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.
How many days do you think this will keep in the refrigerator? Also, is one serving one cup? Trying to decide how much to make for two people. Thanks.
Hi Gayle! See my note above, “ Storing Pasta e Fagioli.” The nutrition facts are electronically generated so I don’t have the exact size of each serving but this recipe makes 12 bowls. You can also change the serving size in the recipe and it will convert the ingredients for you. I hope that helps.
9 quarts -288 oz. 288oz/12 servings = 24 oz per serving. 24 oz is 3 cups. Most people will eat about 2 cups of this.
I made this today, it was very good, but I’d like it to be a little more brothy. I realize I can just add more chicken broth, but is there anything else you’d recommend adding so that the broth doesn’t just water down the flavor?
Hi CJ, you can add more broth flavor like you mentioned, have you tried Better than Bouillon broth paste?
Thank you for your reply. I ended up just using about 6oz water, then adding some salt, it turned out well. Bouillon probably would have added more flavor if I would have had it, but this was good. I’ll have to plan ahead next time I make it to add more liquid so it turns out more like a soup than a stew.
Thank you!
Thank you for the update!
Gonna make it tomorrow, thinking of doing it in a slow cooker, but I don’t want to screw this recipe up by doing that ! Well we will see I guess!
This is one of two soups I make and it is a family favorite! I have tried many “copycat” recipes and this is the only one that works. It’s actually better than O.G. !
Hi William! I’m so glad to hear that! Thank you for the wonderful review.
I have made this recipe twice now. It is so delicious 😋 This last time I cut the recipe in half and it still worked great 😋
Thank you for sharing, Raylene! I’m glad you love the recipe!
What can you recommend when the soup turns out more like a stew instead? I love this recipe, but it ends up being SO thick. I don’t want to water down the flavor.
Hi Lisa! You can thin it out with broth instead.
I was wondering if you can make this in a slow cooker ? If so how long would I cook it ? On low or high ? And would l alter any of the recipe ?
Hi Pam, I haven’t tested that in a slow cooker to advise. If you experiment, please let me know how you like that.
This is a hearty and flavorable soup that we thoroughly enjoyed. Will definitely be making again & again all through fall & winter.
I’m so happy you enjoyed that. Thank you for sharing that with us, Emily!
This soup was super easy and DELICIOUS. My picky eater loved it.
I’m happy that you loved it, Jenny!
This is a wonderful soup! I made it on a cool fall day and it was perfect! Thank you for sharing your recipe!
You’re very welcome, Cheryl! Thanks for the feedback.
I make it all the time! Absolutely fantabulous! I do swap out beef stock for chicken stock. I also use a jar of chunky (tomato, onion &garlic) spaghetti sauce in place of the can of diced tomatoes. I never did follow directions well in school! Thank you so much for this recipe! I know I veered off a bit. Bon Appétit!
You’re very welcome! Thanks for sharing.
I’m not sure where I went wrong but mine was a bit thick and not soupy like yours. I thought I followed the recipe exactly.
Outstanding. For some reason I taste sausage rather than ground beef when we eat this soup at Olive Garden. Guess I could add sausage if I wanted to but would like to have it authentic. Which meat is it? Thanks.
Hi BB! We like to use ground beef, but yes, you can substitute it with other meat like Italian sausage.
I make the base ( meat, veggies and garlic) then freeze half for later. Defrost, then add broth, tomato, tomato sauce, beans, etc., works well for one person. Substituted Italian sausage for ground beef. Lovely recipe! Thank you!
Sounds good, thanks for the review! Happy to know that you liked this recipe a lot.
Can this recipe be cut in half?There are only two of us and freezing is not recommended.
Hi Kathy! Yes, you can. In the recipe card where the number of servings are listed, you use the servings level in the recipe card to decrease/increase the servings.
greap recipe, we freeze without the pasta, add the pasta at the time you eat it.
Sounds good, thanks for your review!
Just to clarify the recipe is for only one cup of cooked pasta? Thanks Sandra
Hi Sandra, yes, you can see on the ingredient list, we add one cup of pasta. I hope this helps.
Made it this am. Looks yummy!! Wish I could attach a photo! My sister in law loves Olive Garden Pasta Fagioli and today is her birthday that is why I made it. Thanks for alway providing great recipes. Havent tried one yet that I didn’t like!!
I’m so happy you enjoyed that. Thank you for sharing that with us, Sandra! I recommend posting your photo on social media and using #natashaskitchen so we can see it!
Thank you for a great recipe! It was delicious and your pro tip to add the parmesan rind took it over the top!
Hi Michelle! Thank you. So glad you enjoyed the recipe.
Where is the video it looks so good love all of your recipes and the videos that shows how to made everything keep posting your short cuts.
Thanks
Mary
Hi Mary, I don’t have a video for this recipe yet but the written recipe has everything that you need to try this. I’ll take note of your suggestion for a video on this!
I love this soup. This time, sirloin tip was cheaper than ground beef, considerably. So, I diced it by hand. Worked great. I freeze portions, so I don’t put the pasta in the soup. I cook up pasta as needed as add to soup when it’s warming.
I’m so glad you loved it, Diana! I bet it was amazing with sirloin!
Your ingredients list says Chicken broth but the intructions says beef stock. I am sure either would be fine but which do you actually use?
Hi Bek! Can you point out to me exactly where you see this in the recipe? I see that one of my readers commented about using beef stock but my written instructions in the recipe card and the ingredients list both state chicken broth/stock. We use chicken, but either one would work. 🙂
I’ve made this delicious soup for years. I use clamato juice instead of chicken broth and Yamato sauce
Thank you for sharing, Tracey! So glad you love the recipe.