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)
This has to be my very favorite soup. When I don’t have turkey, I sub in chicken. I don’t always add the half and half, but either way it is so delicious. I just came down with a cold and all that sounds good is this soup. I can’t wait to make it today. Thanks for all the amazing recipes.
I kept adding seasonings….and there still wasn’t flavor. It was way too thick and I cut the turkey amount by 1/2.
I won’t be making this again. Waste of food.
I made this soup for our Holy Week Lenten Lunch. I received many compliments on it and several ask for the recipe. I just forwarded them to your page.
Can this be frozen?
It’s quite a bit thicker after thawing and reheating and might be slightly grainy due to the high dairy content, but it can be frozen if you take those things into consideration.
Loved this!! So simple too. I added bay leaves like someone else suggested. I’m excited for leftovers for lunch tomorrow!!
This looks delicious! How would you add the rice if you are making it in a crockpot?
I just found this recipe after Thanksgiving and thought it was described so perfectly I’d give it a go! Oh. My. Word! Spot on perfect! Just made it again tonight with leftover frozen turkey! I’m 76 and a connoisseur of soups! Thank you so much!
Seriously so so good. Used chicken and added freshly minced garlic. One of the
best!!
Anyone try using heavy cream?
Yes I did make this and it’s just great although I did have to add some water it is excellent
Just made it today, husband loved it. I added more vegetables and seasoning but followed the ingredients. I smoke turkey sometimes and Im excited to see what this soup will taste like with a nice smokey flavour. Thank you so much for posting this. Merry Christmas
Hi, going to fix this for dinner tonight. Can I use heavy cream and milk combo?
Sure, that should work fine!
This was so good! I doubled the veggies and let them cook a scooch longer, then just added leftover white rice before adding the turkey. I also used only a quart of chicken broth instead of six cups, so it was very thick and creamy. It turned out amazing!
This recipe certainly belongs in the Soup Hall of Fame! Full disclosure: I was just the go-fer while my husband made the soup. In any case, the soup is truly among the very best we’ve ever had…and we are in our late 70s! We now plan to get an extra-large turkey at Christmas and use the leftovers for Round 2 of the soup. Don’t know how well it freezes but we’ll soon find out.
Meantime, do yourself a terrific favor —Make The Soup!!
You should freeze it prior to adding the flour and cream. Thaw, heat up and then finish the last step.
It was great Mel! I made it last night with coconut milk instead of cream because my daughter is lactose-intolerant. Super yummy and lots of leftovers which makes me happy because it will feed my family of 5 again. Thanks!
Add mushrooms if you love them or cream of mushroom in place of the milk. Also used a bay leaf.
I made this last night with potatoes instead of rice and it was outstanding! The seasoning was perfect. I was a little unsure about the rosemary – I wouldn’t have added that, but it was perfect. The flour trick worked perfectly, better that the traditional roux. Thanks!
This recipe was great. My only hiccup was that I wasn’t sure whether to simmer covered or uncovered. I went with uncovered and most of the liquid evaporated. I ended up having to add water. I’ll make sure to cover next time. Thoroughly enjoyed though!
I made this as listed with slightly less turkey. I only had about 2 1/2 cups left and I think that was plenty. It was excellent! My husband and I loved it. It’ll be on my “It’s a keeper” list.
Omg!! This soup is so so good!! I ate it for lunch and dinner until it was gone. We have more turkey so I’m making it again! Best soup ever!
Made this tonight and it was sooo delicious. I used brown rice and simmered on low for a long time while I was busy doing other things. I ended up adding two cups of water at the end because it needed more liquid. (It didn’t need more better than boullion) My 13 year old said, “This soup is PERFECT, mom!” So basically I can die happy. My work here is done.
Absolutely delicious! I had super dry turkey that “didn’t turn out” for Thanksgiving…..decided to try this recipe instead of toss it …it came out delicious. Everyone loved it that ate it (kids, my parents, my husband). Thank you!
I made it this evening because we got a blast of cold temperatures and windy. The house smelled so good. Yes, it was delicious and easy to make. Thanks for this timely recipe. Will keep making it from now on
I finally got my act together this year to make a turkey soup from our Thanksgiving leftovers, and this was the first recipe that popped up in my search. Boy, did I hit the jackpot! This is the most delicious soup I have ever made. My family tends to like their soup on the thicker side, so I used the higher amount recommended for rice. I didn’t have low sodium broth so I only used 4t of bouillon (for 6 cups of water). It was easy, breezy after the prep and there really was only the cutting up to do. I will definitely make this another Thanksgiving tradition! Thank you for sharing!
Absolutely delicious I just replace rice with cubed potatoes and it’s perfect. Thank you for sharing your recipe.
This soup is seriously like a warm hug. It’s cold here today, and I have leftover turkey. Found this recipe when searching around. Made it with ingredients I already had on hand from Thanksgiving. It is glorious. Eating it with some crusty bread while wrapped up in a blanket by the fire.
My husband and I loved this soup. I didn’t have enough turkey, but I had leftover chicken.together it came to 3 cups of Poultry. Will Definitely make again.
Perfect! I felt 3 cups of turkey was sufficient and perhaps I’ll use less flour next time. The time in each step is good. Stick to the recipe and you’ll have a thick, hearty soup.
I’m going to make this with the extra turkey I bought but will make a double batch so I can can some jars for when it gets really cold in January
Soup was delicious!— Followed the recipe exactly using store bought chicken broth and some turkey better than bouillon and white rice—
This really is the best and it’s the soup will be making every year with my left over turkey. I tweaked it slightly by making the rice separately (I boiled the rice in chicken broth rather than water to give it some extra flavor). Everyone who ate it raved about it.
I don’t know maybe I did something wrong. It was just OK lacked a lot in flavor.
This turned out SO yummy! Perfect way to use our leftover Thanksgiving turkey. I undercooked my rice a tiny bit (my own fault) so next time will check to make sure it’s tender before adding the final steps. Will definitely make again!
I finally got my act together this year to make a turkey soup from our Thanksgiving leftovers, and this was the first recipe that popped up in my search. Boy, did I hit the jackpot! This is the most delicious soup I have ever made. My family tends to like their soup on the thicker side, so I used the higher amount recommended for rice. I didn’t have low sodium broth so I only used 4t of bouillon (for 6 cups of water). It was easy, breezy after the prep and there really was only the cutting up to do. I will definitely make this another Thanksgiving tradition! Thank you for sharing!
This truly is the BEST turkey soup recipe! I have a recipe I have made for years with canned creamed soup. This is SO much better, I’m tossing my other one.