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This Whole30 healthy Zuppa Toscana is rich and creamy, spicy, and absolutely bursting with flavor. You’ll love this filling, Whole30 soup anytime, but especially during cold, wintry months. Dairy free, gluten free, grain free, and sugar free, this is one of the best Whole30 soups out there and my favorite healthy soup!

Two bowls of Whole30 healthy Zuppa Toscana recipe

Can You Really Make This Iconic Soup at Home?

We started a recent Whole30 with this soup, and I have to say: we did it right. I even posted a snap (?) on Instagram, lamenting how oh. so. hard. it is to do a Whole30, with lots of crying emojis… I’m subtle.

In previous rounds, I tired quickly of large slabs of animal protein, so I knew I had to shake things up a bit this round. And leading a group Whole30 and Facebook support group (join us!) means coming up with new and delish recipes to keep things interesting.

Et voilà, my friends, the Whole30 Zuppa Toscana. Who isn’t a fan of the creamy, spicy soup at your favorite Italian-food chain, laden with potatoes and kale and bacon and Italian sausage and “ohhhh boy”. Especially during the winter, my cravings for creamy, filling soups multiply like four-hundredfold, so we find ourselves in a tricky spot.

A large pot of Whole30 healthy zuppa toscana recipe

A spot where you’re 100% committed to doing a strict Whole30, but you really, really want Zuppa Toscana.

Why You’ll Love This Recipe

  • This Whole30 soup is rich and creamy like traditional Zuppa Toscana but totally dairy free.
  • It starts with an easy but delicious Italian sausage recipe, made from scratch! But don’t be nervous – it’s super quick and couldn’t be simpler.
  • The combination of coconut milk, kale, potatoes, Italian sausage, and bacon make this healthy Zuppa Toscana super filling and a one-pot meal.

This Whole30 Zuppa Toscana is based on a regular Zuppa Toscana recipe, subbing simple ingredients for the dairy, grains, and sugar. I recommend making your own Italian sausage, which is insanely easy, but you could use compliant storebought Italian sausage, too, of course. Make sure you use compliant bacon if you’re on a Whole30, as well. It can be tricky to find bacon that doesn’t have sugar in it, but Whole Foods has a few brands of that, as well.

Two bowls of Whole30 healthy zuppa toscana recipe with a pot in the background

I have a tendency to be super hungry on the Whole30, like eat. all. the. things., but this soup kept me super full all night. I might have had to bite my knuckles to get past my craving for Glutino pretzels on tap, shoveled into my face during our nightly screenings of Boardwalk Empire, but it wasn’t from hunger, that’s for us.

That, my friends, is a habit that, I have to say, I kind of still miss. Baby steps, fam. Baby steps.

Variations

  • If you avoid potatoes, try cauliflower florets in place of the diced potatoes. You can even try celery root!
  • Try ground chicken in place of the pork, if you prefer or don’t eat pork.
  • If you’re allergic to coconut or are worried it might have a “coconutty” flavor, swap the coconut milk out for cashew cream. Combine 1 cup raw cashews with 3/4 cup water in a high-speed blender and blend until completely smooth.

Chef’s Tips

  • Don’t overcook the soup after you’ve added the kale. You want it bright green and just wilted.
  • Make a big batch of this Whole30 healthy Zuppa Toscana on Sunday and eat it all week. Comfiest meal prep ever!
  • Leave out the extra 1/2 teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes in the soup if you’re sensitive to heat.
A large pot of Whole30 healthy zuppa toscana recipe

Make your Italian sausage: combine all ingredients and mix well with your hands. Alternately, simply pour all ingredients into a large pot and mix with a spoon while browning. Brown the sausage in a large heavy-bottomed pot, preferably a Dutch oven, breaking up with a spoon or spatula. Remove from pot, drain, and set aside.

Combine sausage ingredients then brown in a pot

Fry bacon until crisp and remove with a slotted spoon. Don’t get rid of bacon grease! Stir in the onions and garlic and cook until soft and translucent.

Fry the bacon until crisp

Add chicken broth and bring to a boil. Add the potatoes and boil about 10-15 minutes, or until potatoes are fork-tender. Reduce the heat to medium and add coconut milk and sausage; stir until smooth. Add in kale and bacon and cook until kale is bright green and just wilted.

Add kale, sausage, bacon, and coconut milk

Serve!

Two bowls of Whole30 healthy zuppa toscana recipe with a pot in the background

Other Recipes You’ll Love

Recipe By: Cheryl Malik
5 from 349 votes

Whole30 Zuppa Toscana

Prep 5 minutes
Cook 45 minutes
Total 50 minutes
With tender potatoes, kale, easy homemade Italian sausage, and bacon, this Whole30 soup recipe is loaded with flavor. The perfect one-pot meal!
6 servings

Ingredients

  • 4 slices Whole30-compliant bacon sliced into ½-inch pieces
  • 1 pound Italian sausage made from below recipe or storebought
  • ½ teaspoons crushed red pepper flakes
  • 4 medium yellow potatoes about 1 pound 3 ounces, diced into bite-sized pieces
  • 1 medium white or yellow onion diced
  • 2 tablespoons garlic minced, about 4 cloves
  • 4 cups chicken stock
  • ½ bunch kale stems removed and leaves chopped, 4 cups
  • 1 13.5-ounce can unsweetened, full-fat coconut milk
  • Salt and pepper to taste

Homemade Whole30 Italian Sausage

Instructions

  • If making Italian sausage: combine all ingredients in a bowl and mix well. Alternately, combine all ingredients in the saucepan and stir well when browning.
  • In a Dutch oven or heavy-bottomed medium pot over medium heat, add Italian sausage and sprinkle crushed red pepper flakes over. Use a spoon to break up the pieces. When browned and cooked through, drain and set aside.
  • Cook the bacon pieces in the same Dutch oven over medium heat until crisp, about 5-10 minutes. Remove the crisp bacon and set aside – don’t get rid of the bacon fat! Stir in the onions and garlic; cook until onions are soft and translucent, about 5 minutes.
  • Pour the chicken broth into the Dutch oven with the onions and garlic, and bring to a boil over high heat. Add the potatoes, and boil until fork tender, about 10-20 minutes. Reduce the heat to medium and stir in the coconut milk and the cooked sausage; heat through. Add the bacon and the kale into the soup just before serving and cook ’til the kale is bright green and softened. Add salt and pepper to taste.

Video

Approximate Information for One Serving

Serving Size: 1servingCalories: 394calProtein: 13gFat: 24gSaturated Fat: 16gCholesterol: 14mgSodium: 765mgPotassium: 1235mgTotal Carbs: 35gFiber: 5gSugar: 5gNet Carbs: 30gVitamin A: 4775IUVitamin C: 74.2mgCalcium: 138mgIron: 7.1mg
Nutrition Disclaimers
Number of total servings shown is approximate. Actual number of servings will depend on your preferred portion sizes.
Nutritional values shown are general guidelines and reflect information for 1 serving using the ingredients listed, not including any optional ingredients. Actual macros may vary slightly depending on specific brands and types of ingredients used.
To determine the weight of one serving, prepare the recipe as instructed. Weigh the finished recipe, then divide the weight of the finished recipe (not including the weight of the container the food is in) by the desired number of servings. Result will be the weight of one serving.

Did You Make This Recipe?

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This recipe was originally published in January 2017 but was updated with step-by-step photos, video, and tips August 2018.

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590 Comments

    1. From The Paleo Foundation:

      “[…] The Paleo Foundation Consensus Report concludes that the Official Paleo Status of white potatoes is that they are Paleo, and thus, will be allowed in the Certified Paleo Standards.”

      Source: https://paleofoundation.com/white-potatoes-paleo/#:~:text=6%C2%A0%20%C2%A0%20%7C-,CONCLUSION,-After%20careful%20consideration

      We haven’t tested this recipe with sweet potatoes so I can’t offer any recommendations as far as timing or how they might affect the final flavor. If you try it, please let us know how the sweet potatoes work out!

    1. 1 serving is 1/6 of the entire prepared recipe. It’ll measure a little differently every time you make the soup just because the ingredients will cook down differently each time. You also may prefer larger or smaller portions, so 1 serving for you could be 1/8 or 1/4 of the entire prepared soup.

  1. My kids and husband equally love this soup! I’m planning to make it for my neighbor who recently had a baby. Can this meal be put in the freezer for later?5 stars

    1. It could, however potatoes do tend to get mushy from the thawing process. Let us know if you try it, we’d love to hear the feedback!

  2. I have made this 10 times! So good! Sometimes I do bacon and sometimes I don’t! I use better than bouillon and add fresh lemon to brighten it up! Fantastic!5 stars

  3. Oh Sweet Jesus! This soupa is Ah-Mazing!!! Folliwed through to a T and Wowza. So good. I used a no sugar bacon..absolutely 💯 delish…!!! Ty5 stars

  4. If we purchase store bought compliant sausage, should we add some of the spices that are in your homemade sausage?

    1. How very odd! I’m so sorry for any headache!

      I just tried from Chrome and from an incognito Chrome window and both ways worked for me. In incognito, though, if I tried going straight to the printable page from the link you shared, it redirected me to the post. That didn’t happen when I used the print button on the recipe card in the post, though.

      Are you trying to navigate straight to the printable page, or are you going from the recipe post through the “print” button on the recipe card? If you haven’t tried the button, see if that makes a difference. You might also try clearing your browser cache, trying it incognito, or trying it from another browser.

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