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This Italian sausage tortellini soup recipe is loaded with flavorful sausage and cheesy pasta in an irresistible creamy tomato broth. It has very little prep time and can be on your table in just 40 minutes!
Try my fairly similar Crockpot Tortellini Soup with Sausage if you’d like an alternative cooking method.
Why you’ll love it
You know that feeling you get when you eat the perfect bowl of soup, and it warms you up from the inside out? Yes, this cheese tortellini soup with sausage is the best comfort food meal on a chilly day! Italian sausage and tortellini are an iconic duo, and the creamy tomato broth is so good.
One of the awesome things about this soup is that it has minimal prep time. Chop the onion and celery, crumble the sausage (or use sausage meat), and that’s essentially it. It means that a complete and filling dinner for your whole family is ready faster on busy weeknights.
What you’ll need
- Italian sausage – it has a fantastic blend of herbs and spices. I use mild.
- Onion, celery, and garlic – these staples are the building blocks to any good soup
- Flour – to thicken the broth
- Chicken broth – another layer of flavor
- Diced tomatoes – tomatoes complement the sausage, and using the juices too is important for depth of flavor
- Italian seasoning – this blend of herbs including rosemary, oregano, and thyme makes the soup special. It comes in a single jar.
- Cheese tortellini – I use refrigerated tortellini because it cooks faster, but you’re welcome to use dried; just note that it’ll take longer to cook
- Heavy cream – don’t skip the cream! The silky texture and taste is so good.
- Spinach – tossing in a handful of baby spinach sneaks in some extra veggies
Tools for this recipe
Check out Natasha’s favorite kitchen essentials, gadgets, and cookware!
- Use a soup pot or sturdy Dutch oven for this soup.
- I recommend this ladle. It’s great at not spilling everywhere when dishing up soup.
- For the other half of the onion you’ll have left, store in this cute onion saver. And easily mince the garlic with a garlic press. No peeling needed!
How to make Italian sausage tortellini soup
This is an overview with step-by-step photos. Full ingredients & instructions are in the recipe card below.
In a large soup pot or Dutch oven sauté the crumbled sausage meat until browned. Transfer to a paper towel lined plate, drain most of the fat, and then cook the chopped onion and celery.
Add in the flour and garlic and cook for a minute, stirring constantly. Slowly pour in the chicken broth.
Add the tomatoes, Italian seasoning, and sausage meat. Bring to a boil, add in the pasta, and simmer. Finally, stir in the cream and spinach.
Substitutions and variations
- Be careful subbing the cream because the acidity of the tomatoes may curdle anything with a lower fat content than heavy cream.
- Try a different variety of sausage like chicken or turkey to change it up.
- If you’re not a fan of regular diced tomatoes, use petite diced tomatoes or tomato sauce instead.
- Craving something spicy? Throw in some crushed red pepper flakes or use hot Italian sausage.
- If spinach isn’t your thing, try kale, but let it cook for a little bit longer. This recipe is very flexible, so add in more veggies if you happen to have any on hand that need using up.
Make ahead tip
- If you plan on having leftovers, add the cheese tortellini to individual portions instead when you reheat them. That way, the pasta will cook quickly right in the soup when you need it and won’t have gone too soft!
What to serve with sausage tortellini soup
- This is a hearty soup, but a slice of Garlic Bread would be wonderful with it!
- You’ll even have time to make my 10 Minute Homemade Caesar Salad Dressing for a side salad, or try my Simple Parmesan Arugula Salad.
- Shaved fresh parmesan cheese takes this soup over the top.
Leftovers and storage
- I recommend eating this soup within a couple of days. The tortellini will soak up the broth and puff up the longer it’s in the fridge.
- You can freeze this soup, but if you want to freeze the entire batch, it’s best to leave out the cream, spinach, and tortellini and then add them when you’re reheating.
- If you freeze leftovers as-is, the pasta may not have the same texture as when first cooked.
I hope you try this sausage and tortellini soup recipe! I’d love it if you left a star rating and review below. You can also find me on Instagram.
Italian Sausage Tortellini Soup
Ingredients
- 16 ounces Italian sausage see note
- 1/2 medium onion chopped finely
- 2 sticks celery chopped finely
- 2 tablespoons flour
- 3-4 cloves garlic minced
- 4 cups chicken broth
- 1 (28 ounce) can diced tomatoes with juices
- 1/4 teaspoon Italian seasoning
- 2 generous cups refrigerated cheese tortellini
- 1 cup heavy/whipping cream
- 2 cups (packed) fresh baby spinach optional
- Salt & pepper to taste
Instructions
- Add the sausage meat to a large soup pot. Sauté over medium-high heat, stirring occasionally, for 7-10 minutes, or until the sausage is browned all over.
- Take the sausage out of the pot and set it aside on a paper towel lined plate. Leave about a tablespoon of the fat in the pot (drain any excess).
- Add the onion and celery to the pot and cook for 4-5 minutes.
- Add the flour and garlic and cook for a minute, stirring constantly.
- Slowly add the chicken broth and stir until the flour has completely dissolved.
- Add the canned tomatoes and Italian seasoning to the pot. Also add the sausage back in. Increase the heat to high and bring the soup to a gentle boil.
- Once it’s boiling, add the tortellini and reduce the heat so it’s gently simmering. Cook for 5 minutes.
- Stir in the cream and cook for another 5 minutes.
- Stir in the spinach and season with salt & pepper to taste.
Notes
- For the sausages, anything around the 16 ounce/1 pound ballpark is fine – it doesn’t need to be exact. You can either buy ground sausage meat or, if using whole sausages, take the meat out of the casings.
- This recipe is also in chapter 5 of the Salt & Lavender: Everyday Essentials hardcover cookbook.
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
© Salt & Lavender Inc. Content and photographs are copyrighted. Sharing this blog post is much appreciated, but copying and pasting full recipes without authorization to social media is strictly prohibited.
This recipe was originally published on November 28, 2017. It’s been tweaked to be even easier, tastier, and has new photos!
Made this last night for dinner along with a salad and it was delicious. Easy recipe, cut it in half and it was perfect for two.
Excellent! ๐ Thanks for your review, Kathy!
Easy, excellent! Thank you. I will make it again Ana again.
Fantastic!! Thanks, Susan!
Husband had 2 bowls. I didnโt follow the recipe exactly because I rarely measure things. I also added some garlic salt and crushed red pepper. Delicious. I would maybe try with some kale instead of spinach, it might hold up a little better with the heat. But overall very, very good.
Excellent! I’m so glad you enjoyed it. I think kale would work too… I even suggest it in the blog post for that same reason haha. Thanks for your review, Michelle!
I made this last night with shrimp and subbed out diced canned tomato with crushed canned tomato + fresh diced tomato, and added a dash of red wine and my partner has not stopped raving about it since. Will be a winter staple in our house, thanks!
Love the shrimp idea! Sounds good to me!
I just made this with hot Italian sausage and used Basil instead of Italian seasoning. Delicious!!
Fantastic!! ๐
Can you sub GF flour?
Hi! So, I don’t cook with GF flour so I’m not familiar with how it behaves as a thickening agent. My first thought is to just stir in a cornstarch slurry at the end if you want a bit more thickness to the broth (it’s not a super thick broth even with the flour). If you’ve made roux with gluten-free flour in the past then you could for sure try that, but I can’t speak to what the results will be since I haven’t tried it myself.
This is a family favourite in our home! I always add a few handfuls of baby spinach!
Wonderful!! I like to add in a handful of spinach here and there when I have some too. Thanks for your review! ๐
I look forward to making this soup every year! (Living in sunny socal, it rarely gets cold enough for “soup weather”!) While I have a few soup recipes in my rotation, this is my favorite. I’m always impressed by how simple, yet flavorful, this recipe truly is. I usually have these ingredients on hand, so I definitely appreciate being able to make something THIS GOOD on a whim!
I’m so pleased you like it so much, Stephanie!! Thanks for your kind review. ๐
So easy, filling, and loved by the inlaws! Delicious! Thank you.
Excellent!! ๐ So pleased to hear that. Thanks for your review!
Natsha, Can you make this soup with pantry style tortellini or does it do best with refrigeratored tortellini?
Hi! You could use the dried kind, but I would add it in a bit earlier since it’ll need to rehydrate. I’d ensure it cooks for as long as the package suggests. Hope you enjoy the soup! ๐