Easy Russian Cabbage Soup Recipe for Shchi – and it's Vegan! (2024)

Jump to Recipe

This Russian cabbage soup recipe makes shchi (Щи), the most Russian of soups. If my baboushka wasn’t making borscht, she was cooking a big pot of shchi. A very old soup that was eaten by nobles and peasants alike, the wealthy would include meat in their shchi, while workers made a vegetarian soup, shchi vegetarianskiye, you can skip the sour cream (not something I could do!) and you have a vegan shchi recipe.

My easy Russian cabbage soup recipe will make you an aromatic pot of shchi (Щи), perhaps the most Russian of soups. So beloved by Russians, the Moscow Times called it a “national treasure”. Brimming with cabbage, carrots and potatoes, it’s also one of my best potato soup recipes.

While you might have thought that borscht was the quintessential Russian soup, the beetroot-based meat and vegetable broth is one of the most popular and best-known Russian soups, but its origin is claimed by Ukrainians. Shchi is resolutely Russian.

Shchi is an old Russian soup dating to the 9th century, when cabbage arrived in ‘the Land of the Rus’ from Byzantium. Historically eaten by Russian peasants and nobles alike, a bowl of shchi typically included meat when cooked for the rich, while the poor made a simple vegetarian broth (shchi vegetarianskiye). To make this a vegan dish, you only need to skip the sour cream.

If you’re arriving here for the first time or you’re a regular visitor dropping by (no, we haven’t pivoted to a Russian food blog), we took a break from testing Cambodian recipes for our cookbook over the holidays, which is when I usually cook Russian food and reminisce about long-ago family meals while rolling out dough.

This year, we thought we’d share my Russian family recipes for dishes such as savoury pirozhki (hand pies), stuffed cabbage rolls,kotleti (chicken meat patties), beetroot potato salad, potato vareniki, pelmeni, and pan-fried Russian dumplings.

I’ll tell you more about my Russian cabbage soup recipe in a moment, but first, can I ask a favour? If you’ve cooked any of our recipes from Russia or beyond and you’ve liked them, please consider supporting Grantourismo so we can continue publishing recipes and food stories. This post lists ways to support Grantourismo but here are a few suggestions…

You could shop our online store (we have everything from gifts for food lovers to reusable cloth face masks for foodies designed from Terence’s photography); make a donation or become a patron of our original Cambodian culinary history and cookbook on Patreon; or buy something on Amazon, such as one of these James Beard 2020 award-winning cookbooks, cookbooks by Australian chefs, cookbooks for foodie travellers, classic cookbooks for serious cooks, and gifts for Asian food lovers and picnic lovers. Now let me tell you about my Russian cabbage soup recipe for shchi.

Easy Russian Cabbage Soup Recipe for Shchi, The Most Russian of Soups – And Vegan!

Russians love their comforting soups and my family was no exception. If baboushka wasn’t making borscht, she was cooking a big pot of shchi.

While Russians make warming soups for the winter, and cold soups for summer, my baboushka made borsht and shchi year-around, even in the scorching Australian summers.

My Russian cabbage soup recipe for shchi is one that is very similar to the soup I remember my baboushka making but with just a few tweaks. Baba always included some sort of meat in her soups – beef, oxtail, pork, or chicken.

However, I’ve opted to share the vegetarian version called shchi vegetarianskiye – although it’s a vegan shchi recipe if you give the sour cream a miss – and not just because it’s Veganuary. I think this has so much flavour as it is.

I’m pretty sure that baba included carrots and, from memory, sometimes celery, which are in most (though not all) traditional Russian shchi recipes. I’ll need to consult my mum or check baboushka’s hand-written recipes when I’m back in Australia.

I’ve also include an additional two ingredients – a tablespoon of olive oil to make up for not using a meat-based stock, and turmeric, for its earthy flavours as much as its colour and nutritional value.

This is a super easy Russian cabbage soup recipe – easier than borscht as there’s no beetroot to fiddle around with and no meat stock to make.

If you cooked this on high heat so it reduced faster, you could be eating this in 30 minutes, but the longer you simmer it the better it tastes. I like to leave it on the stove for hours. And it’s even better the next day!

Russian Cabbage Soup Recipe for Shchi

Easy Russian Cabbage Soup Recipe for Shchi – and it's Vegan! (1)

Russian Cabbage Soup Recipe for Shchi, the Most Russian of Soups

AuthorEasy Russian Cabbage Soup Recipe for Shchi – and it's Vegan! (2)Lara Dunston

This Russian cabbage soup recipe makes shchi (Щи), the most Russian of soups. If my baboushka wasn’t cooking borscht, she was making a big pot of shchi. An old Russian dish dating to the 9th century, when cabbage came to the ‘Land of the Rus’ from Byzantium, shchi has long been eaten by nobles and peasants alike. While the rich included meat, the poor made a vegetarian broth (shchi vegetarianskiye). My easy Russian cabbage soup recipe makes a vegan shchi if you skip the sour cream. Like borscht, this comforting Russian soup tastes even better the next day.

Print Recipe Pin Recipe Rate this Recipe

Prep Time 30 minutes mins

Cook Time 1 hour hr

Total Time 1 hour hr 30 minutes mins

Course Soup

Cuisine Russian

Servings made with recipeServings 4 Servings

Calories 124 kcal

Ingredients

  • neutral cooking oil
  • 1 onion - finely chopped
  • 4 garlic cloves - finely chopped
  • 1 head cabbage - roughly shredded
  • 1 large carrot - grated (optional)
  • 550 g potatoes - cut into cubes
  • 2 bay leaves
  • 4 litres water
  • 2 tbsp tomato paste
  • 1 tsp turmeric
  • 2 tsp sea salt - or to taste
  • 2 tsp black pepper - or to taste
  • 1 tsp sugar
  • 1 tbsp virgin olive oil
  • Fresh dill - handful roughly chopped
  • Fresh curly-leaf parsley - handful roughly chopped

Garnish

  • Sour cream - optional
  • Fresh dill - roughly chopped

Instructions

  • Peel and chop the onions and garlic cloves finely, shred or chop the cabbage roughly (avoid fine shredding as you want the texture of wider pieces), grate the carrot if using, and peel and cut potatoes into cubes.

  • In a large fry pan, skillet or Dutch oven, fry the finely chopped onion in a neutral cooking oil until soft, then add the finely chopped garlic cloves, and continue frying until the onion is translucent, taking care not to burn the garlic. Transfer to a large soup pot.

  • Fry the roughly shredded cabbage with bay leaves in neutral cooking oil until soft. If using carrot, add this now also. When soft, transfer to the soup pot.

  • Add the potatoes and 2 litres of water to the soup pot, along with the tomato paste, turmeric, salt, pepper, sugar, and extra virgin olive oil, and stir. Turn to high heat to bring to a boil, then turn down to medium to allow to simmer for an hour. Add another litre of water; feel free to add more if needed.

  • At around 30 minutes, add the rest of the water, taste the soup, season with additional salt and pepper if needed.

  • When the soup is done to your liking (feel free to simmer for more than an hour if you like; the longer the broth simmers the better it tastes), add the chopped fresh dill and curly-leaf parsley and combine well so that it doesn’t clump together.

  • Ladle out the cabbage soup into bowls and (if you’re not vegan) plop a dollop of sour cream into each bowl and sprinkle on more dill and parsley. Provide additional bowls of sour cream and dill on the table for guests to help themselves.

Nutrition

Calories: 124kcalCarbohydrates: 22gProtein: 4gFat: 4gSaturated Fat: 1gPolyunsaturated Fat: 1gMonounsaturated Fat: 3gSodium: 1279mgPotassium: 594mgFiber: 7gSugar: 11gVitamin A: 2902IUVitamin C: 89mgCalcium: 117mgIron: 2mg

Do let us know if you make our easy Russian cabbage soup recipe for shchi as we’d love to know how it turns out for you. Leave a comment below, email or connect with us on social media (links below).

Easy Russian Cabbage Soup Recipe for Shchi – and it's Vegan! (5)

SHARE ON SOCIAL MEDIA

Easy Russian Cabbage Soup Recipe for Shchi – and it's Vegan! (6)

Related Posts You Might Like

Easy Russian Cabbage Soup Recipe for Shchi – and it's Vegan! (7)

Lara Dunston

A travel and food writer who has experienced over 70 countries and written for The Guardian, Australian Gourmet Traveller, Feast, Delicious, National Geographic Traveller, Conde Nast Traveller, Travel+Leisure Southeast Asia, DestinAsian, TIME, CNN, The Independent, The Telegraph, Sunday Times Travel Magazine, AFAR, Wanderlust, International Traveller, Get Lost, Four Seasons Magazine, Fah Thai, Sawasdee, and more, as well as authored more than 40 guidebooks for Lonely Planet, DK, Footprint, Rough Guides, Fodors, Thomas Cook, and AA Guides.

Easy Russian Cabbage Soup Recipe for Shchi – and it's Vegan! (2024)

FAQs

What is the most famous soup in Russia? ›

Borscht. Probably the most iconic Eastern European soup there is, famous for its bright pink colour. Historically, borscht was made by Slavic people from parsnip or hogweed. It was also the poor man's meal, and idioms tying the soup to austerity have since evolved in several different languages.

What are the principle ingredients of щи? ›

The main ingredients in this soup are sauerkraut, cabbage, potatoes and dry mushrooms. The onion and carrots add more flavor to the soup and the fresh herbs are added at the end for a touch of fresh flavor.

What is the national soup of Russia? ›

Shchi. There's a soup called shchi (Russian: щи) that is a national dish of Russia. While commonly it is made of cabbages, dishes of the same name may be based on dock, spinach or nettle. The sauerkraut variant of cabbage soup is known to Russians as "sour shchi" ("кислые щи"), as opposed to fresh cabbage shchi.

What is shchi made of? ›

The major components of shchi were originally cabbage, meat (beef, pork, lamb, or poultry), mushrooms, flour, and spices (based on onion and garlic). Cabbage and meat were cooked separately and smetana was added as a garnish before serving. Shchi is traditionally eaten with rye bread.

What is the No 1 soup in the world? ›

According to the Taste Atlas Awards, the international food database, the Filipino favorite, Sinigang, is hailed as the best soup in the world.

Where did cabbage soup originate? ›

It is one of the national dishes of Russia. When sauerkraut is used, the soup is called sour shchi. There is also a green shchi made with sorrel or spinach. The soup has a long history, originating during the 9th century when cabbage was introduced from Byzantium.

What vegetable is Russia known for? ›

The most widespread vegetables are cabbage, potatoes, and beets. Cabbages were used in shchi (there are over 60 types of shchi), sauerkraut, stewed cabbage, borscht, and pierogies, while beets were most popular in borscht, cold soups, and vinaigrette salads.

What is the breakfast of Russia? ›

A typical Russian breakfast consists of kasha, which can be porridge, buckwheat, semolina and so on. In most cases some milk or butter will be added to kasha.

What is the name of the Slavic soup? ›

Borscht derives from a soup originally made by the Slavs from common hogweed (Heracleum sphondylium, also known as cow parsnip), which lent the dish its Slavic name.

What are the most popular 2 soups of Russian origin? ›

  • Shchi. Shchi is the main soup to be found in Russian cuisine. ...
  • Solyanka. Solyanka is a thick, spicy soup that combines ingredients for shchi (cabbage and sour cream) with pickles and brine. ...
  • Rassolnik. Rassolnik is made from a broth with pickles. ...
  • Noodle Soups. ...
  • Okroshka.

What Russian soup is made from beets? ›

Borscht is a classic beet soup that's so comforting and delicious.

Which of the following is a clear Russian soup that is usually made from various types of fish? ›

Ukha (Russian: уха́) is a clear Russian soup, made from various types of fish such as bream, wels catfish, northern pike, or even ruffe.

What is a well known red soup of Russia called? ›

borscht

What sour soup is common in Russia? ›

Solyanka (Russian: соля́нка, initially селя́нка; [sɐˈlʲankə]) is a thick and sour soup of Russian origin. It is a common dish in Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, the Baltic states, and other post-Soviet states and other parts of the former Eastern Bloc.

What are 3 Russian foods? ›

Top 10 foods to try in Russia
  • Kamchatka crab. Red king crab is a species that's native to the Bering Sea and can be found around the Kamchatka Peninsula in eastern Russia. ...
  • Borscht. ...
  • Pelmeni. ...
  • Blini. ...
  • Black Sea barabulka. ...
  • Kvass. ...
  • Varenie. ...
  • Sirniki.
Oct 19, 2019

What country is best known for soup? ›

10 world soups you need to know
  • Miso soup (Japan) A traditional dish from Japan, miso soup is always found on Japanese tables starting with breakfast in the morning. ...
  • Borscht (Ukraine) ...
  • Ribollita (Italy) ...
  • Bouillabaisse (France) ...
  • Gazpacho (Spain) ...
  • Pho (Vietnam) ...
  • Tom Yam (Thailand) ...
  • Harira (Morocco)
Jan 26, 2024

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Nicola Considine CPA

Last Updated:

Views: 5768

Rating: 4.9 / 5 (69 voted)

Reviews: 84% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Nicola Considine CPA

Birthday: 1993-02-26

Address: 3809 Clinton Inlet, East Aleisha, UT 46318-2392

Phone: +2681424145499

Job: Government Technician

Hobby: Calligraphy, Lego building, Worldbuilding, Shooting, Bird watching, Shopping, Cooking

Introduction: My name is Nicola Considine CPA, I am a determined, witty, powerful, brainy, open, smiling, proud person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.