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Split Pea Soup

This classic Split Pea Soup recipe is made with a meaty ham bone, carrots, onions, potatoes, and has a thick and flavorful broth. It’s easy to make on the Stove Top, Instant Pot, or Crock Pot!

A pot of Split Pea Soup with a ladle in it and fresh thyme on top.

I realize that I’m making quite a claim when I say that this is the best split pea soup ever, but it really is. Just read through the comments, people are in love. There is no doubt in my mind that it could win awards.

The recipe comes from a super old cookbook that my mom has. The steps are simple, and so are the ingredients! This one even landed a coveted spot in The Cozy Cookbook, so you know it’s good!

How to Make it

See recipe card below this post for ingredient quantities and full instructions, including the Crock Pot and Instant Pot cooking methods.

Add a meaty ham bone to a 4.5 quart Dutch oven or soup pot along with the rinsed split peas, onions, butter, olive oil, onion powder, garlic, bay leaves, thyme, and water.

A meaty ham bone in a dutch oven with onions, bay leaves, and water being added.

Bring to a boil, then reduce to a simmer. Cover partially and simmer for 2.5 hours or until desired thickness is obtained. (Higher altitudes will require longer cooking time.) Add the potatoes and carrots about 40 minutes prior to serving.

Making Split Pea Soup with a ham bone, potatoes, and carrots in broth.

Remove from heat once the potatoes and carrots are fork tender. Discard the bay leaves and thyme stems. Remove the ham bone and cut/shred 2 cups of ham from it and add it back to the soup. Serve!

Split Pea Soup in a Dutch oven with Ham being added.

Do You Need to Soak Split Peas

  • Soaking split peas may decrease the cooking time slightly, but since they’re already halved and pretty thin, it’s not necessary. I don’t soak them for this recipe. 

Using a Ham Bone

Using a meaty, uncleaned ham bone is what gives this soup it’s amazingly rich and savory flavor.

  • If your ham bone is small, or you are using a ham bone substitute: Be prepared to add up to 4 chicken bouillon cubes to the broth to add more flavor if needed.
  • If your bone doesn’t have much meat: You can also add a diced ham steak at the beginning of cooking. 1 (8oz.) steak = about 1 ¼ cups diced ham.

Ham Bone Substitutes

  • Bone-in Picnic Shoulder or smoked ham shank
  • Using a ham hock is the next best option.
  • Chopped salted pork and/or chopped smoked bacon can also be substituted.

Pro Tips

  • Unlike most soup recipes, the vegetables don’t need to be softened in butter/oil first. They float to the surface of the soup and cook/soften in the fat from the ham bone.
  • The longer you simmer split pea soup, the more it thickens. Just make sure the temperature is low if you are going to simmer for several hours to avoid losing too much liquid.
  • If you’re at a higher altitude, longer cooking time is required.

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Storage

  • Store in an airtight container and refrigerate for up to 3 days or freeze for up to 3 months. 
  • This soup does freeze and reheat very well, just ensure that the potatoes and carrots are cooked until just fork tender so that they don’t become too soft.

A white bowl of split pea soup with a spoon scooping some out.

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Split Pea Soup

5 from 217 ratings
This Split Pea Soup is made with a delicious ham bone, potatoes, and carrots, in a thick and flavorful broth.

Ingredients

  • 1 lb. dry split peas, equal to 2 cups
  • 1 ham bone, See notes for substitution options
  • 2 cups ham, cut from the ham bone at the end.
  • 2 cups onions, diced
  • 1 ½ tablespoons onion powder, not teaspoons
  • 1 tablespoon butter
  • 2 tablespoons olive oil
  • 1 tablespoon garlic, minced
  • 2 bay leaves
  • 2 sprigs thyme
  • 8 cups water
  • 2 cups carrots, diced
  • 2 russet potatoes, peeled and diced

Instructions

  • Note: The split peas do not need to be soaked for this recipe.

Stove Top

  • Add the uncleaned/meaty ham bone to a large soup pot along with the rinsed split peas, onions, onion powder, butter, olive oil, garlic, bay leaves, and thyme.
  • Add the water and bring it to a boil, then reduce to a simmer, with the lid slightly cracked.
  • Let the soup simmer for 2.5 hours or until desired thickness is obtained. Stir occassionally as it cooks to lift any settling on the bottom of the pot. (Note that higher altitudes may required 5 or more hours of simmering time.) The longer it simmers, the thicker and more flavorful it will get.
  • Add the carrots and potatoes about 40 minutes prior to serving.
  • Once the carrots and potatoes are fork tender, remove the ham bone, bay leaves, and thyme stems. Shred/cut 2 cups of ham from the bone and add it back to the soup. Serve and enjoy!

Instant Pot

  • Rinse the peas. Add all of the ingredients to 6+ quart instant pot. Make sure the pot isn’t more than 2/3 full.
  • Secure the lid and set it to cook on high (or press the ‘pressure cook’ button) for 25 minutes.
  • Once finished, let 10-15 minutes pass before you trigger the quick release valve. This will allow most of the pressure to release naturally, allowing the soup to cook a little bit longer.
  • Remove the ham bone, the bay leaves, and thyme stems. Slice/cut 2 cups of ham from the ham bone and add it back to the soup. Serve!

Slow Cooker

  • Rinse the peas. Add all of the ingredients to a large Slow Cooker (5 quarts or larger). 
  • Cook on low for 8+ hours or on high for 6+ hours. It's ready to serve once the peas are tender and the soup has reached your desired level of thickness.
  • Remove the ham bone, the bay leaves, and thyme stems. Slice/cut 2 cups of ham from the ham bone and add it back to the soup. Serve!

Notes

Using a Ham Bone:

Using a meaty, uncleaned ham bone is what gives this soup it's amazingly rich and savory flavor.
  • If your ham bone is small, or you are using a ham bone substitute: Be prepared to add up to 4 chicken bouillon cubes to the broth to add more flavor if needed.
  • If your bone doesn't have much meat: You can also add a diced ham steak at the beginning of cooking. 1 (8oz.) steak = about 1 ¼ cups diced ham.

Ham Bone Substitutes:

  1. Bone-in Picnic Shoulder or smoked ham shank 
  2. Using a ham hock is the next best option.
  3. Chopped salted pork and/or chopped smoked bacon can also be substituted.

Nutritional information is an estimate, and is per serving. There are 6 servings in this recipe.

Nutrition

Calories: 364kcal, Carbohydrates: 40g, Protein: 19g, Fat: 15g, Saturated Fat: 5g, Polyunsaturated Fat: 2g, Monounsaturated Fat: 8g, Trans Fat: 1g, Cholesterol: 34mg, Sodium: 623mg, Potassium: 943mg, Fiber: 10g, Sugar: 7g, Vitamin A: 7211IU, Vitamin C: 12mg, Calcium: 70mg, Iron: 2mg
Did you try this recipe?Mention @TheCozyCook on Instagram or tag #thecozycook!

 

 Carrots, onions, potatoes, split peas ham blend perfectly together in this rich and flavorful split pea soup recipe that comes straight from mom! | The Cozy Cook | #soup #peas #comfortfood #ham #peasoup

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623 comments on “Split Pea Soup”

  1. Hi, I have a question…do you use 2 cups pre-soaked peas, or 2 cups dry peas? There’s a significant difference so I want to make sure I do it right 🙂

    • Hi Michelle! That would be dry peas, good question! I just finished making my second batch of the soup, it is out of this world! Enjoy!!

  2. Oh, I meant to tell this crazy story… When my husband & I were 1st married, he talked about his mom making “Hot Dog Soup”! I asked him “What??” several times & he insisted it was green, delicious, & they called it Hot Dog Soup! Once I started ferreting out some facts, I realized his parents were missionaries, traveled all over the world on a huge ship & were pretty poor. This could only be Split Pea Soup!! I’m sure it wasn’t easy to have access to Ham & Ham bones on a ship (had a lot of “dry goods”) & his mom was probably able to get Hot Dogs in a port sometimes, and Voila! “Hot Dog Soup”!! To this day – – 30 yrs later, when we get together with my husbands brothers, Hot Dog Soup comes up Every time!! I’ve asked my husband many times if he’d like for me to try to duplicate it for him & he always laughs and says: “That’s sweet, but no thanks!!” Don’t know Why he refuses since they talk about it fondly, but I think I may make it for him Anyway!! Maybe some things are just better left in the past… like pea soup with Hot Dogs!! Hmmmm… jan

    • Awwwwwwwww I love that story!!! Hot Dog soup, that’s a new one for sure! However, is it weird that I think that hot dogs would actually be pretty tasty in pea soup? (Maybe I’m just hungry… all this pea soup talk has gotten to me!) -You should definitely try to replicate that hot dog soup, it would bring him back!! That’d be sweet 🙂 What a good wife!

  3. I’ve become very frugal and recently baked a ham in my pressure cooker, and I saved every morsel! This weekend I’ll be pulling the ham bone and some extra meat from the freezer and making this! My husband claims to not like pea soup, but up until last week he claimed he didn’t like hot & sour soup either. I made a batch, veggie style, and he loved it. Wish me luck on my newest endeavor!!!

    • Hi Mary! WOW- What luck that you have that ham bone, thank goodness you kept it, smart move!! It’s going to really make this soup, and I’m almost willing to guarantee that your husband is going to like it! Mine used to say that he didn’t like pea soup either… (hahaha)- then I gave him a bowl of this and his response was, “This is SOO good, what IS this?!” (Pea soup ya dummy.)

      Good luck and if for some reason he DOESN’T go for the soup, then it’s all the more for you! 🙂 Thanks for the comment!

      • Thanks Stephanie … my Dad used to take canned Campbells pea soup and “doctor it up” as he’d say … lol. I’m sure he and my Mom would have been proud of my efforts. Thank you so much for the recipe!

  4. Hi, I, too have Polish roots! (My grandfather) We ate some pretty strange, but yummy stuff when I was a kid, eg: “Potato Ball” Soup (or as we kids dubbed it: “super ball soup”!!) Odd, but de-lish!! The fam Split Pea Soup was very similar to yours except sometimes my mom would have ham but no ham BONE – Gasp! – a Crime!! So my mom would use chicken broth instead of water, to impart more flavor – – it works Great! She made it a habit to try to keep a ham bone in the freezer from then on, but would Still use the chicken broth, or half broth/ half water! It’s an Amazing soup either/any way you do it, it seems!! Thanks so much for your reminder to me that IT’S TIME FOR PEA SOUP!! I’m going to print yours as mine is so old and faded, I’ m afraid someday I won’t remember What it says and they’re almost identical so it’s Perfect. Thanks Again.

    • Hellooooo Jan, my fellow Polish pea-soup maker! I am SO excited that you’re going to be making this after Easter, and even more excited that you’re going to use this recipe alongside your mom’s recipe! First of all, I am 100% trying the chicken broth idea…I might even work that suggestion into the recipe notes, it sounds so flavorful! (Thank you for that!)….Your comment definitely made my day today. Enjoy your soup and I will do the same!!! Wahoo!!!!

  5. Have you ever added celery or corn? I know its not traditional, but I try to sneak as many veggies in on my 3 yr old as I can. 😉 If you have used either, did it change the soups flavor? Plan on making this after easter. 🙂

    • Hi Nicole! I’m making this after Easter too, I can’t waiiiiiit! (It’s just so good!)- I haven’t tried adding celery or corn before, but they wouldnt compromise the flavor of the soup and they sound delicious, especially celery, yum! Enjoy!

  6. Hi,
    I made this soup and I found it wasn’t as thick as yours. The only thing I did differently was I rinsed my peas and soaked them for 3 hours prior to making the soup. How do I thicken it? What did I possibly do wrong?

    • Hi Rosy!! Did it ever thicken more after you wrote this? Otherwise it’s really hard to say, I am making this again after Easter with the leftover ham that we have and I’ll try to think of what could have caused it to be thinner than mine… I’m sorry I couldn’t be of more help!

  7. Hi there. Can I make this luscious looking soup in my slowcooker?

    If yes how do I go about it?

    Also where can I get a ham bone?

    Thank you in advance.

    • Hi Yvonne- For the slow cooker I think I’d try this:

      Put the water, onions, carrots, & ham bone, in the crock pot and cook on high for 2 hours.
      Add all remaining ingredients except for the potato. Reduce to medium or low and let the soup simmer for approximately 4 hours, stirring occasionally.
      Add the potato about 1-2 hours prior to when you’re ready to eat. Once the potatoes are soft, you’re done!

      I usually get the ham bone from a whole ham that I’ve previously used for another meal (this is a great after-Easter recipe!) Otherwise you could try asking the meat department at the grocery store for a ham hock.

      Enjoy!

  8. Hi Stephanie,

    On October 31, 2015 Jenny posted a comment saying “by boiling the ham bone in the afternoon, and setting the broth in the fridge overnight so that that excess fat rises and gels, that way I can skim it off”. Would she just be boiling the ham bone alone in the 8 cups of water and then putting it in the fridge and then after scrapping off the excess fat, following your directions from the beginning?

    • Hi Kristy, I find that if I make the full recipe and then put it in the fridge, the excess fat rises and gels from there 🙂

  9. Hi, I am from Europe, own a little Lunch Restaurant in Florida. I try to find several good soups for daily soups. Yesterday I made this Split pea soup first time but with a few adjustments, I used my spice Mix (Salt, pepper, mustard, Terragon, celeryseed, onion) instead of salt only and added Green onions, the double batch sold completely first day! Thank you very much, people love it, and so do I 😍

    • Hi Linda!!! WHAT AMAZING NEWS!!!!! That is just so completely awesome- I wish they had more pea soup around me at the daily soup places!!!! Thank you for sharing that with me! Here’s to great soup sales!

  10. Can this be done in the slow cooker? How longs 8hrs on low?

    • Hi Jill, I’m sure it could, but I’ve never made it in the slow cooker. I would almost recommend transferring it to the slow cooker once it reaches the point where it needs to simmer, and 8 hours on low would be fabulous!

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