Thai Pumpkin Laksa with Crunchy “Fried” Chickpeas.
I have figured out how to sneak pumpkin into everything this year. You have to try this combination, Thai Pumpkin Laksa with Crunchy “Fried” Chickpeas.

I’m talking sweet AND savory. Most years I tend to go the all savory route with pumpkin. Remember, I rarely mix my chocolate with fruit (yes pumpkin is a fruit – it’s actually a berry!), I truly love an all chocolate dessert! Anyway, this year things are a bit different. It’s kind of pumpkin everything… and I am so into it.
Me and pumpkin are definitely having a moment, which I think I’ve already mentioned…
Ok, clearly, I am out of things to talk about if I am discussing my obsession with pumpkin. My life is semi-boring at the moment. Okay, not semi-boring.


Just plain BORING.



I don’t mean that I am bored, cause it’s actually the complete opposite, I am not bored in the least. I just mean that most people would think my life is boring. Basically all my time is spent either in the kitchen, crouching over food taking photos, typing at my computer, milking the goat, making grocery lists, making lists in general or cleaning the kitchen.
It’s kind of busy over here, but I actually love it. I have discovered that I stress more when I am not busy. I’ve also wondered if there will ever be a time in my life where I am not stressed and can actually relax instead. I think about this a lot. Ever since I can remember, I have been a stresser. I don’t think I’ve ever known life without at least a little stress.
I don’t know if I can do life without stress.
Hmmm…..maybe when I am old…and probably clinically crazy too, maybe then I will relax.
Maybe. I dunno. That’s a big one.


WAIT, though! I do have some fun things to share. One, we got new chickens….like eight new chickens actually, and they are red feathered and pretty, and they lay lots of eggs!!
Or well, they are supposed to lay lots of eggs. So far they have only laid two, and well, Dad is totally scratching his head about it. But I’m pretty a sure a two-hour car ride on a cold night (in their coop in the back of the truck bed) to a new environment would be enough to stress them out for a bit (it would stress me out, but again, that’s saying much). Plus, the new Rhode Island Reds and our old white feathered Buff Orpingtons are not really getting along that well. They are staying segregated from each other. They literally live right outside my kitchen window, Reds on one side, Whites on the other.
It kind of makes me think of the 60’s and the separation of blacks and whites…it’s weird and I don’t like it, I want my chickens to get along…I hope they become friends soon!
And since we are on the subject of animals, I want to give you guys a little Snape update. He’s awesome! He hangs with me all day long. In fact, he is currently chillin on my desk right in between my arms and my keyboard. He likes to keep close, and I love it! I have to take a photo and show you already! If you happen to follow me on Snapchat then you’ve already seen a whole lot of this little black cat!

So another thing that’s totally not boring?
This Thai Pumpkin Laksa!
It’s full of so many great Thai flavors, and of course, lots of pumpkin – which yes, I promise pairs amazingly well with the Thai flavors going on here. This soup/noodle bowl is super simple too. Just add everything to a soup pot and simmer. Lots of ginger, a little soy sauce, canned coconut milk, pumpkin and just a small amount of peanut butter too. Like all my favorite flavors in one!!
And there are noodles involved too, AND it’s all totally HEALTHY.
Triple, YES.
Perfect for a Thursday night don’t you think??


Oh and the chickpeas!! Those are just YUM! I coated them in cinnamon sugar and roasted them until they where extra crunchy. I literally could snack on these chickpeas all day long. They are like a super healthy potato chip, but with cinnamon.
Gimme.


So tomorrow I’m thinking sweet?? Healthy today…sweets for Friday?!? You with me?



Nutritional information is only an estimate. The accuracy of the nutritional information for any recipe on this site is not guaranteed.
Thai Pumpkin Laksa with Crunchy "Fried" Chickpeas.
By halfbakedharvest
Course: Main Course
Cuisine: American, Asian, thai
Keyword: chickpeas, laksa, pumpkin
You have to try this combination, Thai Pumpkin Laksa with Crunchy "Fried" Chickpeas.
Ingredients
- 1 tablespoon sesame oil
- 2 cloves garlic minced or grated
- 1 inch fresh ginger grated
- 1 red fresno pepper seeds removed + chopped (may use a jalapeno if needed)
- 2 green onions chopped
- 3 1/2 cups chicken or vegetable broth
- 1 small pumpkin, peeled + cut into cubes (about 3 cups cubed)
- 1 tablespoon rounded creamy peanut butter
- 2 tablespoons soy sauce
- 1 tablespoon fish sauce
- 1 (14 ounce) can unsweetened coconut milk
- 1 large bunch broccolini stems trimmed
- 1/2 cup fresh cilantro chopped
- 1/4 cup fresh mint chopped
- 8 ounces rice noodles
- arils from 1 pomegranate
Crunchy "Fried" Chickpeas
- 2 (15 ounce) cans chickpeas drained + rinsed
- 3 tablespoons olive oil
- 1 teaspoon cinnamon
- 1 teaspoon brown sugar
- salt + pepper to taste
Instructions
-
Heat a large soup pot over medium heat and add the sesame oil. Once hot, add the garlic, ginger, fresno pepper and green onions. Cook 30 seconds to 1 minute or until soft + fragrant.
-
Slowly stir in the chicken or vegetable both and then add the cubed pumpkin. Bring the soup to a boil and simmer 15-20 minutes or until the pumpkin is fork tender. Add around half to 3/4 of the soup to a blender or food processor and blend until completely smooth. Return the soup to the pot.
-
Add the peanut butter, soy sauce, fish sauce and coconut milk, stirring to combine. Add the broccoli and cook until tender, about 8-10 minutes.
-
Meanwhile, cook the rice noodles according to package directions.
-
Once the broccoli is tender, remove it from the heat and stir in the cilantro + mint. Ladle the soup into bowls and add a big handful of rice noodles. Top with crunchy chickpeas (recipe below) and pomegranate arils. EAT UP!
Crunchy "Fried" Chickpeas
-
Preheat the oven to 425 degrees F.
-
Spread the chickpeas out on a towel and dry them completely. Add the chickpeas to a baking sheet and toss with the olive oil, cinnamon, brown sugar, salt + pepper. Toss well to evenly coat. Roast for 20 minutes and then stir the chickpeas around and roast another 20 minutes or until the chickpeas are browned and crunchy. Remove from the oven and serve warm atop the soup. Save any leftovers for snacking later!

A noodle for your Thursday? I do think so.
I love Thai curries, so this is totally up my alley! And I had no idea that pumpkin was considered a berry- a little mind blow right now!
This looks incredible! Autumn in a bowl. I’ve got a few pumpkins I was wandering what to do with so this will be it! I love crunchy chickpeas too – a great snack. But not added cinnamon to mine before – love this!
Gorgeous colours going on in that dish!
I loooove laksa – I love Thai food, period. – but I am sold on those chickpeas, I will have to try and do that soon!! Can I not add the sugar, though? WIll it work with only salt and pepper? Maybe some nutmeg??
http://bloglairdutemps.blogspot.pt/
HI Miranda!! You can leave the sugar out, no big deal! Salt + pepper is fine or cinnamon + salt, it all work! 🙂
As always this looks and sounds fantastic. I could happily just dig into a bowl right now :-). Have a great day.
Such a unique and flavourful sounding soup! Love this!
Such a unique recipe you really created amazing pumpkin dish.
Beautiful presentation, pictures and recipe! I love the addition of pomegranate 🙂
The colors are beautiful and I can imagine the amazing taste! Hurray for Pumpkin season!!
You’re recipes NEVER disappoint!! I know this will taste amazing because girl I have tried at least 5 of your recipes and they are ALL fabulous!
SO GOOD! Peanut butter, soy sauce and pumpkin sound amazing! I have to try this!
This looks incredible! I’m super excited to try it. Do you think you could blend all of the pumpkin or would it make it too thick? I have an immersion blender and it would be way easier to just blend it all!
Hi Stacy!!!
I think blending it all will be fine. Hope you love this!!
You sure know how to make things look beautiful! I don’t know laksa, but this sounds incredible! I love the balance of savory and sweet going on, too. Yum!
xx Sydney
Crunchy chickpeas are the bomb-dot-com. LOVE this pumpkin laksa too — so seasonal and beautiful!
I must of stayed up half the night reading your blog last night. I love hearing about your life in Colorado and love all the fall inspired food you have out right now! Your photos are beautiful but even better are the recipes. You use so many wonderful flavors together! Your are truly an inspiration and I admire your work!
AWE!! Wow, thank you SO much!!! Honestly, so happy you are enjoy the recipes and photos. Makes my day!! 🙂
Once again you nailed another pumpkin recipe. Give me all the noodles!
Love all the colors and flavors in this! Looks incredible!
this look 100% asian recipe, colors are attractive love it so much
Another day and another terrific recipe! Home run as usual 🙂
I think I read some where that you are supposed to sneak a new chicken into the flock at night. Seems in the morning their little heads cannot remember who was roosting next to them last night so they just accept the newbie as though they had been with the family all along. Not sure what you do now. I don’t know if they even see difference in color? I bet someone has researched it, though!
haha! That is pretty funny! Thanks for the tip! 🙂
Wow!!! I need to make this soon it looks amazing and the pictures are gorgeous! Yes please take some kitty pictures!
Made this tonight for my family and they loved it!!! Had to make a few little changes due to lack of ingredients and time but it was absolutely delicious. Thank you very much for the great recipe!! Love your photography too 🙂
I was in Singapore last week and it was my mission to track down a delicious bowl of Laska soup. Mission accomplished! Your rendition looks so great and unique.
Oh the pictures are wonderful today and so is the food.
What a perfect fall dish! Love the fusion of a Thai laksa with those gorgeously bright pomegranate seeds. Another absolute winner Tieghan that I will definitely be saving to make next autumn when it is pumpkin season over here. X
PS fried chickpeas are GENIUS!!
Snape sounds like such a cutie! My cat Latte was following me around all day today, I kind of loved it! 🙂 And this soup looks so good, I’m loving all the colors!
Wow, this looks amazing!!
I’m on a bit of a pumpkin kick too, I just can’t get enough.
Katie xoxo
http://www.iheartkatiecakes.co.uk
What a color composition. I love it, and I can imagine the taste truly.
I love thai food and this is perfect for my vegetarian needs, thank you x
http://www.wonkylauren.com
Hi Tieghan,
I’ve followed your website for a long time– I love your recipes and food photography! Something’s been bothering me for awhile now, though, so I thought I’d finally come out with it.
I think it’s culturally insensitive to reduce ethnic cuisines into a couple of flavors/ingredients and then label a recipe those ingredients as if it were an authentic recipe. In this case, what you’ve created here isn’t a Thai dish at all, but because you were maybe inspired by actual Thai food and used some coconut milk and Thai flavors, you’ve labeled it “Thai.” It’s a delicious and unusual recipe, but it isn’t Thai.
I’m not a food purist by any means. I think people should alter recipes and find new ways to do things. I guess to put it more clearly, the issue for me is when someone (usually from a privileged background) incorrectly attributes things (in your case, recipes) to an ethnic group. I think it’s fine to say “Thai inspired” or “Thai fusion” or just leave out “Thai” entirely. The reality is that you made your own recipe that is very different from authentic Thai food.
If I put peanut butter and jelly in a tortilla, I can call it a burrito, but that doesn’t make it Mexican. I can put pico de gallo on my pho, but that doesn’t make it Mexican, either. Food isn’t just about its ingredients or flavor profiles: it’s also about culture and history.
I’ve noticed you do this a lot: from your Coconut Honey Lime Filipino Chicken Adobo Skewers, to your Hawaiian Carne Asada Fries with Pineapple Pico De Gallo, to your Vietnamese Meatball Lettuce Wraps with Mango Salad + Cilantro-Basil Cashew Sauce, to your Indian Style Baked Eggs with Green Harissa + Naan. When you take a Tunisian dish (shakshuka) and pour a Moroccan condiment on it (Harissa), it hardly seems fair to call it Indian just because you added garam masala.
I would like to just politely request that going forward you avoid positioning your recipes as if they are authentic ethnic cuisine. I think your recipes would have sounded and looked just as heavenly if they had been titled Coconut Honey Lime Chicken Adobo Skewers, Carne Asada Fries with Pineapple Pico De Gallo, Meatball Lettuce Wraps, etc… and would have been more respectful to the ethnic cuisines that inspire you.
Thanks for hearing me out. I really do love your recipes and think you are such a creative chef and I’m looking forward to the release of your book. I wish I could cook like you! I really hope you take some time and consider my request.
Eden
HI Eden,
Thank you for kindly pointing out your issue. I will think about everything you said for naming recipes from here on out. That said, the recipes I am naming, I do feel are correct. They may not be perfect, but to most people these are Thai flavors. I understand everything you are saying and in no way have meant to offend you. Hope you understand and again thanks for your kind words. I am so flattered! AND thank you for kindly pointing this out. That is not always the case and I really appreciate you being kind!!
Have a great weekend! 🙂
Curious about the response to critique regarding cultural insensitivity. When you say “to most people” to whom are you referring? Do you think that most Thai people would call this Thai food? I hope that you sincerely will consider the above comments in a serious way, in spite of having already decided that you think you are correct. Yes, this soup sounds tasty, but I do also find it a tad presumptuous to call it Thai soup. Just my own humble opinion.
Hi Jerris,
Thank you for your thoughts and opinion’s, I really appreciate them.
Hope you are having a great weekend, Tieghan!
oh yes, we can’t get enough pumpkin this year as well! could eat it with everything 😀
This recipe looks and sounds so good <3
Hi Tieghan~ I know that fresh pumpkin is the absolute best to use in this recipe, but if I don’t have fresh pumpkin how much canned would be equivalent to use for this? Thank you!!
HI! I would go with 1 1/2 to 2 cups canned pumpkin. Hope you love this! 🙂
Absolutely amazing. I made it tonight and I can’t tell you how phenomenal this is. I was hesitant on the pomegranate but it adds such a nice sweet pop of flavor. I love this recipe.
Oh awesome! So happy it was a hit! THANKS!
so beautiful! what lens are you using? the photos are amazing xx
Thanks Carly!
I use either a Canon 50mm 1.2 or 35mm 1.4. THANKS! 🙂
I leave in Malaysia, and I can’t always have thai food because it’s too spicy. Thanks for sharing this recipe with a much more mild flavor! I’ll definitely give it a try!
xo
http://dearbabymj.com
When I saw this recipe I just had to try it. Made it last night and all I can say is WOW!!! It was phenomenal. I’m not a huge cilantro fan but I loved the flavor combination of the cilantro with the pomegranate arils. And the toasted chickpeas added a nice texture to the dish. I think the next time I make it I’m going to steam the broccoli and then add it to the bowl, rather than letting it wilt in the soup. I liked the flavor of the soup before the addition of the broccoli. I’m wondering what the soup would taste like if crab meat were substituted for the broccoli….
I made this last night and it was delicious! I think I missed the window of time where pumpkins are available at the grocery store so I used sweet potato instead, other than that I followed the recipe exactly and it turned out great! I thought the soup tasted a bit too peanut buttery at first but then once the herbs, noodles, chickpeas and pomegranate were added it was perfect. So unique, I loved it and my husband did too and he’s a carnivore! I love how the main dishes you post are always a complete meal with carbs, protein and veggies, makes things so much easier for me 🙂
Thanks!
SO happy you loved this. THANK YOU!
Hey, I wanted to quickly point out that I found this recipe under the vegetarian tag on your recipe finder. While the recipe has no meat, and you do say chicken or veggie broth – Fish sauce is not quite vegetarian, just wanted to give you a heads up!
Thanks for the heads up Jessica I will make a note on the recipe! Happy new Year! 🙂
My friend sent me the link to this recipe – I can’t wait to make it!! As you’ve probably seen with your red chickens, they will probably never mix with the whites… mine never did. And, as you’ve also probably seen, your reds started producing eggs – lots of eggs – gradually. We had that happen one year because the red chickens we bought were still young… but it didn’t take them long to get up to speed! I made a chart for my husband and he’d enter the amount of eggs the hens laid each day. In the beginning it was only a few, but in a few weeks we were getting 12 eggs pretty much every day. ++ Great website!!! ; o )
Hey! I haven’t tried this recipe yet but it looks super good! I just wanted to ask, what could I replace the fish sauce with? I’m a vegetarian so I would like to exclude that. If there’s something that would be a suitable replacement for it, or if I could leave it out all together without too drastic of an effect, I would really appreciate it. Thanks (:
HI! You can leave it out or swap it with soy sauce. Let me know if you have other questions, thank you and enjoy! 🙂
Made this last night. I added sautéed tofu instead of chickpeas. Everyone loved it. Thank you! When can we preorder your cookbook?
SO happy you loved it, thank you!! The cookbook comes out Fall of 2017, so my guess is around early spring 2017. THANKS!
This is amazing! Made it for dinner and 3 out 4 loved it!! (Don’t worry about #4 she only eats meat) easy, delicious and filling!!
Eh…… this is the prettiest bowl of noodle i have ever seen. Then I read more of your blog and recipes…..
If you open a restaurant, the customer will be like living in heaven man……..
How can you be so creative and clever? colors, spices and and and and……..you play it all so well, so good, so pretty.
WOW!! Thank you so much!! I’ve contemplated it before! Maybe one day!!
Thanks for the recipe it was amazing.
So glad to hear that! Thanks Sharon!
Thanks for the recipe it was amazing. How ever it’s time consuming .
Sorry about that Sharon, but I am so happy you enjoyed it! Thank you!
All photo looks nice, I’m not sure how it tastes though as it really out of my element as a Thai person.
As a Thai person, it’s hard to figure out how “Thai” this curry be. We don’t use soy sauce but fish sauce and that what make Thai food taste different. We don’t use peanut butter in any of our food because it’s western thing that doesn’t existed in our cuisine. We only use pumpkin in dessert not food because to us it’s not something we will eat as a main dish.
Sorry to be a bit negative but it’s always difficult for me to see the recipe that claim itself as a “Thai food” without going near the Thai food at all; ingredient-wise, overall-image-wise, or taste-wise. I think it’s good to mix both world together as a fusion food but to claim it as a Thai curry, it’s very much a cliche word to get attention to it.
Best.
Hi, I’m sorry you weren’t happy with my choice of “Thai” ingredients. I hope you can get past the name and try the food! Hope you love the Recipe. Thanks.
Made this for supper last night using my instant pot and it was soooo good!! I ended up burning the hell out of half my chickpeas though (40 minutes was about 10 minutes to long for my oven) I would really love to see you make more vegan/vegetarian friendly dishes as I sure miss cooking your recipes since we went veggie earlier this year. Also, don’t let the food title naysayers get you down, I really appreciate having a hint about what the flavors will be like as I have young kids and they don’t have the palate yet for certain ethnic foods (that’s a big no on Ethiopian food so far!)
Thanks so much Genevieve, I am so happy you liked this dish! I will also take that into consideration! ?
This looks AH-Mazing! I love all things Thai and soups. You can tell with all my recipes that I share (www.behindtheplates.com). This one is defintiely going on my winter “try” list!!
Yes, i’ll check it out right now!! Hope you love it! Thank you
this recipe is perfection! i made some subtitutions: canned organic pumpkin, tamari instead of soy sauce, white miso instead of fish sauce (good vegan sub) smoked paprika, a little sriracha, thai basil instead of cilantro, and with udon noodles. love the addition of the mint! sooooo yummy! thanks!
Ooo sounds delish! I am so glad you liked it Tori, thanks!
Can you clarify how much pumpkin and chickpeas are called for please? This is how these two items are listed for me: 1 cups small pumpkin peeled + cut into cubes (about 3 ),2 ounce cans chickpeas drained + rinsed, 15. Also, can canned pumpkin be used, and if so do you have an idea of how much? Thanks!
Hi Tammy! So sorry for the confusion. It is one (14 ounce) can coconut milk and one (15 ounce) can chickpeas. For the pumpkin, it is one small pumpkin, which is about 3 cups cubed pumpkin. And yes, you can use 1 can of pumpkin in it’s place. Hope that clarifies everything, let me know if you have any other questions. Hope you love this!
Made this for lunch for my family today, and they all loved it and said I hit the bulls eye with this soup.
Yay!! SO happy everyone liked it!! Thanks Pika!
My family have recently gone vegan and we just made this dish, absolutely delicious! Can’t fault a single element and the pomegranate is a brilliant contrast. Thank you for all of your hard work Tieghan, we’ve made a habit of trying one of your dishes together every Saturday for a while now!
That is so amazing! I am really happy you and your family loved this recipe & I hope you continue to love all the Saturday dishes! ?
This looks amazing! Could you use butternut squash instead of pumpkin?
Yes, butternut squash would be delicious! Please let me know if you have any other questions. I hope you love this recipe. Thank you!
Hello I’ve never used pumpkin in a recipe before (i’m a new cook) and was wondering if I should use something like the small pumpkins they sell for pies? Or should I be using a different pumpkin?? Thank you for the help!
Yes, use the small pumpkins they use for pie. That is perfect! Please let me know if you have any other questions. Hope you love this recipe! 🙂
I actually didn’t see this until after I had already made it, so I ended up using an acorn squash! This is by far the most daring recipe I’ve tried since really starting to cook and I absolutely loved it! I was worried about all the different flavors being cohesive but they really worked! My husband said “this is really weird, but for some reason I really like it and can’t stop eating it!” Haha! So I will take that as a win and I’ll be making this all winter. Thank you for this recipe!
I am so happy you loved this Emily! Thank you!
Holy delicious! I was standing in my kitchen trying to figure out what to make with the half can of pumpkins and can of coconut milk I had in the fridge…and I am SO glad I stumbled onto this recipe! I added cubed sweet potato for texture, since my pumpkin was of the canned variety and it turned out amazing. I made a vegan “fish” sauce to sub in for the optional fish sauce the recipe called for, and I am so glad I did! It added the perfect layer of depth to this dish. 10/10 ? (I also used sweet potato glass noodles since I didn’t have any rice noodles, YUM)
Sounds amazing Steff! I am really glad you loved this! Thanks!
I just made this and it was delicious! Thanks for the recipe.
I am so happy you loved this! Thank you!
WOW! AMAZING! I used butternut squash, and adapted the cooking times to make this in my pressure cooker (cooked the noodles right in it too for 1 minute on low). Just had to say THANK YOU for sharing. You have a new fan!
Awh thank you!! I am so happy to hear that this turned out amazing for you Sarah!
Wow, sure likes a receipt that i would like. Very easy to follow and colourful too.
Thank you Dayle!
Can you sub canned pumpkin for this? How much would you recommend using?
Sure! I would use 1 (14 ounce) can of pumpkin. Please let me know if you have other questions. Hope you love this recipe! Thanks! 🙂
Tieghan – I love your recipes! They are so unique and relatively easy to make. I made this tonight for my partner and me and we both loved it! I added some sambal oelek, miso paste and Thai red curry paste for an extra kick!
Thank you Rohini! I am so glad you liked this recipe!
This is a great recipe – flavors and seasonings spot on. The noodles I used, however, soaked up all the broth so I would keep noodles separate and only add to individual serving bowls immediately before serving.
Thanks Chelsea!
Wonderful, colorful and tasty soup! I’ve made it many times already and often use fresly made coconut milk.
I also at the broccoli later as another reader pointed out, so that it doesn’t become to soggy.
I also agree with the reader who kindly suggested that you rather label your recipes as ‘Thai inspired” or ‘Thai fusion”.
The perfect soup to serve to guests. This soup is in my top 3 list of soups. ??
I posted a picture of it some time ago on my Instagram feed, but I just have to give you a five star rating!
Thank you for your lovely recipe!
Awh thank you so much! I am so glad you loved this soup! Did you happen to tag me? I would love to see it!
I made this for the first time today and it was fantastic! I used kabocha squash–baked it for about 1/2 hour so that it was easier to peel. Didn’t get all the green from the skin off, so the color was a bit muddy and not as vibrant orange as yours, but it was still delicious. My husband, who has a limited palate, liked it, though he’ll skip the pomegranate arils next time. They remind him of acetone. I liked the tangy burst of pomegranate, and the crunchy garbanzos, as a contrast to the rich lusciousness of the laksa. I’m planning to make this for someone we are having over for dinner, because I think they’ll really like it.
Thank you so much Caroline! I am so glad you loved this recipe!
Really nice recipe.
I’ve used squash in place of pumpkin and worked alright. Only one thing: I would suggest adding peanut butter along with 1/2 or 2/3 of the soup to blend as otherwise peanut butter doesn’t dissolve when added straight to the soup for the last few minutes if cooking.
P.S.
These food photos look sooooo damn goooood!
Thank you Jan!
2nd time making this recipe, good dish but one question: How on earth did you come up with 20 minutes prep time??? I can see that if you get canned everything but fresh pumpkin and pomegranate alone took me the better part of an hour…still a good recipe but this is definitely a lengthy process to do solo
Hi Shawn! I am so sorry about that. Prep time is different for everyone, so it is hard to come up with an average time. I am so glad you still loved this recipe and it turned out amazing for you!
What great pictures…WOW!
A few questions…
Can I leave out the peanut butter…have allergies and others here hate peanuts.
Can I combine butternut squash, acorn squash and canned pumpkin in this?
Any other suggestions would be appreciated.
HI! Yes, you can omit the peanut butter. I recommend using butternut and acorn squash. I dont think canned pumpkin is needed. Please let me know if you have any other questions. I hope you love this recipe. Thanks so much!! xTieghan ?
Delicious soup! The chickpeas and the pomegranate really make it a winner – sooooo good. When I tried the soup initially I found it fairly sweet (my pepper may not have been spicy enough to offset it) so I added some sirarcha. Thanks for the recipe!
Thank you Kianna! I am so glad you loved this!
Can’t wait to try this recipe!! Just wondering if you could use canned pumpkin and get the same outcome?
Thanks!!
I love this so much! It is my new favorite pumpkin soup and my whole family agrees. I have made it twice in the past 2 weeks. To make it weeknight friendly, I use canned pumpkin. Including prep, it is ready in under an hour.
Thank you so much for this recipe! <3 your website
Awh you are too kind! Thank you so much Raquel! xTieghan
Hi! How much pumpkin should I use if I already pureed it? Thanks!
Hey Natalie,
I would use about 1 1/2 cups of pumpkin. I hope you love the recipe, please let me know if you have any other questions! xTieghan
Hi what if I have canned pumpkin ? How would the recipe change?
Hey Julia,
I would use 1 1/2 cups of canned pumpkin. I hope you love the recipe, please let me know if you have any other questions! xTieghan
This soup changed my life
I love that! xTieghan