Asparagus Soup (Zuppa Di Asparagi)
Submitted by chef pierre
Zuppa di asparagi is a rustic Italian asparagus soup thickened the old way: beaten eggs and Parmigiano stirred into garlicky broth, then ladled over toasted Italian bread. Stracciatella technique meets spring vegetables.
YIELD
6 servingsPREP
20 minCOOK
40 minREADY
60 minZuppa di asparagi is the spring cousin of stracciatella. Same egg-and-cheese thickening trick, but here asparagus carries the show instead of just spinach or escarole. The Italian grandmother move that turns a thin broth into something silky and substantial.
The asparagus gets a quick sauté in olive oil and garlic before any liquid hits the pot. That browning step builds a base of caramelized, slightly nutty flavor that boiled-from-the-start asparagus will never deliver. Don’t skip it.
The egg-cheese addition (called “stracciare," meaning to tear into rags) is the technique that defines this soup. Whisked together, then tempered with hot soup, then streamed back into the pot with constant stirring. Done right, the eggs form delicate ribbons through the broth. Done wrong, you get scrambled eggs floating in soup.
The pot must come off boiling heat before the egg mixture goes in. Eggs scramble at 158°F (70°C). Hold the soup at a bare simmer or just below.
Serving over a slice of toasted Italian bread is the part that makes this a meal. The bread soaks up the broth and softens into something between bread soup and dumpling.
Pro Tips
- Snap the asparagus where it bends naturally to find the tender stem. Anything below that point is woody and won’t soften.
- Use a Microplane on the Parmigiano. Coarse grates clump in the eggs and won’t melt evenly.
- Pecorino Romano in place of Parmigiano gives a sharper, saltier edge.
- Drizzle a little extra-virgin olive oil over each bowl right before serving for body and aroma.
Variations
- Stir in a handful of baby spinach at the end for added green.
- Use day-old crusty sourdough in place of Italian bread for a chewier base.
- Add a pinch of red pepper flakes with the garlic for gentle background heat.
Ingredients
Directions
Heat the oil and garlic in a soup pot until the garlic is golden. Add the asparagus and cook until they begin to color. Season with salt and pepper.
Add the broth and bring to a boil; reduce the heat and simmer for 15 minutes, or until the asparagus is tender.
Beat the eggs and cheese together. When the asparagus is tender, reduce the heat so the soup is no longer simmering. Very slowly ladle some of the hot soup into the beaten eggs, stirring continuously. After adding about 2 cups of the hot soup to the eggs, reverse the process and gradually stir the eggs mixture into the soup pot.
The soup must not boil or the eggs will scramble. Heat until thickened.
Put one slice of toasted bread into each soup dish. Ladle the hot soup on top and pass additional grated cheese.
Serves 6.
NOTE: To trim asparagus, hold the tip in one hand and the base of the stalk in the other. Bend gently. The asparagus will snap, leaving the tender part with the tip.
Comments




This is a wonderful soup. It is best to start sautéing the asparagus first, then add the minced garlic.
Salt not needed if broth is salty. Add 5-6 cups of broth.
Partially purée the soup before starting to add the beaten eggs.