This hearty Ukrainian Buckwheat Soup combines soup bones, mixed vegetables, and roasted buckwheat for a healthy, wholesome, and delicious soup.

Other grandma’s soups with love is this sorrel soup and turkey meatball soup.

Buckwheat soup served in a pot and garnished with dill and bread buns on a kitchen counter.

Buckwheat soup might be something you have never heard of and I feel like it is my duty to share with you.

This is true Ukrainian soup I grew up with, still make to this day, and that my kids love. Same story with my Ukrainian borscht! Buckwheat gives soup such a nutty and distinct flavour, you gotta try! I promise you will love it!

To flavor this buckwheat soup, traditionally fried onions, carrots, and celery are used. Potatoes and buckwheat add healthy carbs and “fill” the soup. And fresh herbs like dill or parsley for another level of flavour.

What Is Buckwheat?

You might have seen buckwheat in a bulk section of the store, which is raw and green in colour. What you really need to look for to make proper buckwheat soup or any buckwheat recipe is “kasha” aka roasted buckwheat.

You can find it in European delis, health food stores and Amazon. It is crucial that you buy roasted buckwheat!

Roasted buckwheat in a glass jar.

This buckwheat soup is so delicious, I have been making it all my life and am yet to remember the time I disposed of any leftovers. Never happens.

Even better, it has even more depth of flavor with the use of soup bones.

How to Make Buckwheat Soup

Soup bones cooked in broth in a large stock pot.

In a large stock pot, add enough cold water to cover the soup bones or chicken carcass along with bay leaves and peppercorns.

Cover with lid half way and bring to a boil on medium heat. Reduce heat to low and cook for 1 hour, straining the foam occasionally (if any).

Sauteed onion, celery and carrots in a large pot.

Preheat large ceramic non-stick skillet on medium heat and swirl oil to coat. Add onion, celery and carrots, saute for 5 minutes, stirring occasionally.

Red pot on the stove.

Transfer to a pot along with potatoes, buckwheat, oregano, thyme, salt and pepper. Cover and bring to a boil on medium-high heat, then reduce heat to low and cook for 15 minutes.

Close up of buckwheat soup with potatoes on a ladle.

Add dill and serve hot with a slice of crusty bread or Ukrainian garlic bread.

More Recipes to Try

You can also browse through my entire collection of healthy soup recipes!

Buckwheat soup with chicken and potatoes in red pot with laddle.

Buckwheat Soup

This hearty Ukrainian Buckwheat Soup combines soup bones, mixed vegetables, and roasted buckwheat for a healthy, wholesome, and delicious soup.
5 from 3 votes
Servings 12 servings
Calories 150
Diet Gluten Free
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 1 hour 20 minutes
Total Time 1 hour 30 minutes

Ingredients  

Instructions 

  • In a large stock pot, add enough cold water to cover the bones along with bay leaves and peppercorns. Cover with lid half way and bring to a boil on medium heat. Reduce heat to low and cook for 1 hour, straining the foam occasionally (if any).
  • Preheat large ceramic non-stick skillet on medium heat and swirl oil to coat. Add onion, celery and carrots, saute for 5 minutes, stirring occasionally.
  • Transfer to a pot along with potatoes, buckwheat, oregano, thyme, salt and pepper. Cover and bring to a boil on medium-high heat, then reduce heat to low and cook for 15 minutes.
  • Add dill and serve hot hot with a slice of good bread.

Notes

  • Store: Refrigerate in a pot for up to 5 days.
  • Freeze: In an airtight container for up to 3 months.
  • Do not buy raw (light colour) buckwheat, it has to be toasted.

Nutrition

Serving: 1.5cups | Calories: 150kcal | Carbohydrates: 30g | Protein: 5g | Fat: 2g | Saturated Fat: 1g | Sodium: 412mg | Fiber: 4g | Sugar: 2g
Course: Soup and Stew
Cuisine: Ukrainian
Author: Olena Osipov
Did you make this recipe?Mention @ifoodreal or tag #ifoodreal!

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About Olena

Welcome! I grew up in Ukraine watching my grandma cook with simple ingredients. I have spent the last 11 years making it my mission to help you cook quick and easy meals for your family!

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Comments

  1. 5 stars
    Olena, your recipes are just amazing! I am dreaming now about Instant Pot Buckwheat Chicken Soup? Can not find any in the internet. Have you tried to cook it in Instant Pot?

  2. Is gerbs buckwheat okay to use? I can’t see anywhere that it’s roasted. When I clicked on your amazon link for the pasha it said currently unavailable. Do you have another suggestion for the buckwheat? Thank you

    1. Best buckwheat is roasted and brown in colour. Pale and green buckwheat is not tasty. You can use quinoa, longer cooking brown rice or even pasta. ANy grain works just might need different cook time.

  3. Plus I love and and am envious of your pretty Dutch oven! I can’t believe that I have never had one! I LOVE Lodge cast iron pans! But am too lazy to keep them seasoned properly, thus, the ceramic coated like that gorgeous red Dutch oven remain in my wishful fantasies!

    1. You don’t have to season this ceramic dutch oven.:) It is amazing so far! You need a dutch oven – even heat distribution, not like in a pot.

  4. When my boys were growing and eating seemed endless with them, I bought a 16 quart stockpot for soups and homemade noodles and chicken. I filled it to the brim and still only had two dinners and one weekend lunch!

    Now, filled, I can’t lift but it is on my shelf for times when they all return for a soup Saturday, so I can’t can’t move it out. My stock pot now for the the two of us is a cute little 6 qt one. Enough for a weeks worth of dipping into. We don’t mind a bowl of the same soup every day for lunch until it is gone. The salads or sides change things up.

    Olena, thanks for the tip using my chicken carcasses. I already have chicken thighs and breasts in my freezer, so I am all set for Monday!

    1. I LOVE but had never heard of this soup. My Ukrainian mom didn’t make it.

      I always have buckwheat in the house. I think what I have is roasted as the buckwheat is not green.

      My question is: Could/should I just toast the buckwheat I have to be sure?

  5. I usually make a pot of soup once a week and this is one of my favorites. This meal is all the goodness of childhood. I do laugh when I hear about all the bone broth goodness because it certainly isn’t new. Ukrainians are smart people. 😉

    1. I end up making large pot of soup once a week too. Sometimes twice a week and feeding the family felt so stress free this week. How many meals your pot makes? Is your pot the same size like mine?

        1. Do your boys eat a lot compared to other kids? Mine do, especially 10 year old eats like dad. I’m just curious to compare kids who eat real food mostly, I do not know many in real life.:( My Italian friend cooks healthy too and her kids eat a lot as well.

        2. I feel like they do eat alot compared to other kids. lol Whenever I have my kids friends over they eat so little compared to mine. My kids lunches are probably the healthiest in the school. We go through SO much fruit. Veggies are slower…unless its something they love.

        3. Yes, same here except mine are pretty good with veggies. Fruit is our snack and dessert, that is why it literally flies out.

  6. It is funny, because every since quinoa hit the shops and rose to the top of popularity, I have done my best to like it. But I just could not. I tried every brand, color, and Recipe trying and just finally realized maybe I didn’t fit with the ‘in’ crowd, and gave up, lol!

    I naturally expected that I would enjoy it since I love experimenting with many Ancient grains like Fargo, Kamut, spelt, and whole Barley, and love them all so far. But I have yet to try buckwheat (other than in Japanese noodle form) and I love soup, so this recipe is a natural for me to make soon. First I’ll have to roast a turkey! I do have two rather skimpy chicken carcasses in my freezer but we pick them clean!

    Can’t wait to try your buckwheat as grain! Thank-You for sharing the recipe, I love that it is authentic homeland from you! Also, I had a lot of potato patties, but never stuffed? With what? Cheese, meat?

    1. Sounds like you prefer hearty and nutty grains. They do have more flavour. Just cook your chicken carcasses with some chicken thighs or breasts. Saves from roasting the turkey and same results. -;)
      My grandma made potato patties this way – stuffed with ground beef and wild mushroom gravy on top from our forest mushrooms. I WILL NEVER FORGET! Stretched out the meat quite a bit.
      Have a great weekend!

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