The Best Leftover Turkey Soup
This creamy vegetable, turkey, rice soup is the best leftover turkey soup ever. I always keep the recipe on hand for after holiday meals like Thanksgiving!
I know you are probably knee deep in pie crust, recipe prep, and chaotic stress right now. And I don’t want to interrupt you.
But please promise you’ll bookmark this recipe and revisit it the day after Thanksgiving, because trust me, you don’t want to miss your chance to use some of those precious turkey leftovers in this incredibly delicious soup.
It is one of the best soups EVER. Good news: in the off-turkey season, it works great with cooked chicken. However, I have to say that I like it better with turkey. I don’t know why. I’m sure there’s some placebo effect going on in there, but either way, it’s one of my favorite ways to use turkey leftovers.
And that’s saying a lot because this girl looks forward to Thanksgiving each year mainly in anticipation of leftover turkey sandwiches on homemade rolls.
This soup is loaded with really good things
The base of the soup begins with sautéed carrots, celery, onions and a few simple, fragrant seasonings. You could probably throw in some garlic, too. It’s a homey…yet delicious start.
What kind of rice to use for leftover turkey soup
Once a little broth is added (leftover turkey stock? use it!), in goes the rice. Now, this part is open to wild interpretation. If you only have white rice, use it! But this turkey soup is fantastic with hearty brown rice or a brown and wild rice combo.
I like to use a brown rice blend with some different varieties of brown rice and some wild rice, too. I’m pretty sure I found it at Costco, but you can search the rice aisle for a blend that works for you and then adjust the simmering time to account for whatever variety you are using.
Brown and wild rices will take longer to cook than white rice.
How to easily thicken the soup
My favorite thickening hack for creamy soups is to blend flour with milk or half and half and whisk that into the soup instead of making a separate roux on the stovetop. It also saves a few calories since no butter is involved – a slight travesty, but worth it in the long run.
I mean, we all just indulged in probably the highest calorie meal of the year, so omitting a little butter is in the good interest of us all.
In this soup, I use half and half, but milk will work just fine (avoid skim milk if you can – it can turn the soup grainy and doesn’t thicken the soup as well).
Then in goes the turkey! I use a mix of white and dark meat. And like I mentioned above, if you are viewing this post in March and there’s no leftover turkey in sight, go ahead and throw in some cooked chicken. No one will be the wiser.
However, if you have enough leftover turkey to freeze, you CAN make it in March and relive savory Thanksgiving flavors again.
This soup is thick and creamy, hearty and comforting.
It takes on some serious creamy chicken and wild rice vibes, yet it still lives in its own little world. The turkey and simple seasonings make sure of that.
I actually think it’s my favorite creamy veggie + rice soup in the long lineup of similar soups I have on my blog. It is the perfect soup for a cold night (especially a day or two after an indulgent holiday meal).
While languishing in your pie and homemade roll comas, promise me you won’t forget about this one!
What to Serve With This
One Year Ago: Chocolate Truffle Cookies
Two Years Ago: Creamy Homemade Hot Chocolate {in 15 minutes or Less}
Three Years Ago: Glazed Cranberry Lemon Cake
Four Years Ago: Make-Ahead Buttermilk Dinner Rolls
Five Years Ago: Yummy Fresh Cranberry Salsa
Six Years Ago: Triple Chip Pumpkin Oatsies
Seven Years Ago: Black and White Holiday Bark
Eight Years Ago: Vegetable Sauté with Simple Cream Sauce
The Best Leftover Turkey Soup
Ingredients
- 1 tablespoon butter
- 1 tablespoon olive oil or avocado oil
- ½ cup chopped carrots
- ½ cup chopped celery
- ½ cup finely chopped onion
- ¼ teaspoon dried thyme or 1 teaspoon fresh, chopped
- ¼ teaspoon crushed dried rosemary or 1 teaspoon fresh, chopped
- 6 cups chicken or turkey broth/stock, I use low-sodium
- ½ to ¾ cup brown rice or brown rice blend (see note)
- 2 teaspoons salt, I use coarse, kosher salt
- Pinch of black pepper
- 1 cup half and half (see note)
- ⅓ cup all-purpose flour
- 3 to 4 cups cooked, chopped leftover turkey
Instructions
- In a 6-quart saucepan or pot, heat the butter and oil until hot over medium heat. Add the carrots, celery, onion, thyme and rosemary and cook, stirring often, until vegetables are slightly tender, 3-4 minutes.
- Add the broth, rice, salt and pepper. Bring the soup to a simmer and cook, stirring occasionally to prevent sticking, until the rice is tender. The exact time will depend on variety of rice and package directions. For a brown and wild rice blend, the time will be about 30 minutes.
- Whisk together or blend the half and half and flour until smooth and there are no lumps. Stir the flour mixture into the soup, whisking quickly, and simmer gently until slightly thickened, 5-6 minutes.
- Stir in the cooked turkey and heat through. Season to taste with additional salt and pepper, if needed. Serve.
Notes
Recommended Products
Recipe Source: from Mel’s Kitchen Cafe (inspired by a recipe my friend, Machele H., gave me years ago)
Thank you! My family loved this, perfect recipe for leftovers. I added sautéed mushrooms and a garnish of french’s onions on top. Holds up against any restaurant chicken/turkey and wild rice!
Question! Would you freeze the turkey and then thaw it to make the soup? Or could you make the whole soup and freeze that?
Thanks!
The soup may turn a bit grainy after freezing and defrosting, but either way is fine based on your preference!
I’m about to make this soup and was going to use Cous Cous instead of rice and wondered if oyu have ever tried it that way?
I haven’t – sounds yummy though!
I love a similar soup to this..will definitely try this recipe…My late sister made a soup called Thanksgiving soup, similar to this only she added a few dried cranberries…so delicious…we also like it served with a dollop of leftover cranberry sauce and sourcream…
This is not “turkey soup”. This is “cream of” turkey soup. Please say so in the title. I was looking for old fashioned turkey soup. I thought this was it until I read the recipe. No milk or cream in turkey soup.
Your comment is ridiculous… If you don’t care to make the recipe then move on and find something more suited for your needs.
What are you, the turkey soup police?
The picture clearly shows that the soup is creamy. So that’s your fault for even having to read the recipe to decipher that.
Karen…I mean Alice. Chill out babe. It’s only soup.
Alice, even though it’s not what you were looking for, this soup is so good, you should consider coming over to the “cream of” turkey soup side to try it!!!!
ReAdinG iS hArd. It is indeed a soup using turkey and thus is a turkey soup. If you go to the description it clearly states “This creamy vegetable, turkey, rice soup is the best leftover turkey soup ever.”. This is NOT cream of turkey soup, not with the rice and veggies in it.
Can left over soup be frozen?
You can try – it might be a big grainy upon defrosting (because of the dairy).
I’m leaving a five star review because I believe, I mean truly believe, that this is a wonderful soup. The problem I have is that I’m not a wonderful cook. I tried to make this once before and used left over smoked turkey. The flavors were less than complimentary. It would have been better without the smoke flavor. I tried it again last night with freshly cooked turkey but forgot to bring the soup to a simmer and left it boiling. By the time I realized my error, when I was to add the half-and-half/flour, it had mostly boiled out. I added some watered down chicken stock to it but just made the soup too salty. Aside from the near lethal levels of sodium, it had a great flavor. Will definitely attempt this again.
Thanks for all the reviews on recent recipes, Derek! I know it takes time to check back in but I really appreciate it and have enjoyed reading your thorough reviews. Sorry this soup has given you some issues – hope you get it perfect one of these days!
Very Good! I used turkey bones (Legs, wings) with lots of meat on them. Simmered in water making my own broth, then added the vegetables, then rice mixture and half & half w/ flour. I needed to add a bit more than the recipe called for due to the volume of my broth, as well as more seasonings. Rich, hearty and one bowl along with crisp bread for dipping, filled me up. My recipe made 15 servings, so taking some to family members who are sick during this season. Would make again.
I only have wild rice, hope that isn’t a soup ruiner on its own… fingers crossed, but your recipes never disappoint!
Should work out just fine, Becky! You might need to keep an eye on the cooking time for the rice and add time as needed.
This soup was terrific! Didn’t have celery or separate spices so used celery salt and Italian seasoning. Also made slurry with whole milk and added cooked egg noodles right at the end. Easy, comforting, and delicious!
Can you use Quinoa instead of rice?
Definitely worth a try!
I made this last night and it was absolutely delish! I doubled the onion, carrot and celery, as I like my soup more veggie forward. Also added 2 cloves of minced garlic. I was a bit nervous about the flour and half & half mixture. I was afraid it may lend a raw flour flavor, but it did nothing of the sort! It was creamy and silky perfection. 🙂
Thanks, Lisa!
Just made this and it’s so easy and delicious! I can always count on you Mel!!
Thanks, friend!
(I also don’t know why it doesn’t show a 5 star rating. I thought I clicked a 5 star rating. We give it a 5 stars and a bunch of enthusiastic thumbs up!)
Thanks for letting me know, Mara! Not sure what’s up with the ratings – I’ll look into that!
Excellent recipe! Butterballs were $0.87 a lb at Aldi’s so we did a Thanksgiving practice run! I made a bone broth from the carcass and used that for your soup. It is DELISH! Used blend of wild and brown basamati rice so took about 45 minutes for the brown to get soft and wild to get softened. I didn’t use salt in my broth and only did a heaping teaspoon of kosher salt and it was perfect amount. The half and half with flour trick is a keeper. I kept the meat from the legs and thighs and had some breast meat scraps to add in as well.
Bland.
This is absolutely the best creamy, chickeny (or turkey in this case) soup I’ve ever made. So yummy. I used a brown and wild rice blend – took almost 60 min and some of the broth had reduced with the longer cook time – but I just added more broth and YUM! Thank you! It’s already printed and in my tried and true recipe binder.
We made this last night with the leftover turkey I froze at Thanksgiving…it was so yummy! We used the Lundberg wild rice blend and increased the cooking time to 45 minutes and it turned out great. So great, unfortunately, that everyone had seconds and there are no leftovers for me for lunch. Will definitely be making this again soon!
Excellent use if leftover turkey! I used white rice since that’s what I had – I think it definitely would taste better with wild rice. Next time I will use that. I also added garlic because I believe food without garlic is sad, but otherwise followed the recipe. It was quite delicious and easy and will provide many lunches for myself.
This soup is so delicious! I love the flavor but I especially love how EASY it is! My favorite kind of recipe right here, simple and delish. This will be my go to leftover turkey soup! Thank you
Thanks, Mandy!
Made this tonight and my family loved it! I used white rice because that’s all I had. It was delicious! My 7 year old kept talking about how much she loved it. Thanks for the great recipe to use my leftover turkey!
I’m so happy this was well received by your family, Tara! Thanks for letting me know!
This was very, very good. So good that I ran some over to a neighbor who was having a rough day. She loved it too. I used some chopped rotisserie chicken that was in the freezer and leftover brown rice and it ended up being a really quick meal. This is my favorite of all the similar recipes you have posted, though they’re all good. Thanks for another winner!
Yay! Thanks!
U made the soup exactly how it is written except no rice. I didnt want rice in it. But it doesnt look thick to me. I am about to add the chicken and cook it on low in the crock pot. Do I need to do anything else to thicken it or do you think it will as it cooks more in the crock pot? Thanks. Jas a great taste.
Omitting the rice will definitely impact the consistency of the soup (making it less thick). You can try whisking together broth + flour or cornstarch and adding it to see if that can help thicken it up.
Good to know about the rice. Thanks I’ll try that.
Fact: My husband doesn’t like turkey. No cranberry sauce at Thanksgiving? No eating turkey. But he ate the turkey leftovers in this delicious soup, and then he ate the soup leftovers the next day. To me, that means this soup is a keeper. Thanks Mel! (PS I didn’t have any chicken broth, so I used water, and instead of half and half/flour, I used milk and a tablespoon of McCormick turkey gravy powder. )
Thanks for letting me know, Maggie! Glad your husband liked this despite not being a turkey fan in general. 🙂
First time making an entire Thanksgiving dinner for my family this year, so tons of leftover… everything. haha
I subbed leftover green beans and corn, as well as the last little bits of a couple of bags of frozen veggies, and added a couple of TBSP lemon juice and some chili flake and fresh garlic. Perfect recipe to knock out a good chunk of my post-holiday Tupperware pileup and get a head start on my annual holiday cold!
Love those changes, Adrienne!
I’m trying to cut some carbs so was considering subbing riced cauliflower in place of the rice. Would I need to decrease the amount of liquid added?
-Nicole
I’m not sure as I haven’t tried that – but you could definitely experiment!
I made your recipe for turkey soup and it was delicious! And easy too. I must admit I was afraid the brown rice wouldn’t cook so I cooked it on the side and added it later.
That’s ok! Glad it worked out so well!
Absolutely delicious. Thanks!
Thank you, Amy!
Do you think I can do everything up until adding the thicker earlier in day? Then doing those steps closer to meal time?
I think you could make the entire thing earlier in the day and refrigerate and then just heat it up for dinner. That’s probably what I would do!
I’m no cook but I made this and it’s incredible! As far as I’m concerned this is pretty much a perfect recipe. Delicious!
Thanks, Eric!
Amazing! Thanks to your tip on using half n half, the soup is dreamy…silky and creamy! I love it! Definitely recommend this recipe. At first, I thought it was too thick and added more water. I’m regretting adding more water because all the wild rice settled at the bottom. When the soup was thicker, the ingredients didn’t all settle to the bottom as fast. To make this soup faster, I separately pressure cooked my wild rice and added it to the soup in the same spot called out in the recipe. Didn’t need to wait 45 minutes for it to cook in the soup.
Thanks for adding your review/variations, Elle!
My family liked this, I thought it was just ok, but I’m not a soup person (was hoping this would convert me!). Served it with a garden salad and French bread. I didn’t check my short grain brown rice and it took about 45 minutes to cook so dinner was late…but the recipe did warn me. Happy to have something to use up the turkey with, simmered the carcass for my broth which is fun.
Anyone tried this in the Instant Pot? I’m attempting it now and am subbing almond flour, onion powder and herbs de provence (in lieu of rosemary) mostly because I was lacking called for ingredients! It smells divine before I pushed the ‘soup’ button! Will update if I can find this page again.
This turned out to be the best soup I have ever made!
That’s amazing! Thanks, Cathy!
We LOVED this soup! Took no time at all and was delicious. Thank you!
Amazing recipe! Thank you!
Thanks, Maureen!
I just learned a few years ago how to make my own turkey (or chicken) stock by boiling the leftover carcass, so I thought I’d pass it along so that you don’t have to buy stock when you have it right in front of you. After picking the meat off of the carcass, put the whole thing in large pot and fill with water. Boil for several hours (the longer the more flavorful). You can add onions, carrots, celery or ither seasonings depending on your preferences. When your water has been boiling for at least 2 hours, remove the carcass and strain the broth. If you boil it for too long, you can always add more water. Thanks for posting this delicious looking recipe, I am excited to make it!
Does the soup need stirred constantly once the half and half and flour go in, like gravy does?
Yes, it helps so it doesn’t scorch or stick.
Thank you for providing this easy to follow recipe. Just tried it! I didn’t have any celery on hand, but plenty of sweet potatoes, so I substituted those in. My daughter and I are about to have second helpings. It turned out delicious! Thanks again.
Thanks for letting me know!
Thank you for providing this easy to follow recipe. Just tried it! I didn’t have any celery on hand, but plenty of sweet potatoes, so I substituted those in. My daughter and I are about to have second helpings. It turned out delicious! Thanks again.
This soup is amazing! I need more turkey I want to make more batches!!
Thanks, Sherrie! That’s kind of how I feel about it, too!
Can you use success boil in bag rice in this? If so, should I cook first? Thanks!
I’m not familiar with that so I don’t know – I’m sorry!
This soup was delicious! It seemed more like a creamy rice casserole for me though. The brown rice absorbed so much liquid that I had to add an extra water and it still came out that thick. Either way it was delicious and this is going to be a regular in our house! A friend just introduced me to your site… so excited to try more of your recipes! Many Thanks!!
Thanks for the review, Brittney!
I used boil-n-bag rice but I cooked it separately and added it before I added the flour mixture. It worked out fine.
Entire family loved it!
That’s always amazing! Thanks, Melissa!
This soup is dang good! Really delicious and nicely creamy and homemade broth really makes it! Totally great. Going in my TG notebook! I mean to give this a top rating! Not sure if I’m choosing one star or 10!
Thanks, Karen! (The ratings have been a little messed up lately but they should be fixed now).
Thank you. This was a delicious soup!
Thanks, Jim!
I made this for my family tonight and everyone enjoyed it. The seasonings were perfect. I didn’t need to add any additional salt or pepper. It was nice to put leftovers in a soup for a change rather than a heavier casserole type dish. Thanks for the idea and recipe!
Thank you so much for letting me know, Janie!
I just made this soup. It was great. Will make it again.
Thanks, Cari! Glad you liked it!
The soup began to look grainy. Did I overhear the soup? Is this normal? Any way to fix it?
Hmmm, how did it look at the end, Devan? Still grainy?
Another delicious recipe! Thank you!
Thanks so much, Rebecca – and thanks for taking the time to let me know.
Loved this recipe!
I’m making this soup right now – just the ticket for my two littles with Thanksgiving head colds. :). Question – could I sub canned coconut milk for the half and half for creaminess? We only have skim milk left. Thanks!
I think so, Valerie!
Making this right now! Question – during the simmer rice step, should the pot be open or covered? Thanks, Mel!
I don’t cover it while simmering.
I was searching the comments for this answer too ! Lol I always simmer rice with the cover on…I will do it without and I can’t wait to try this recipe soon!
Ah! This style of soup has been on my mind lately! I was perusing one of those pioneer woman cookbooks and found a recipe for creamy wild rice and chicken soup. The thing that got me really excited was the cranberry relish she had you top it with! So it’s basically a sign that you post such a similar recipe. Clearly it’s the universe telling to make it.
This looks wonderful. Can’t wait for turkey leftovers.
This is making my mouth water! I LOVE soup, making it and eating it! Happy Thanksgiving to you and your family!
Thanks, Jo! Happy Thanksgiving to you, too!
This looks wonderful! I can’t wait to make it this weekend when rain is scheduled all weekend. Have you ever used creme fraiche instead of the half and half? I don’t know much about it and too afraid to ask my sister who knows. When I was at Costco last week I bought some and would like to try it in some stuff. (I was talked into buying it by the guy that was going to do the promoting that weekend )
I haven’t tried creme fraiche in this soup, but I love it in a lot of other things! It has a tangy flavor usually so I’m not sure how it would fare for the half and half in this recipe.
I just made this soup tonight!! Used fried turkey left overs from Wednesday’s Bowl game party. Mostly dark meat. Made my own stock with the bones. I added 6 cloves of garlic just because I cant cook and not use it! I also used kasmati rice. Its very soft and absorbed the flavor nicely. Great recipe, I needed something new and this was a perfect.
This is exactly what I was looking for! Thank you!
I have frozen turkey leftover from May. Thanks so much for giving me a recipe to use it in and look forward to! (We are not hosting this year, so alas no turkey leftovers for us.)
Awesome! Happy Thanksgiving, Julie!