Pasta e Fagioli is a hearty, one-pot soup inspired by Olive Garden. Chock-full of beans, veggies, noodles and lean beef, this classic Italian soup is sure to win you over. Pair it with Soft Dinner Rolls and you have a very satisfying meal.
We love making restaurant favorites at home like Zuppa Toscana soup, Chicken Madeira (a Cheesecake Factory favorite) and of course Philly Cheesesteak.

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Pasta e Fagioli Recipe:
I’m so excited to share my copycat recipe for Olive Garden’s Pasta e Fagioli with you. I believe this recipe tastes better than the restaurant version. You will love this soup!
This hearty soup is the perfect candidate for meal prepping. It only requires one pot to make and it reheats amazingly throughout the week. It is also super filling and healthy.
What is Pasta e Fagioli?
In Italian, “Pasta e Fagioli” translates to “pasta and beans”. This makes a whole lot of sense considering this soup is chock-full of pasta and beans! It is also loaded with aromatic veggies and lean ground beef, making it a whole meal in a bowl. Think of Pasta e Fagioli as an Italian spin on chili!

How to Make Pasta e Fagioli
- In a dutch oven or soup pot, heat up a tablespoon of olive oil at medium heat and brown your beef. Drain excess fat and set aside. Add a bit more olive oil to the pot and stir in garlic, onions, celery and carrots. Cook until tender.
- Add in tomato sauce, canned tomatoes and beef. Stir to combine. Add your beans and chicken stock/broth. Let simmer for 10 minutes.
- Add in pasta and Italian seasoning (dried oregano and thyme will work if you don’t have the spice blend on hand). Cook for 10 more minutes. Season to taste with salt and pepper.

Can I Substitute the Ground Beef?
You can substitute spicy, ground Italian sausage for beef. It will add a nice kick of heat! Also, don’t hesitate to use half beef, half Italian sausage.
Pro Tip: Have a parmesan rind lying around? Don’t let it go to waste and throw it into the soup pot alongside the broth. All the oils and salty-parmesan in the rind will meld with your broth and enhance the flavor. Just make sure you take the rind out before serving.

Storing Pasta e Fagioli
Store soup in an airtight container in the refrigerator. It will keep for up to 5 days. The kicker? This soup tastes better and better as it marinates in the fridge. Yes, that means your leftovers will get tastier as the days go by! To reheat your soup, simply microwave it or bring it to a simmer in a pot over medium-high heat.
Can this Soup Be Frozen?
I wouldn’t recommend freezing Pasta e Fagioli. Generally, freezing soups with pasta is not a good idea. When the noodles defrost, they tend to turn to mush, ruining the texture of your soup.

More Olive Garden Copycat Recipes:
- Creamy Shrimp Pasta – plump shrimp in alfredo sauce
- Zuppa Toscana – Natasha’s take on Olive Garden’s soup.
- Alfredo Sauce – easy and done in 5 minutes! Perfect pasta or pizza sauce.
- Minestrone Soup – classic soup never goes out of style. Serve it as an appetizer or a meal all on its own.
Pasta e Fagioli (Olive Garden Copycat)

Ingredients
- 1 lb lean ground beef
- 1 tbsp olive oil
- 2 medium carrots , diced into small cubes
- 1 large onion, diced into small cubes
- 1 stalk celery, diced into small cubes
- 3 cloves garlic
- 15 oz canned diced tomatoes
- 15 oz tomato sauce
- 32 oz chicken broth
- 15 oz canned Great Northern beans, drained and rinsed
- 15 oz canned Kidney beans, drained and rinsed
- 1 cup ditalini pasta
- 1 tbsp Italian seasoning
- 1 tsp salt, adjust to taste
- 1 tsp black pepper, adjust to taste
- 2 tbsp fresh basil, (optional)
Instructions
- On medium heat, preheat a large pot or dutch oven with oil. Add ground beef and let it brown (3-5 minutes). As its cooking, be sure to break it apart into small pieces.
- Remove cooked beef from the pot. Drain of excess fat and set aside.
- In the same pot, add diced carrots, onion, celery and pressed garlic. Saute until the vegetables are softened (about 4 minutes).
- Add canned diced tomatoes, tomato sauce, and beef back to the cooking vegetables in the pot. Stir to combine together.
- Add Great Northern and kidney beans to the mix. Pour chicken broth to the pot and let simmer for about 10 minutes.
- Add pasta, Italian seasoning, salt and pepper and let it cook for another 10 minutes.
- Serve right away with a sprinkle of basil or parmesan cheese.
Nutrition Per Serving
Filed Under
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Hi! I’m Natasha Kravchuk, a New York Times bestselling cookbook author, recipe developer, food photographer, and writer. Here you’ll find delicious, reliable recipes made with simple ingredients, plus easy step-by-step photos and videos to help you cook confidently at home.
This soup is amazing. Natasha you never disappoint. The only change I made is after doubling the recipe I used 1-1/3 lbs of ground beef instead of using 2lbs. We really love this; one of the best soups I have ever made. Thanks!!
Hello Janine, so wonderful to hear that! Thank you so much for your awesome feedback.
I made this tonight in the instant pot! Followed recipe as is minus the 10 min simmer and 10 min cook. Instead pressure cooked it in my instant pot for 8 minutes and it was great! I also added 1/2 tsp of crushed pepper flakes for some warm heat.
Hi Karol, nice one! Thank you for sharing some tips with us, we appreciate it!
HI Karol, I had the same idea to cook in instant pot but didnt try yet. I had multi function cooker where sotte is possible. What about a pasta? Did you cook it separetely and then add into final meal?I was thinking about cooking this meal in slow cooker, it could work too. Thank you.
Hi Lucy- I put the uncooked pasta right in, stirred it then set the instapot to high pressure for 8 minutes. Then quick release the pressure. If you leave it longer or let the pressure natural release the pasta will be overcooked.
This looks and sounds great! Wish to make. Do I drain beans and rinse OR just pour both straight out of the can into the soup?
Hi Anne, Please see this note in the recipe, “15 oz canned Great Northern beans drained and rinsed, “15 oz canned Kidney beans drained and rinsed” I hope that helps.
Turned out excellent!
I’m so happy you enjoyed that!
You might say 15 oz CAN of both Kidney and Northern so some dummy like me doesn’t use dry !
Hi Mark, Oh my goodness I didn’t realize it didn’t specify the “canned.” I have updated that to clarify. I’m sorry about that.
Can I use my crock pot for this?
Hi Diane, I haven’t tested that in a slow cooker to advise. If you experiment, please let me know how you like that.
I use it for boiling beans (I buy dried ones, cook once and freeze for several weeks).
For the main part of the recipe need hot temp. cooking at stove.
Not only do l love your recipes, you put a smile on my face every time I watch your videos.Keep doing what you’re doing please!
You’re so nice! Thank you!
Regarding freezing. If you make a large batch that you will not be consuming it all within the week & want to freeze some, I suggest before you add the pasta that you divide the sauce & freeze. Now you can add the appropriate amount of pasta to your current pot. The frozen sauce for later, add the appropriate amount of pasta to the reheated sause at time.
Thank you for sharing your tips on freezing this!
Nobody beats my pasta e fagioli. Everyone that’s had it asks for the recipe. I’ve had Olive Gardens. It stinks. And there’s no beef in that soup. Pasta e fagioli means pasta and beans….no meat!
Btw, I love your recipes, but I can’t like this one. I made your chicken marsala tonight. Yummy!
No worries but good to know that you liked the Chicken Marsala!
Hi Natasha! You bring so many smiles to my face with your videos! Love all of your recipes. This one, however, I felt lacked a bit of flavor. So I did add a beef bouillon cube, seasoned salt, and some additional crushed tomatoes. That seemed to help. Thanks for bringing joy to my world!
Hi Julie, thank you for your sweet words. Did you possibly use low sodium chicken broth? In that case, a little extra salt or a bouillon cube is definitely a good idea. Thanks for sharing that tip – I bet it was even better with the bouillon.
Hi Do you add the pasta un cooked ?
Yes, that is correct.
Love your videos! I tried the Pasta e Fagioli tonight for dinner. My husband and I both loved it. Our only negative comment is that we thought it had way too much Italian seasoning in it. Next time I plan to cut that in half. I did substitute elbow macaroni for the ditalini pasta and had to substitute cannellini beans for the great northern beans since I didn’t have either of those two ingredients on hand. I’m thinking of trying your broccoli cheese, potato, and corn chowder soups in the future.
Thanks for your comments and feedback, Barb. Thanks for sharing the substitutes that you used and that sounds like a good idea. Please feel free to amend the recipe according to your preference. I hope you love every recipe that you will try!
I made this the other night and it was a huge hit. Loved the flavor and the easiness of the recipe. thank you,
Hello Cathy, you are so welcome. I’m happy that you enjoyed this recipe!
I followed the recipe to the letter; the soup is good, but sadly not the claimed soup from Olive Garden.
Hi Alex, I always feel homemade is better because of better quality ingredients.
Hi Alex, I too love the soup and have made it many times over the years and get close enough. The key is to develop some flavors. Olive Garden, just like Wendy’s (chili) uses left over cooked beef which already has a flavor profile. So did old school cooks – stews are leftover cooked meat with fresh veg to liven them up. Cooking everything fresh will not bring richness.
1. Take 25% of the ground beef and cook in a cast iron skillet with 25% of the chopped onions until reduced down to REALLY dark crumbles. NOT burnt, takes some time. This develops a richer flavor.
2. Use beef STOCK and not chicken to further richen the flavor.
3. Kick up the amount of garlic for that familiar tang.
4. I cooked the pasta el dente first, recipe didn’t say.
5. Salt/pepper remaining meat in chunks under the broiler in the oven for a grilled richness, doesn’t take long.
Give it another try… the ingredient given are spot on…
This is a delicious and hearty soup!
I’m happy you enjoyed that Paula! Thank you for sharing that wonderful review with me!
Does it seem like a lot of celery once it’s all cooked? One stalk seems like a lot.
Hi Stephanie, we didn’t think it was too much but you are welcome to add less.
Does this taste like olive garden’s soup?
You should try it but I personally think that homemade is so much better.
Ok, thank you.
I definitely will try it.
Looks so yummy in the pictures!!
Hi Stephanie! I’m so glad you enjoyed this recipe! Thank you for that awesome feedback!
I just made this soup.. i exchanged the beans with a 32 oz jar of 16 bean that i had canned. I then canned the remaining soup.. (without the noodles). I had one jar which didn’t seal and was worried the flavor would change thru the canning process… OMG!! It was so good.. even without the noodles. I will be making more of this soup just to can for this winter.. thank you for sharing the recipe
It is so wonderful to read your awesome comments and feedback, Joni. I’m glad you enjoyed this recipe! Thank you so much for sharing that with us, we appreciate it.
I made the pasta soup and it came out very delicious. Thank you for your recipe.
You are most welcome. Thanks for sharing your good feedback!
This is the first I ever made soup from scratch. My husband loved it. It made so much I gave some to my Mom and some to my neighbor. Rave Reviews!
That’s just awesome! Thank you for sharing that with me, Darlene!
First time making this soup, it is absolutely delicious!!!! I used pinto beans and navy beans.
Thankyou Natasha for sharing this amazing recipe!
You’re welcome, Linda! I’m so happy you’re enjoying this recipe!
What’s a good substitute for northern beans.
Hi Maha, sorry but I haven’t tried any other substitute to advise.
Cannalini