50 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 5tablespoons olive oil
- 1small onion, chopped
- 1carrot, chopped
- 1celery stalk, chopped
- 1tablespoon minced garlic
- Salt and ground black pepper
- 2cups cooked or canned cannellini beans
- 115-ounce can whole peeled tomatoes
- 4cups vegetable stock or water
- 1fresh rosemary sprig
- 1fresh thyme sprig
- 1pound chopped kale or escarole
- 4large, thick slices whole-grain bread, toasted
- 1small red onion, thinly sliced
- ½cup freshly grated Parmesan
Preparation
- Step 1
Put 2 tablespoons of the oil in a large pot over medium heat. When it’s hot, add onion, carrot, celery and garlic; sprinkle with salt and pepper and cook, stirring occasionally, until vegetables are soft, 5 to 10 minutes.
- Step 2
Heat the oven to 500 degrees. Drain the beans; if they’re canned, rinse them as well. Add them to the pot along with tomatoes and their juices and stock, rosemary and thyme. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat so the soup bubbles steadily; cover and cook, stirring once or twice to break up the tomatoes, until the flavors meld, 15 to 20 minutes.
- Step 3
Fish out and discard rosemary and thyme stems, if you like, and stir in kale. Taste and adjust seasoning. Lay bread slices on top of the stew so they cover the top and overlap as little as possible. Scatter red onion slices over the top, drizzle with the remaining 3 tablespoons oil and sprinkle with Parmesan.
- Step 4
Put the pot in the oven and bake until the bread, onions and cheese are browned and crisp, 10 to 15 minutes. (If your pot fits under the broiler, you can also brown the top there.) Divide the soup and bread among 4 bowls and serve.
Private Notes
Comments
Ribollita is a very typical dish from Tuscany and I was born in Florence so... trust me when I suggest to not add thyme and use only kale not escarole Don't put in the oven but cook early in the morning or better the day before. Add bread in large pieces and wait. Wait, wait and wait again. Then cook again for 5 minutes until boiling but only before serving. Stir, add 4 tbs olive oil and eat.
As a matter of fact Ribollita means "boiled again".
As written, a bit boring. But a great template dish. I made the following changes:
- Broth, not water
- 10 oz kale, not 16 oz
- Add 2 sweet potatoes or equiv butternut squash (cook before adding)
- Doubled the amount of herbs (I used oregano, basil)
- Doubled the carrots & celery
Just an addition to your great comment!
Ribollita was originally developed as a way to utilize stale bread.
For the non-Italians on this site, this is an authentic recipe for ribollita: http://www.cookwithgrazia.com/csa-box-content/ribollita-soup-authentic-r...
I agree with Jen A to use - 10 oz kale/chard, not 16 oz. and with Theresa to bake croutons separately, cutting sourdough into cubes and toss with high heat oil (I use avocado oil) and thinly chopped red onion (on 400 degrees for about 7-10 minutes. After 5 minutes I added parmesan and watched carefully to remove it before anything got too dark or burned. The bread stays crispier and it’s ready sooner. Only use EVOO as a garnish - its not meant for high heat!
Cooked as directed: used Aneto brand veggie stock as it’s really good and brings out a lot of body to this dish. Very tasty, comes together easy, and great leftovers.
I would use about half the kale and double the beans. I think that would come closer to the soup we ate in Florence. Also bread on top and store in refrigerator overnight. Then reheat next day and mush bread into soup. Also Parmesan on top when serving.
