Slow Cooker Winter Vegetable Soup with Split Red Lentils
Hearty slow cooker winter vegetable soup with split red lentils. This healthy crock pot recipe is packed with vegetables, red split lentils, and finished with a drizzle of olive oil, chopped parsley, and parmigiano-reggiano cheese.

Today marks a big day! This slow cooker winter vegetable soup with split red lentils is the first crock pot soup recipe to ever grace the blog. Healthy vegetable soups are my jam. Cue the confetti and break out the crock pots!
A bunch of you have been asking (for some time now) that I share slow cooker recipes and while I always want to oblige any recipe requests that you throw my way, I didn’t actually own a slow cooker machine until about six months ago.
It is probably the one kitchen appliance that I’ve held out on over the years.

Can I confess something? For a long time, I didn’t quite get what all of the fuss was about. Feel free to hate me a little bit.
I’m an adamant believer in sauteing and browning (hello flavor!) and felt like I would be betraying my favorite Dutch oven, because I’m weird like that.
On the other hand, the idea of throwing everything into a slow cooker in the morning, leaving the house if need be, and coming back to a fully prepared dinner was incredibly appealing. Who wouldn’t love that?! The good news? You can get slow cookers with stovetop-safe inserts, which allow you to enjoy the best of both worlds.
This soup can be prepared two ways: you can either choose to saute the onions beforehand (which will help maximize their flavor) or you can just throw them into the slow cooker with the remaining ingredients, turn the machine on, and walk away. I’ve tried it both ways and the soup still comes out great.


This soup is all about the vegetables and it is packed with them.
Onions, celery, carrot, zucchini, chopped canned tomatoes, and finely thinly sliced savoy cabbage. Yukon gold potatoes are added as well (no peeling required) to help bulk it up just a bit. My mom actually made a very similar soup for us when we were growing up, and I always loved it.
Hearty and extremely filling, yet you don’t feel weighed down at all. It’s the perfect soup to enjoy on a cold and dreary winter day – especially if you have access to good crusty loaf of bread.

One important tip that I realized after testing this recipe a few times was the importance of fresh (or at least, as fresh as possible!) split red lentils.
Yes, all lentils at the store are dried. But if you’ve been hanging onto a mason jar full of split red lentils for, um, maybe a year – I blame the move – please don’t use those for this.
Older lentils tend to dry out even further and will take significantly longer to cook and become tender. Try to find a fresh bag of them at the grocery store or choose them from a bulk bin that gets refreshed often (i.e. not the bag of lentils that has been sitting in your convenience store for three years on the top shelf).
I love split red lentils, because they are delicate and small, yet break down in the cooking process and help thicken the soup. They also are incredibly good for you and contain lots of fiber and protein.

Don’t forget to finish the soup by drizzling it with a touch of olive oil, sprinkled parsley, and a generous pile of freshly grated parmigiano-reggiano cheese.
It’s the final important touch.

Slow Cooker Winter Vegetable Soup with Split Red Lentils
Equipment
Ingredients
- 2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
- 1 large yellow onion diced
- 3 celery stalks diced
- 3 medium carrots trimmed, peeled, and diced
- 2 medium zucchini ends trimmed and chopped into ¾-inch chunks
- 3 small Yukon gold potatoes scrubbed and chopped into ¾-inch cubes
- ¾ cup split red lentils
- 1 cup (240 mL) canned chopped tomatoes with their juices
- 2 pieces of parmigiano-reggiano rind
- 2 dried bay leaves
- 3-4 sprigs of fresh thyme
- 5 cups low-sodium chicken stock or vegetable broth
- 1 teaspoon kosher salt plus more to taste
- freshly ground black pepper
- 2-3 cups finely sliced savoy cabbage reserved for later
For Serving:
- extra virgin olive oil for drizzling
- freshly chopped flat-leaf parsley or basil, for garnishing
- freshly grated parmigiano-reggiano cheese
Instructions
- If you own a stovetop-safe slow cooker insert: Heat the olive oil in the insert over medium heat on the stove. Add the onion and celery and saute until tender, 5 to 7 minutes, before transferring to the slow cooker and continuing with the instructions below.
- If you do not own a slow cooker with a stovetop-safe insert (or wish to skip step one): Place the insert on the slow-cooker base (this recipe will fit a 4-quart capacity slow cooker). Add the olive oil, onion, celery, carrot, zucchini, potatoes, split red lentils, chopped tomatoes, parmigiano rind, bay leaves, thyme, chicken stock, kosher salt, and black pepper. Stir together. Cook on the high heat setting for 4 to 6 hours, or until the red lentils are tender (or alternatively, cook on the low heat setting for 8-10 hours).
- In the last hour of cook time (or 2 hours, if you are cooking over the low heat setting), add the thinly sliced cabbage. Remove and discard the dried bay leaves, parmesan rinds, and any tough thyme sprigs. Adjust the seasoning to taste salt and pepper – you will most likely need to be liberal on the salt for this soup.
- Serve the soup and top each serving with a drizzle of extra virgin olive oil, a sprinkling of freshly chopped parsley, and freshly grated parmigiano-reggiano cheese.
Tips for Success:
- Older lentils tend to dry out and might take significantly longer to cook. Try to find a bag at the grocery store or choose them from a bulk bin that gets refreshed often (i.e. not the bag of lentils that has been sitting in your convenience store for three years on the top shelf).

124 Comments on “Slow Cooker Winter Vegetable Soup with Split Red Lentils”
I cannot print the recipe. This makes it useless as far as I am concerned.
Hi! I’m not having any issues printing on my end. There is a print button in the recipe box and it should open a window, which then prompts you to print. Unfortunately I can’t troubleshoot tech problems for printers, but I’d try another browser or check your printer connections.
Delicious soup. So fresh and tasty and extremely simple to put together. Loved it!!!
I loved this soup. So much flavor. Am I able to freeze it?
Yes! Soups freeze really well. Just allow to thaw in the fridge for 24-48 hours before reheating on the stove. You might have to add a touch more broth or liquid if it is a bit too thick.
This soup has been on repeat for us for 3 years now. So good! I’ve made it in the crockpot and on the stove. Both turn out great.
Is this soup as good if made in Instapot? If so, are there instructions for instapot cooking?
Thank you!
Instant Pots have slow cooker settings, I would personally use that! Unfortunately I haven’t tested it with one to give more specifics.
I didn’t have the Parmesan rind and I was too lazy to go to the store, so I left that out. Despite this omission, the soup was delicious. I used my Instant Pot so I could sauté the celery and onions.
I do wish the recipe guided how much salt to add at the end. I am sure salt tastes are very individual, but a starting point would have been helpful for me!
Hi Kate! I always season throughout the cooking process and then season once again before serving – until everything tastes balanced (if a dish tastes at all bland or flat, it’s usually in need of another pinch or two of salt!). I hesitate to add salt quantities to savory recipes because it really is a taste preference and salt should be used throughout the cooking process (not added all at once) – in addition, every brand of salt varies in density and so you’d need to use the exact brand I specify to follow the quantities without adjustments – but I’ll definitely keep this in mind for the future.
This is the best soup I have ever had
Do you Recommend doubling everything to make more ?
This could hard in a slow cooker, because you’d need to have a really large one. If that’s the case, I’d adapt the recipe to be made on the stovetop in a large soup pot!
I really look forward to making this! Was wondering if I could swap out the red lentils for green ones? I know some recipes you can’t. Thanks :)!
You could do that with this recipe, just know the texture of the soup will be different! I like how the red split lentils break down a bit more!
This soup sounds absolutely delicious!!! I just had oral surgery and am bound to a liquid/soft foods diet, would this soup still be good if I use my immersion blender on it? Or will that take away from the soup itself?
I honestly think it could be great that way – another idea would be this Red Lentil Soup, which you could blend even more: https://www.abeautifulplate.com/red-lentil-soup/ Hope this helps!
I only have regular red lentils, not split. Google says this will cool fast and become mush. Should I adjust for this? Thanks!
You can use those! The point is for them to break down more and become very soft – that’s why they were used for this recipe!
Omg this soup was amazing! Didn’t change a thing. Can’t wait to have it tomorrow for lunch.
This sounds really good. I need t find ways to eat more vegetables and legumes. Will try it next week.
I’m excited to try this for upcoming meeting. I’m interested in swapping zucchini for butternut squash—can you give tips for that? I’ve never cooked with it before. I’m a fan of layers of flavor and cooking it on stove— but I love my slow cooker and my pressure cooker as well!! I will be doubling recipe. Thanks!!
Butternut squash is similar to potato, and takes much longer to cook than zucchini in any situation – it should work but you’d want to maybe chop it in smaller cubes and prolong the cooking process. Hope this helps!
This was absolutely delicious and so perfect on a rainy cold day. Thank you for posting !
So glad to hear that!
I’ve made this recipe before and it was so amazing! I want to make it again for my new roommate, but they don’t like lentils. Is there a good substitute for them in this recipe?
Do they like cannellini beans? I might substitute with canned to name it easier and especially because the cooking time will be off compared to lentils which cook and break down quickly.
looks so very healthy, Due to all the covid circulating I have been using turmeric in my other vegetable soups. could you comment on this ? I have a triple recipe cooking at the moment for my big family for a very cold day.Im sure it is going to be delicious!!
Thank you x
Hi Helen, thanks for your comment. In terms of adding turmeric to soups, go for it – although the flavor isn’t as suited for some of my recipes. If you’re asking in regards to immune health, I obviously cannot comment on this, but as the significant other of a health worker, I hope you get vaccinated. ❤️
I prepped this last night, ready for today’s lunch! It did not disappoint! It was perfect for today’s weather! It was my first time making lentils and I will definitely be making them again, especially with this recipe.
I substituted with sweet potatoes! I almost forgot the parsley .. but trust me when I say DON’T forget the parsley ?
Yuuum. Thank you!
this soup is fab 🙂 really hearty and filling, but not heavy! i skipped the cabbage as it tends to bug my stomach, and it turned out wonderfully 🙂 served with some homemade dutch oven bread and shaved parm. soup was even better the few days after i made it!
So glad you enjoyed it!
This soup is delicious! My first time to cook red lentils. I too was looking for a soup using winter veggies. I used one potato, one turnip, and one cup or so of butternut squash. (No zucchini) I really wanted to try the savoy cabbage but I couldn’t find any. I used kale. I cooked the soup in my dutch oven on top of the stove. Freshly grated parmigiano-reggiano to top it off sealed the deal! Happy Healthy Blessed 2021!
So glad you enjoyed it! Thanks for the feedback Sherry!
I would like to do this in my new Dutch oven on the stove top. Do you have the cooking instructions for stovetop instead of crockpot? Thanks!
Sorry, I don’t have the written instructions included in the recipe card but I’ve made this soup countless times on the stove and it’s great. You just want to slowly sauté the aromatics, and add the ingredients in batches based on cook time. If you’ve made other vegetables soups on the stove, use those as your guide. If you don’t tend to stray very often from written recipes, that might not help that much, but hope it does!
This is a weird question but I have a 3 qt crock pot, any tips on fitting the soup in there? Maybe do a little less broth? Thanks!
I would just do 3/4 of the recipe quantities because it could be very tight otherwise and you don’t want to just reduce one ingredient, especially broth (otherwise will be too thick). Hope this helps!