This is a fabulous “throw it all in the slow cooker” Pea and Ham soup. There’s no need to cook the onion separately – it “sautés” itself in the fat from the ham hock that rises to the surface. Thick, hearty soup broth infused with incredible flavour from the ham bone!
A worthy ending for your leftover Christmas ham bone, or use store bought. Make this in your slow cooker or on the stove!
Pea and Ham Soup
I’ve always said that Lentil Soup is the least sexy looking soup in the world.
But in hindsight, I think Pea and Ham Soup should take that title.
I mean, think about it. A sparkling white Corn Chowder is pretty. A Thai Tom Yum Soup is colourful and vibrant. Creamy Carrot Soup is a cheerful bright orange colour. And a fiery red Laksa looks as bold as it tastes.
But Pea Soup? It’s brown more than green. Kahki at best.
So no, it’s not glamorous.
But this ugly duckling is seriously delicious. One bite, and you won’t be able to stop!!
What goes in Pea and Ham Soup
Here’s what you need for pea and ham soup. I’ve used a store bought ham hock here because I used up all the ham bones I managed to score from friends and even mere acquaintances. Yep, when it comes to rounding up ham bones, I’m shameless!!
Make sure you use a ham bone with plenty of meat because more meat means more flavour imparted into the soup – and more shredded ham!
Green split peas – these are just dried peas that are halved (split!) which means they cook faster and there’s no need to soak overnight (such as with most types of beans for things like Southern Baked Beans). They taste quite neutral, slightly earthy, and it absorbs the flavour of whatever they’re cooked in – in this case, ham! When cooked for a long time like we do here (in order for the ham meat to be ultra tender), they become creamy and thicken the soup;
WATER, no broth – the ham bone releases so much flavour that all we need is water for the soup broth. How good is that??!!
I love how economical pea soup is when made using leftover ham bone because the broth just needs water – no stock!
The Ham Hock – ham bone
If you’re wondering what a ham hock is, it’s a ham bone. And it is literally the bone inside a leg of ham, left after carving off all the ham (ie the cold cuts sold at delis). So it is already cooked – well, smoked.
If you buy one, you’ll find it looks a lot neater than a scrappy leftover leftover ham bone from a homemade Glazed Ham. The store bought ones are cut neatly then from the looks of it, they are re-smoked to seal the surface of the pink meat part.
Where to buy ham hocks
Store bought ham hock is sometimes sold over the counter and delis, otherwise it’s vac packed and sold with ham and similar items in the refrigerator section.
Make sure it’s meaty!
While store bought are intentionally nice and meaty (to flavour the soup and for plenty of shredded ham), leftover ham bones have been known to be picked clean by Ham Monsters. So if your ham bone isn’t meaty enough, just add a hunk of ham into the soup as well – just to ensure you get enough flavour into the broth.
Do the same if your store bought ham hock weighs less than 1 kg / 2lb. 🙂
Alternative: give the broth a flavour boost with a dash of stock/bouillon powder.
Just place everything into the slow cooker then turn it on
No need to sauté onion separately beforehand. In this recipe, the onion will rise to the surface and “sauté” in the ham fat. I’ve tried it sautéing onion first, then using my method and there is no difference in flavour.
The peas will be so soft they become creamy. So blitzing is optional. What I like to do is partially puree the soup using a handheld blender stick. This way you get the best of both worlds – a smooth, creamy soup broth with soft bits of pea and veg bits!
How long to cook Pea and Ham Soup
Make sure you slow cook Pea and Ham Soup in the slow cooker for at least 8 hours, but 10 hours is even better (on low). The ham meat should literally fall off the bone and be shredded with a touch.
Easily shreddable ham is an indicator that it’s been cooked long enough to release a ton of flavour into the broth!
Are split peas good for you?
They are! They’re high in fibre and protein, can help reduce cholesterol and are low in fat. But split peas are a higher carbohydrate vegetable so watch your intake if you’re on a low carb diet.
What to serve with Pea and Ham Soup
A hunk of warm crusty bread (preferably slathered in butter) is literally made for dunking into this thick soup.
In fact, forget spoons. Imagine eating the whole thing using bread as your feeding tool of choice?? 🙌🏻 For homemade, try this quick no yeast Irish Soda Bread or yeast free Sandwich bread. If you’ve got the time, make this crusty Artisan Bread – pretty sure it’s now officially the world’s easiest yeast bread! (It’s no knead, very foolproof).
OR – if you want to go all out, upgrade to Garlic Bread or CHEESY Garlic Bread!
Things to dunk into soup
If you’d like to add a side salad, try it with a Cucumber Salad for lovely contrasting crisp freshness, or for something different (and totally fabulous), a French Carrot Salad with Honey Dijon Dressing! – Nagi x
PS Some recipes dress up Pea and Ham soup by adding spinach or frozen peas at the end to make the soup colour greener. I choose to celebrate the unattractiveness and focus on flavour, flavour, flavour!
Watch how to make it
Hungry for more? Subscribe to my newsletter and follow along on Facebook, Pinterest and Instagram for all of the latest updates.
Pea and Ham Soup (slow cooker or stove)
Ingredients
- 500g / 1lb dried split peas (Note 1)
- 1.2-1.5kg / 2.4-3lb ham hock (aka ham bone), bacon hock or MEATY leftover ham bone (Note 2)
- 1/4 tsp salt (start with less, adjust later)
- 3/4 tsp black pepper
- 2 garlic cloves , minced
- 2 bay leaves , dried or fresh
- 1 onion , finely chopped
- 1 carrot , peeled and finely chopped
- 2 celery sticks , finely chopped
- 8 cups (2 litres/qts) water
Garnishes / serving:
- Parsley , finely chopped
- Crusty bread for dunking!
Instructions
- Place peas in slow cooker, push ham in. Scatter all ingredients around the ham bone, then pour over water.
- Slow cook 8 to 10 hours on LOW or 6 hours on HIGH. (Or 2.5 hours on low on stove, 1 h – 1 hr 20 min pressure cooker/Instant Pot on HIGH)
- Remove ham bone, shred ham meat. Discard bone and fatty skin.
- Remove bay leaves. Use a stick blender to blitz 2 or 3 times – thickens soup but doesn’t make it completely smooth (my preference, you can blend completely if you want).
- Return ham into slow cooker, stir. Taste and add more salt if needed (soup gets lots of salt from ham).
- Serve garnished with parsley. Serve with crusty bread for dunking – make a quick Irish Soda Bread, Garlic Bread or upgrade to Cheesy Garlic Bread!
Recipe Notes:
Nutrition Information:
More ways with leftover Ham Bone!
Here are other recipes I’ve shared made using ham hocks. They make an amazing way to flavour broth!
And more chunky, hearty soups
Life of Dozer
This is what he does on cleaning days – he gets sick of trailing me up and down the stairs as I whizz back and forth between floors with brooms and mops and vacuum cleaners so he eventually just plonks himself down halfway on the landing.
Don’t you love how relaxed he looks while I’m hot, sweaty and exhausted from manic cleaning??🙄
Rachael Bennett says
Amazing and easy I used to cook bone for a day then cool overnight skin and do veggies but this is fantastic thanks!!!
Bev says
Easiest soup – it’s magic! I won’t make it any other way again. I did use yellow split peas instead of green since that’s what I had in the cupboard and it turned out exactly like Quebec-style Habitant pea soup. Thank you for another great recipe and so happy to hear Dozer is coming along so well. Loved the photo of him in the water – that smile says everything.
steven peterson says
Arigato Nagi,
Made your pea soup tonight and it was great. I did add two teaspoons of fresh thyme leaves and an additional 1lb. of pork sausage (cuz we like it meaty). The soup came out great and I served it with fresh baked corn bread. So good!
patricia worton says
Hi Nagi
Thank you for such amazing recipes. I have made this soup before and loved it so here we go again with left over xmas ham bone. I have made quite a few of your recipes and ❤️ everyone, also have your cookbook. Can’t live without you.
Penny says
This was absolutely delicious using the last of our Christmas ham hock, served with Nagi’s artisan bread.
Renea says
I made this with left over Christmas ham in the slow cooker on high for 6 hours. Delicious! The flavour balance was just right. I was tempted add a bit more salt but decided against it until after I had it with some sourdough with a thick spread of butter. The salt in the butter with the bread was all it needed. I’ve made pea and ham soup all sorts of ways and even after blitzing, there’s sometimes a grainy texture. Not with this method. So creamy. Next time I’m going to try the 10 hours on high. Thank you Nagi for another awesome foolproof recipe.
Frances says
Am definitely going to make this, but with blue boiler peas. Mum always made her Dutch pea soup with them, and they are less claggy than the split peas, and seem to be suddenly more available in the shops
Delphia says
Made this tonight, we have a houseful of covid 3 days before Christmas. Seriously don’t need that but this soup is amazing. Used the leftover ham bone from last week & threw in a half can of tomato soup, also used soup mix rather than peas as that’s what I had. Creamy, thick & flavoursome.
Renee says
Oh my goodness this was delicious! The meat was so tender, it fell off the bone, and I had to fish around in the soup for all the little bones. Next time, I will put the ham hock in a cheesecloth, hah!
But for real, my husband and I both loved this. It’s the best soup I’ve ever had,
David Gateley says
Recently I am a single guy. Consequently cooking is a challenge for me. I have made this soup with this recipe 4/5 times now. So easy and simple to follow, and the result is tremendous. I have looked at the other and they just don’t sound right. In my novice opinion there doesn’t appear to be enough peas. And the cooking time appears to be inadequate. I will keep with this recipe. I may add some garlic.
Sarah-Jane says
Eeeee so excited to make this – it’s just before 9am on a wintry Thursday and it’s in the slow cooker 😀 Question: my slow cooker is only 3.5L so I could only get about 1.25L water in before it was absolutely full to the brim. Should I trim fat off the ham bone? It weighed 1.45kg so on the more generous side. Or, should I just leave it and top up with more water at the end?
Josie says
Delish!!!!
Helena Denel says
Hi Nagi,
We live on a farm and our veg can vary in size dramatically. When I see “1 onion” in recipes I have no idea what it means. Just weighed 2 onions in the pantry: 150g and 260g. That’s 73% difference and it makes a big difference in the final outcome. Can you please let me know your average weight of onions? Save me experimenting.
Will be making the soup this week to give to my kids when they come over – Emergency Rations!
Thanks heaps and have fun!
steven peterson says
I used 2 cups chopped (~1 very large onion, or ~2 medium onions) and it came out very nice.
Jenny says
I have always cooked the onion but never again.So easy to set and forget.
Delicious with a few frozen meals set aside.
Sandra says
You’re right Nagi, it’s about as attractive as puréed frogs, but it’s so tasty, so flavoursome, so comforting and so simple! Always excited by the end result. 😁
Angela says
Made this today turned out great. Followed exact recipe. In my bowl I added a good squeeze of lime.
Liana says
What a winner! This is so incredibly easy to make and is simply delicious. It’s going to be a regular addition to the menu (like many other Recipe Tin Eats recipes!). Since finding your recipes I hardly feel like takeaways because your recipes are so simple and cost effective. Thank you so much Nagi
Ross says
Surely you need to remove the carrot or you will turn it into orange soup!
Rebecca says
You know ham hock is the foot without the trotter not the bone in the leg from ham and resealed it’s smoked with the other parts 🙂
This is a fab recipe Thankyou
Michelle says
My husband loves/ed pea and ham soup.
Unfortunately if you have Fruktane/Fruktose malabsorption and need a low Fodmap diet, it cannot be enjoyed without massive indigestion and belly pain/gas.
I had to resort to dark green leek (thanks, I am eating the rest of leek in soups and woah, I soon can’t see leek anymore), potatoes, carrots subs when he craved some ham hog soup.
I myself eat no meat.
So there goes the
good old pea and ham soup.
But so true,
the look is far from appealing
(I had to laugh when reading your introduction and the title taken from the lentil soup passed to the pea soup, ROFL), the taste is super yummy!
So if you know a trustful source of ham (we have farmers raising free range with mum sow and slaughtering on site)
and and love peas and hearty winter soups, this is a must!
This version looks delish!
Alison Key says
I am so relieved that I am not alone in this – I love pea and ham soup, but it does not love me.