This recipe was inspired by Susan’s seitan stew. I used her method of cooking the seitan directly in the soup. It saves time and makes the seitan itself very tender. Adding seitan to this dish makes it very filling. Don’t forget to add some lemon, it takes away the sweetness of the pumpkin, if you like your pumpkin savoury like me.

Curried Pumpkin Soup with White Wine and Seitan
For the soup:
1 t oil of your choice
3 large cloves garlic, chopped
1 onion, chopped
1 red bell pepper, chopped
850 g (~ 7 1/2 cups 1 inch cubes) chopped pumpkin
1 cup white wine (or vegetable broth)
4 cups vegetable broth
1 T curry powder of your choice (I used a mild version)
1 t smoked sweet paprika
freshly ground pepper and additional salt to taste
cook for 15 minutes
For the seitan:
144 g gluten powder (vital wheat gluten)
2 T nutritional yeast
1 t onion powder
1 t salt
1 t smoked sweet paprika
1 t liquid smoke
180 ml (3/4 cup) water
cook for 40 minutes
Additional seasonings for each bowl:
1/2 T fresh lemon juice
1 t liquid smoke or chipotle sauce
fresh basil
To make the soup:
Heat oil in a large pot. Add onion and garlic and cook for five minutes, stirring. Add bell pepper and cook two minutes. Add remaining ingredients and bring to a boil.Cook for 15 minutes until the pumpkin is tender.
While the soup is cooking, prepare the seitan:
Mix together the dry ingredients in a bowl. Add liquid smoke and water and mix with your hands until a dough forms. Knead for five minutes. Place the dough on a cutting board and cut into 1/2 inch cubes. Set aside.
Purée the soup with a handheld blender until smooth. Add seitan and bring back to boil. Simmer for 30-35 minutes until the seitan is done. Ladle soup into bowls and add 1/2 T fresh lemon juice per bowl and 1 t of liquid smoke or chipotle sauce. Garnish with fresh herbs such as basil and serve immediately.
If you have leftover pumpkin, you can use it to make Nicole’s pumpkin chili:

I added 2 cups of vegetable broth, 1 T of chipotle sauce, 1 T oregano, 1 additional t of cumin, and used kidney beans instead of black beans. What a great autumn coloured stew!


Oh yum! I really liked Susan’s method when I made her stew–with pumpkin it sounds absolutely wonderful.
By: Jes on 6 November 2009
at 5:03 pm
I’m sitting here shivering, staring at that gorgeous bowl of pumpkin soup and planning tonight’s dinner. I want that on my table!
By: Andrea on 6 November 2009
at 6:39 pm
I am printing this recipe and putting it in my High Priority Recipes Folder!!!
By: tahinitoo on 6 November 2009
at 8:55 pm
Way to go on taking your inspiration from Susan’s recipe and taking the whole thing to a totally different direction! It sounds delicious, and absolutely perfect for the chilly autumn days we’re having right now.
By: Josiane on 6 November 2009
at 9:58 pm
Mmm I love curried squash soups and this definitely stands apart from the usual. The picture looks scrumptious!
-K
By: taleoftwovegans on 6 November 2009
at 11:43 pm
Oh yum. A friend of mine has lots of pumpkin puree to get rid of. I bet we could skip the puree step and still make this tasty looking soup!
By: Meagan on 7 November 2009
at 4:03 am
You can totally use purée! I think you will need 3 1/2 to four cups of purée.
By: mihl on 7 November 2009
at 10:51 am
Oh my, this looks SO good!
By: Melisser on 7 November 2009
at 7:58 am
This looks excellent. I actually have a pumpkin sitting on my counter that’s looking to be put to use… haven’t been sure how to use it though. I often find straight up pumpkin soup to be a little sweet, but I bet seitan would balance that nicely. Now I can’t decide… pumpkin soup or pumpkin chili? I best buy another pumpkin and try out both!
By: Monica Shaw on 7 November 2009
at 8:36 am
If you add lemon, as suggested above, it takes away all the sweetness. Because I totally agree with you…I also find regular pumpkin soup too sweet.
By: mihl on 7 November 2009
at 10:45 am
Ooh, yum, love this pumpkin recipe and it’s the perfect season for it. Thanks for sharing!
By: Vaishali on 7 November 2009
at 6:36 pm
i’ve never had pumpkin in a stew or soup before, Milh – i need to give it a whirl. i think i can make your soup with tempeh to keep it gluten-free, too. w00t! white wine, curry, and smoked paprika – now you’re talk’n! i enjoy my pumpkin savory as well – never been one really care for it being super sweet.
By: jessy on 7 November 2009
at 7:07 pm
That sounds like a great soup for a rainy day (like today). I’ve never tried cooking seitan directly in a soup but it sounds like a great idea. I’ll have to try this soon!
By: Angela on 7 November 2009
at 10:26 pm
This looks awesome! It’s funny, I use squash all the time but always neglect my ol’ pal the pumpkin. From some reason, this stuff always floats by me on FatFreeVegan, but hits me like a truck on your site. This is definitely high on the must-make-soups list, and we’re just about into soup season.
By: ideaoforder on 8 November 2009
at 6:49 pm
That soup looks SO good! Saving this one for sure.
By: Mo on 9 November 2009
at 7:37 am
Wish I could come to your place and try this. I personally can’t seem to figure seitan out and haven’t loved it when I’ve made it. But, your stuff looks fantstic!
By: jrsimon56 on 9 November 2009
at 9:23 am
Mmm. I LOVED Susan’s stew, and I am definitely into savory pumpkin (cinnamon gets boring after a while!), so this sounds delicious.
By: Claryn on 11 November 2009
at 4:34 pm
Both of these look absolutely heavenly! And my bank account likes creative use of leftovers. (Not that I would be likely to have any!)
By: t on 11 November 2009
at 8:33 pm
oh these both look amazing, but it’s too damned hot to eat anything of the sort…
By: Philippa O on 11 November 2009
at 11:44 pm
I’m not the biggest pumpkin fan but somehow you still make me want it Mihl! NOM~!
By: fortheloveofguava on 12 November 2009
at 7:40 pm
Thanks! She’s dong just fine.
I was lucky and found the Chanterelles on sale for 14.99 a pound! Super cheap
Wow this looks delicious.
By: JennShaggy on 12 November 2009
at 10:34 pm
That looks delicious! I’m gonna try makin this one
By: Eric on 13 November 2009
at 8:23 pm
I made this for dinner today and really enjoyed all the flavors. Cooking the seitan in the soup resulted in some of the best seitan I have ever eaten. The addition of lemon juice and liquid smoke at the end really pulls the soup together. And, the recipe makes a ton so there are plenty of leftovers!!! Thanks so much for sharing the recipe!!!
By: tahinitoo on 22 November 2009
at 7:00 am
[...] a side note, if it’s getting a bit chilly in your neighborhood, make this soup. (You could probably find a tasty bread recipe to go along with it while you are visiting [...]
By: Hey Winner! « tahinitoo on 25 November 2009
at 5:59 pm