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More about Joe →That first cool evening in September when you crack the window and suddenly want something warm in your hands this is exactly when Moroccan Lentil Immune Soup earns its spot on the stove. Bold cumin, bright turmeric, and hearty lentils come together in one pot that smells like it took all day.
I started shooting this soup back in early fall a few years ago, and the moment the steam hit the lens I knew we had something. After a long shoot day, it’s the kind of dinner that feels substantial without weighing you down that in-between feeling that late summer to fall cooking really calls for. The trick I always come back to: bloom your spices in oil first, even just 60 seconds the color payoff alone is worth it, and after testing this dozens of times, that step is what separates flat from genuinely rich and layered.

Moroccan Lentil Immune Soup Warm Comforting Recipe Your Family Will Love
Ingredients
Notes
- Harissa spice levels vary, so start with less and adjust to taste. Store leftovers in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 5 days. Reheat gently on the stove or in the microwave. Freeze in airtight containers for up to 3 months and thaw in the fridge overnight before reheating.

Why You’ll Love This Moroccan Lentil Immune Soup
This soup keeps earning its place in the weekly rotation because it hits that exact sweet spot between cozy and light. The harissa and warm spices make it feel indulgent, while the red lentils and carrots keep things grounded and satisfying. On those tired weeknight evenings when the idea of cooking feels like too much, this is the pot worth reaching for low effort, one blender pass, and dinner actually feels like dinner.
It’s also fully vegan and gluten-free without trying to be, which means it works for nearly everyone at the table.
Key Ingredients and What They Do
Every ingredient in this soup is doing real work. A few worth highlighting:
- Red lentils they break down quickly and create a thick, creamy body without any cream
- Harissa smoky, complex heat that drives the whole flavor profile; spice level varies by brand, so taste yours before adding
- Fresh ginger and garlic bloomed in oil with the dried spices, the color shift alone tells you something is working
- Cashew butter or tahini blended in at the end, this is what gives the soup its silky, restaurant-quality finish
- Fresh lemon juice stirred in last, it lifts the whole pot and keeps it from feeling flat
Note: The recipe also offers plain full-fat Greek yogurt as an alternative to cashew butter or tahini use whatever you have on hand.
How to Make It
The process is straightforward and comes together in one pot, with a single blender step at the end.
- Heat olive oil in a large Dutch oven over medium heat. Add the diced onion and carrot coins and cook for about 8 minutes, until the onion turns translucent and the carrots begin to soften.
- Stir in the minced garlic, fresh ginger, harissa, ground coriander, and turmeric. Cook for 2 minutes until fragrant, then season with kosher salt.
- Add the dry red lentils and stir to coat in the spices. Pour in the vegetable broth and bring to a boil. Reduce heat, cover, and simmer on low for about 35 minutes.
- Carefully ladle the soup into a blender. Add the filtered water and cashew butter (or tahini or Greek yogurt). Hold a kitchen towel over the lid opening and blend until smooth, 45 to 60 seconds.
- Return to the pot, stir in fresh lemon juice, and adjust seasoning. Serve with sesame seeds, fresh cilantro or parsley, and a swirl of extra harissa if you like.
Pro Tip: When blending hot soups, remove the blender lid’s center cap and cover the opening loosely with a towel hot liquid builds pressure quickly and this simple habit keeps things safe.
Can You Make This Soup Ahead of Time?
Yes, and it actually improves the next day as the spices settle deeper into the base. Make a full batch on Sunday and you have lunch or dinner covered for most of the week.
- Refrigerate in an airtight container for up to 5 days
- Freeze in a freezer-safe container for up to 3 months thaw overnight in the fridge before reheating
- Reheat gently on the stovetop over medium-low heat, stirring occasionally, or microwave in 30-second intervals
The soup thickens considerably after chilling just stir in a splash of broth or water when reheating to bring it back to the right consistency.
Simple Swaps Worth Knowing
What makes this recipe so weeknight-friendly is how forgiving it is. A few easy adjustments:
- Swap cashew butter for tahini or full-fat Greek yogurt depending on what’s in your pantry
- Adjust the harissa quantity based on your brand mild harissa like Mina can be used at the full 4 tablespoons, but spicier varieties should start at 1 to 2
- Add extra vegetable broth or filtered water at the end if you prefer a thinner, more brothy texture
- Garnish with sesame seeds, fresh cilantro, parsley, or an extra drizzle of harissa for both color and contrast
FAQs ( Moroccan Lentil Immune Soup )
What spices go in Moroccan lentil soup?
This recipe uses ground coriander, turmeric, and harissa to build its warm, deeply spiced base. Fresh ginger and garlic round out the flavor.
Can I make Moroccan lentil soup in the crockpot?
This recipe is written for a stovetop Dutch oven and has not been tested in a slow cooker. Check your recipe card for the tested method.
Is Moroccan lentil soup vegan?
Yes, this dish is fully vegan and gluten-free when made with cashew butter or tahini instead of Greek yogurt.
How long does Moroccan lentil soup last in the fridge?
Store this meal in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 5 days.
Can I freeze Moroccan lentil soup?
Yes, this recipe freezes well for up to 3 months in an airtight freezer-safe container. Thaw overnight in the fridge before reheating.

This Moroccan Lentil Immune Soup comes together in one pot, and the payoff that silky, spice-forward finish looks as good as it tastes. The turmeric gives everything a gorgeous deep gold color, and the moment you blend in the cashew butter, the texture shifts into something that feels genuinely restaurant-worthy.
One small step that makes a big visual difference: bloom your spices in oil first. That brief step is where the color deepens and the whole bowl becomes something worth photographing. If you reach for tahini instead of cashew butter, the soup stays just as creamy, with a slightly more earthy tone. Make a full batch ahead of time and you’ll have ready-to-go dinners all week just stir in a splash of broth when reheating and it comes right back to life.
If you make this, sharing a photo of your bowl would be wonderful that swirl of harissa on top is hard to resist. Do you have a warming spiced soup that feels like a full reset on a hard day? Drop it in the comments, save this one for the people you love most, and pass it along when someone in your circle could use a little comfort on their table.