Albondigas Soup (Mexican Meatball Soup) is a classic Mexican Soup that’s about to become a family favorite!
Albondigas Soup is a traditional Mexican soup made with juicy, herb and rice infused meatballs (albondigas), and loaded with veggies: carrots, potatoes, celery, and chayote all simmered in a bold, aromatic tomato broth – and of course toppings! This Albondigas Soup recipe is hearty, warm, comforting and customizable with your favorite veggies. Albondigas Soup is make ahead friendly (tips and tricks included!) stores and reheats beautifully, is freezer friendly irresistibly delicious!
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You will love this Mexican Meatball Soup
Mexican Soups have a special place in my heart: Chicken Tortilla Soup, Mexican Chicken Corn Chowder, Chicken Fajita and Rice Soup, Cheesy Taco Soup, White Chicken Chili, Salsa Verde Chicken Tortilla Soup and Caldo de Pollo – some of the best soups you will ever taste! But you know what makes Mexican soup even better? Meatballs! – AKA Albondigas Soup!
If you aren’t familiar with Albondigas Soup, I’m excited to make the introduction because this soup is epic – loaded with everything delicious and then some. It tastes fresh due to the aromatic broth and veggies yet comforting due to the potatoes and meatballs and just plain fabulous due to the layers of flavor and texture all over. Patrick was swooning over this Albondigas Soup recipe and I hope you will be too!
WHAT IS albondigas Soup?
Albondigas is the Spanish word for meatballs, so Albondigas Soup simply means Meatball Soup – but this isn’t just any meatball soup. This soup will make you want to face plant into the broth and not come up until every meatball disappears. Here’s what makes this Albondigas Soup recipe so divine:
- THE MEATBALLS. The unique meatballs in traditional Albondigas Soup are the juicy, plump, delectable, flavor exploding star. They are loaded with both ground beef and pork, tons of fresh herbs such as mint, cilantro, parsley and oregano, aromatic onions and garlic and finally rice is used as the binding agent. Can we say texture, flavor and YUM?! The meatballs are made extra delicious – and extra easy -by cooking directly in the broth so they soak up even more flavor.
- THE BROTH. The tomato broth creates a soup that is both light yet hearty at the same time. The broth is a hypnotic blend of beef broth, fire roasted diced tomatoes, green chiles, sautéed onions and garlic, chili powder, cumin, coriander, and smoked paprika. Its subtle soothing warmth will warm you from the inside out.
- THE VEGGIES. The vegetables in Albondigas Soup are customizable. You can go as simple as potatoes and carrots but my favorite combination is carrots, celery, potatoes and chayote. The tender veggies with the juicy meatballs create a symphony of textures you won’t be able to get enough of!
- THE RICE. Rice is not only added to the albondigas, but often added to the soup as well elevating this meatball soup with yet another layer of satisfying al dente texture.
Now just think of the meatballs, the broth, the veggies and the rice combined into one bowl – and drool a little.
Albondigas Soup Recipe ingredients
There are a lot of ingredients listed for this Albondigas Soup recipe due to both the soup and the meatballs – but keep in mind while the soup does require sauteing a few veggies, the rest is dump and simmer; and all of the meatball ingredients are dump and roll – so please don’t be scared away!
THE SOUP
- Long grain white rice: you’ll want to use long grain white rice as opposed to brown rice otherwise it will not cook in the same time as the meatballs. You also don’t want to use short grain rice or it will cook in too short of a time.
- Oil: olive oil but any cooking oil such as avocado oil works great.
- Onion: you will need one small yellow onion for the Albondigas Soup recipe – half for the soup and half for the meatballs.
- Jalapeno: jalapeno adds a pop of flavor and a little kick but does not make this Albondigas Soup overly spicy, in my opinion. I would omit the jalapeno if you want to make sure this soup is very kid friendly and then add cayenne to taste or to individual servings. On the other hand, if you know you LOVE heat, then consider using 2 jalapeno peppers or even a serrano pepper. You may also use canned diced jalapeno peppers to taste.
- Carrots: chop the carrots into 1/2-inch thick slices. I cut the small ends of my carrots even thicker because they are so narrow.
- Celery: chop the celery into 1/2-inch thick slices so they don’t become too soft.
- Potatoes: I use Yukon gold potatoes chopped into 1-inch chunks for their buttery flavor. Yukon potatoes are also hard to overcook and never taste mealy. You may also use red potatoes or any other waxy potato but don’t use russet potatoes because they are more likely to fall apart.
- Chayote: is also known as mirliton squash of Mexican origin AKA the most delicious squash you have never heard of – you will LOVE it! They are pear or avocado in shape with a green skin. When cooked, chayote taste like a baby squash with a hint of sweet corn. I was able to easily find chayote at my local Sprouts (specialty produce store), so if you don’t spot them right away, make sure you ask someone before you give up. When buying chayote, choose firm, unblemished vegetables – the harder the better. If you can’t find chayote, you may substitute with zucchini.
- Garlic: I use 4 garlic cloves but you can use more or less depending on your garlic love.
- Green chiles: use one 4 oz. can mild diced green chiles. They are not spicy, just add tangy flavor, just take care you get the MILD vs HOT.
- Fire roasted diced tomatoes: the tomatoes and their juices add a tangy, slightly sweet and smoky flavor. Fire roasted tomatoes are very common and can be located with the other canned tomatoes at your grocery store. If you can’t find them, then you may substitute with regular diced tomatoes.
- Beef broth: use low sodium beef broth so we can control the salt otherwise your Albondigas Soup will be too salty.
- Seasonings: chili powder, ground cumin, dried oregano, ground coriander, smoked paprika, salt and pepper. It creates a dynamic, satisfying broth you will want to slurp with a straw.
THE MEATBALLS
- Beef: I recommend lean ground beef because it is fatty enough to taste juicy and lean enough to not make your soup greasy.
- Ground Pork: is sublime when combined with beef. I recognize it can be inconvenient, however, to use half beef and half pork, so you may substitute the pork with beef.
- Rice: serves as a binder in the meatballs instead of breadcrumbs. The recipe calls for par-boiling the rice before adding to the meatballs otherwise if you use cooked rice, the meatballs will be mushy; if you use uncooked rice, the meatballs will overcook by the time the rice is al dente.
- Onion: use the other half of the yellow onion not used in the soup and make sure to dice it fine so you don’t end up with raw onion in your meatballs.
- Garlic: 3 finely minced garlic cloves.
- Egg: one large egg will do the trick.
- Herbs: give these albondigas their distinctive alluring flavor. Chopped cilantro, mint, parsley and oregano. You may also use dried parsley and oregano – but fresh is always best!
- Seasonings: chili powder, ground cumin, salt, pepper to round out the flavor profile. If a meatball doesn’t have salt and pepper it will taste bland no matter how many other ingredients you add to it.
CAN I USE STORE BOUGHT MEATBALLS?
Like I mentioned previously, a huge part of what makes Albondigas Soup, Albondigas Soup are the unique meatballs made with rice and herbs so I HIGHLY encourage you to make these meatballs from scratch or the soup will not taste like it was intended. You may use store-bought meatballs, but just keep that in mind.
Also, store bought meatballs won’t necessarily save you any time because you whip up your meatballs while your soup is simmering – and nothing beats tender, juicy, homemade meatballs cooked from scratch in flavorful broth.
CAN I USE TURKEY MEATBALLS?
You may make your meatballs from ground beef, pork, lamb, turkey or chicken. Just keep in mind the higher the fat content, the juicier the meatballs. I also like to add a little beef bouillon to my turkey or chicken when I am substituting them for beef. The bouillon adds a rewarding beefy flavor. If using bouillon, you will want to reduce the amount of salt in the meatballs.
How to make Albondigas Soup
STEP 1 – Parboil Rice. Boil rice for 6 minutes. Take this time to chop your veggies for the soup. Note we are parboiling the rice, it will not be completely tender.
STEP 2 – Sauté Veggies. Cook onions, jalapenos, carrots, celery, potatoes, garlic and all seasoning to enhance their flavor and expedite the cooking process.
STEP 3 – Simmer. Add tomatoes, green chiles and broth then bring to a boil, and reduce to a simmer for 20-25 minutes while you make the meatballs.
STEP 4 – Meatballs. Add egg to a large bowl and whisk. Add 1 cup parboiled rice and all remaining meatball ingredients and mix well. Shape 1 tablespoon-size meatballs and place on a parchment lined baking sheet; about 40-45 meatballs.
STEP 5 – Simmer meatballs in soup. Add uncooked meatballs, remaining rice, and chopped chayote to the soup. Bring to a boil then reduce to a gentle simmer for an additional 12-15 minutes or until meatballs are cooked through and rice is tender.
STEP 6 – Toppings! Ladle Albondigas Soup into bowls and top with desired toppings.
Albondigas Soup Recipe tips and tricks
- Use a large pot. This Albondigas Soup recipe makes a large quantity so make sure to use a large pot otherwise you will need to half the recipe. You can also scale down the recipe if you don’t have a large family and don’t want leftovers. If you do love leftovers (raising my hand high), then you will love this Albondigas Soup for an easy lunch or dinner!
- Customize vegetables. I love the combo of veggies in this Albondigas Soup recipe- but there’s a lot of flexibility! Other delicious vegetable options include green beans, bell peppers, zucchini, corn, peas, and cabbage. Just be aware of veggie cooking times – for example, green beans take longer to cook than peas and cabbage which just takes minutes.
- Parboil rice for the juiciest meatballs. If don’t parboil the rice then you will have to cook the meatballs longer in order to soften the rice which results in overcooked, dry, falling apart meatballs; OR if you cook the meatballs just until cooked through the rice will still be crunchy. So, please parboil the rice and everyone wins!
- Wet hands to make meatballs. If your hands get too sticky when making meatballs, you can either dampen your palms or lightly spray them with nonstick cooking spray.
- Uniform meatballs. I suggest using a scooper to roll your meatballs so they are a uniform size and cook evenly. This also saves tons of time!
- Don’t stir meatballs. The raw meatballs can easily break apart if stirred after they are first added so wait until they have simmered for at least five minutes before gently stirring. If they break apart though it’s not the end of the world – they still taste delicious -just are no longer meatballs 😉.
How to serve Mexican Meatball Soup
Albondigas Soup is a meal in one that is perfectly delicious with crusty bread, a big green salad, fruit salad, chips and salsa and churros!
Albondigas Soup Recipe toppings
Let’s be honest, some of the best part of Mexican soups are the toppings! This Albondigas Soup doesn’t need much, but it is delicious with the addition of:
- Lime Juice: awakens the flavors of the entire soup with a bright pop of citrus.
- Sour cream: adds a wonderful creaminess and refreshing tanginess. You may also use fat free sour cream or Greek yogurt.
- Cilantro: adds a fresh, zesty flair.
- Avocado: chopped or sliced avocados add a wonderful creaminess. I prefer chopped so I can get a bite of avocado in every spoonful.
- Pico de gallo: a spoonful of pico de gallo isn’t necessary but adds a depth of freshness I love, otherwise fresh chopped tomatoes are fab.
- Hot sauce: to customize the heat of your Albondigas Soup.
CAN I MAKE Albondigas Soup AHEAD OF TIME?
Absolutely! As with all soups, Albondigas Soup tastes even better the next day so feel free to make it ahead of time for lunches or dinners. The rice and vegetables will absorb some of the broth, so you’ll want to add some additional water to thin to desired consistency.
Albondigas Recipe storage
Albondigas Soup should be stored in an airtight container in your refrigerator. When properly stored, it is good for 3-5 days.
How to freeze this Albondigas Soup Recipe
Yes and no. Potatoes can become grainy and chayote can become mushy which is off-putting to some people but others don’t seem to have a problem with it. If you don’t mind their texture or want to omit or remove these veggies, then freeze on!
To Freeze Albondigas Soup:
- Cool: Allow soup to cool completely before freezing to preserve the integrity of the ingredients and so it doesn’t linger in the “danger zone” temperature for too long.
- Package: Transfer soup to a freezer safe container or smaller containers.
- Freeze. Freeze for up to 3 months.
- Defrost/Reheat. When ready to use, thaw overnight in the refrigerator then reheat on the stove or microwave per instructions.
How to reheat Albondigas
- Stove: You can reheat large batches of Albondigas Soup on the stove over medium low heat, stirring gently until warmed through. Add additional water or broth as needed to reach desired consistency.
- Microwave: For smaller batches or individual servings, you can reheat Albondigas Soup in the microwave. Transfer soup to a microwave-safe dish, cover with a microwave-safe lid or paper towel. Microwave for 2 minutes, stir, then continue to microwave for 30-second intervals, if needed. Stir in additional broth or water to reach desired consistency.
Albondigas Recipe FAQs
Yes! Rice is gluten free and is used in place of breadcrumbs in the meatballs. The rest of the Albondigas Soup recipe ingredients are gluten free.
For this Albondigas Soup recipe, I like 1 tablespoon round meatballs. This size is large enough so you can sink your teeth into a juicy meatball and they don’t just get lost in the soup. They are also large enough so they are hard to overcook and remain super tender. You can make mini meatballs if you prefer, just take into consideration they will require less cooking time so plan accordingly.
There are variations of albóndigas (Spanish for meatballs) in both Spanish and Mexican cuisines, each with its own unique preparation and flavor profiles. In Spain, they are often served in a tomato-based sauce, while in Mexico, albóndigas are commonly added to a soup, such as “Albóndigas Soup” or “Sopa de Albóndigas.”
Albondigas require both eggs and rice to bind the ingredients together. If you don’ have enough of either ingredient compared to the ratio of meat and liquid, the meatballs can fall apart. My general rule of thumb for no-fail meatballs is 1 pound meat + 1 large egg + 1 cup parboiled rice – works like a charm every time! If your albondigas mixture is too loose to roll, let rest in the refrigerator for about 30 minutes to help firm up.
Albondigas soup can become greasy if you don’t use lean ground beef. You can skim the fat of the top of the soup to eliminate some of the grease – next time use leaner beef!
LOOKING FOR MORE MEXICAN RECIPES?
- Cilantro Lime Shrimp Tacos
- Creamy Green Chile Chicken Enchiladas
- Tacos Al Pastor
- Mexican Rice
- Southwest Egg Rolls
- Slow Cooker Carnitas
LOOKING FOR MORE MEATBALL RECIPES?
- Swedish Meatball Soup
- Honey Buffalo Meatballs
- Italian Meatballs
- Cranberry Meatballs
- Korean Meatballs
- Parmesan Meatballs
- Swedish Meatballs
- Italian Meatball Sliders
- Aloha Subs
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Albondigas Soup Recipe
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Ingredients
SOUP
- 1 cup long-grain white rice, uncooked divided
- 2 tablespoons olive oil
- 1/2 small yellow onion chopped
- 1 jalapeno pepper minced
- 2 medium carrots sliced 1/2-inch thick
- 2 stalks celery sliced 1/2-inch thick
- 2 small Yukon gold potatoes chopped into 1-inch chunks
- 4 garlic cloves minced
- 2 teaspoons chili powder
- 1 1/2 teaspoons ground cumin
- 1 tsp EACH dried oregano, ground coriander
- 1/2 tsp EACH smoked paprika, salt, pepper
- 2 15 oz. cans fire roasted tomatoes with juices
- 1 4 oz. can mild diced green chiles
- 8 cups low sodium beef broth
- 1 chayote, peeled, cored chopped into 1/2” cubes (may sub ½ zucchini)
MEATBALLS
- 8 oz. lean ground beef
- 8 oz. ground pork may sub lean ground beef
- rice from above in directions
- 1/2 small yellow onion minced
- 1 large egg
- 3 garlic cloves minced
- 3 tablespoons minced fresh cilantro
- 2 tablespoons minced fresh mint
- 2 tablespoons minced fresh parsley or 2 teaspoons dried
- 1 1/2 teaspoons minced fresh oregano OR ½ teaspoon dried
- 1/2 tsp EACH chili powder, ground cumin, salt, pepper
TOPPINGS (pick your favs!)
- Avocados
- Tomatoes
- cilantro
- sour cream
- lime juice
- hot sauce
Instructions
- Bring 4 cups water to a boil in a Dutch oven. Add rice and ½ teaspoon salt and cook, stirring occasionally for 6 minutes. Take this time to chop your veggies for the soup. Drain rice and rinse thoroughly in cold water (we are parboiling the rice; it will not be completely tender). Set aside.
- Heat 2 tablespoons olive oil in a large Dutch oven or soup pot over medium-high heat. Add onions and jalapenos and cook 3 minutes. Add carrots, celery, potatoes and all seasonings. Cook for an additional 3 minutes. Add garlic and sauté 30 seconds. Add tomatoes, green chiles and broth.
- Cover pot and bring to a boil. Once boiling, reduce heat to a low simmer and cook, uncovered, for 20-25 minutes while you make the meatballs.
- Meatballs: Add egg to a large bowl and whisk. Add 1 cup parboiled rice and all remaining meatball ingredients and mix well. Shape 1 tablespoon-size meatballs and place on a parchment lined baking sheet; about 40-45 meatballs.
- Add meatballs, remaining parboiled rice, and chopped chayote to the soup. Add 1-2 cups water if desired for a less chunky soup. Bring to a boil then reduce to a gentle simmer for an additional 12-15 minutes or until meatballs are cooked through and rice is tender – don’t stir meatballs for at least 5 minutes or they’ll break apart.
- Ladle into bowls and top with desired toppings.
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Jennifer Fulk says
I have never made this before , but have been wanting to forever. Now that I see you have a recipe I will be making it this on Sunday. I know it calls for 1lb of meat for the meatballs but do you think it would hurt the recipe to use 1-1/2 lbs? I have 1 pound of ground pork and 1/2 pound of ground beef. Do you think I could just use it all or would that mess it up? Thanks for info. This looks awesome!
Jen says
Hi Jennifer, that’s awesome you’ve been wanting to make Albondigas Soup! My main concern about using 1 1/2 lbs is that the soup is already brimming and I’m afraid you would need too much additional liquid for it to all comfortably fit in a Dutch oven pot so unless you have an even larger pot, so I would stick with the 1 lb meat. You could use half of your pork and be ready with the other half for next time ;).
Jennifer Fulk says
Okay, thank you! One more question- when parboiling the rice for the six minutes, is that covered or uncovered?
Jen says
Uncovered, enjoy!
Karen Provchy says
Do you have a cook book ?
Jen says
No plans for a cookbook – I love posting online so the recipes are free 🙂
Briita Noyes says
This looks amazing. We have a hard time with tomatoes, do you think I could leave them out, or drastically reduce the amount. Love all of your recipes, Thank You!
Jen says
Hi Brita, they are a large part of the broth flavor, but I still think you could leave them out with delicious results – different, but delicious. Let me know how it turn out!
Jamillah says
Yes I was wondering the same thing. Whenever I substitute tomatoes, I use a homemade red pepper sauce recipe I found online. Try it.
Jen says
Great idea, thank you!
cindy l oconnell says
Hi Jen
I was expecting to bake meatballs after directions say to put them on parchment paper and baking sheet. So no baking ????
thanks .
ps have made over 15 of your recipes and love them all !!!
Jen says
Hi Cindy, no need to bake, just pop them into the soup to cook. The lined baking sheet is so they don’t stick and are easy to move-you can also line your counter with parchment. Thank you so much for making my recipes, that is amazing you’e made so many-I LOVE hearing you’re loving them!
Casie says
Carlsbadcravings has the best recipes. Try to find Better than Takeout beef and broccoli. It’s a favorite and often requested in my family.
Jen says
Thank you so much Casie for the compliment! Here’s the beef and broccoli: https://carlsbadcravings.com/secret-ingredient-better-than-takeout-beef-and-broccoli/
Polly says
I just made a pot of his soup and it’s delicious!, full of meatballs, veggies and lots of flavor! I think the only thing I would do differently would be omit the water at the end. It’s a definite make again!
Jen says
Thanks so much Polly, I’m so happy you enjoyed it!
Kathy says
Your recipe says to divide the rice but the directions state to use the one cup for meatballs. Later it says to add the remaining rice but how much exactly “remaining” rice do I use and is it cooked or not? Thank you can’t wait to make.
Jen says
Hi Kathy, first you parboil a full one cup of rice. The rice will expand while it’s cooked so you’ll end up with closer to 2 cups by the time it’s cooked. Measure out one cup of this parboiled rice and add it to the meatballs. Whatever is leftover you will add to the soup. Enjoy!
Nini says
Looks great! Can I leave it the mint? Def NOT a mint fan.
Jen says
Absolutely! I would replace it with equal parts basil and parsley. Enjoy!
Peggy Vincent says
Actually, I would use the mint. I have a strong aversion to mint myself and avoid it like the plague, but I learned from many recipes and my Mexican friends that mint is ALWaYS used and if something that makes the meatballs so distinctive. So, with fear in my heart, I went ahead and added the mint – the whole amount – to the meatballs, and I’m glad I did! The taste is pretty much identical from what I remember eating at Mitote’s Mexican Restaurant in East LA more than 50 years ago, and they didn’t taste like mine AT ALL.
Jen says
Thanks so much Peggy, I’m so happy you loved the meatballs!
Joanna Tanner says
This looks great. I would like to substitute cauliflower for the rice. Thoughts on how to pull this off?
Jen says
Thanks Joanna! Cauliflower rice should take about 6 minutes to cook, so add it at the end when you have about 6 minutes left. Good luck!
Mark Wilson says
My wife said, Good Work, Sir.
Jen says
That sounds like it’s a repeat! Thanks Mark!
jeff says
Damn… I’ve been craving Albondigas Soup, and I was looking for a simple recipe, this is not a simple recipe, this is a treatise on the soup, I’d almost call it a manifesto 😉
Needless to say, THIS is what I’m gonna make. And since I cook only for two, I’m doubling the meatball recipe and halving the soup recipe (I cook for two, but have a deep freeze 😀 ).
Thank You.
Jen says
LOL! I hope this Albondigas Soup Manifesto did not disappoint! I’m honored you chose to make my recipe!
Tim says
This soup is absolutely incredible,I followed the recipe exactly as it is written,wow,this is good stuff!!!
Thanks a bunch!!!
Jen says
You’re so welcome Tim, thanks for your awesome comment! I’m thrilled you loved it!
Fran says
This soup is excellent. The only changes we made are: no mint, and added Worcestershire sauce & some frozen corn. This is a full meal all by itself. The meatballs are really tender. Thank you SO MUCH for this recipe, it is definitely a keeper.
Jen says
You are so welcome Fran, I’m so pleased you loved the Albondigas Soup! Your additions sound perfect!
HEATHER says
What size dutch oven would you recommend for this recipe?
Jen says
I recommend 6-8 qt. Enjoy!
Tiffany T says
Your recipes are my absolute favorite. I have yet to make something from your site and not LOVED it! Now if I’m looking for a recipe for something, I always check Carlsbad Cravings first! Thanks to you my family thinks I’m an amazing cook 😉
Do you have a cook book out?
Thanks again!
Tiffany
Jen says
Thank you so much for making my day Tiffany! I am honored I am your go-to recipe source and you’re loving my recipes! I don’t have plans for a cookbook, but I’ll let my readers know if anything changes. xo
Samantha says
Do you think I can put I all in a crockpot on low and cook the meatballs separately and then add those on top of the soup later?
Jen says
Yes Samantha, I think that should work!
Elaine says
This soup is five stars kind of good!! What a terrific recipe! Only substitutions I made were using ground turkey instead of beef (mixed with the pork) and crushed instead of diced tomatoes. I also used homemade turkey stock from our Thanksgiving bird. There are lots of recipes out there for albondigas, but the carefully chosen ingredients here make this version sing! Thank you!
Jen says
Thank you so much Elaine for your 5 star review! Your soup sounds especially amazing with homemade turkey stock!
Kate says
I can’t wait to christen my new dutch oven with this recipe! I saw your reply above recommending a 6-8 qt dutch oven, however mine is 4 qt. Should I cut the ingredients down so they all fit?
Jen says
Yes, I would halve this recipe. Enjoy your new Dutch oven!
Josey says
I made this last week. Great recipe. And I am iffy with soups. Or is it called picky?
Jen says
LOL! Either way, I’m glad/relieved this one made the cut!
Sherri says
I can’t wait to make this. If I need to use long grain brown rice instead of white, should I parbroil it for a shorter time? Thank you!
Jen says
Hi Sherri, I would parboil it for longer because brown rice (even short) takes longer to cook. Enjoy!
Sherri says
Thank you! Going to try this for dinner tonight!!
Suzanne says
We really enjoyed this, will be making again!
Jen says
Thank you so much Suzanne!
D says
If I want to bake the meatballs in the oven and not boil in the soup would I use fully cooked rice?
Jen says
Great question! Yes, in that case use fully cooked rice. Enjoy!
Kimberly says
I made this yesterday on a rainy day and it was the perfect meal – warm, just the right amount of spice, and full of texture and flavor! My daughter and I both had leftovers for lunch today and probably will again tomorrow. The meatballs are SO good!
Jen says
Thanks so much Kimberly for the glowing review! I love hearing how much you and your family loved this soup. The meatballs would also be good with enchilada sauce and rice!
Jen says
Perfect slow Sunday meal. First time making this soup and blew our socks off – so much flavor, filling and can’t wait for leftovers tomorrow- thx for another delicious recipe!
Jen says
Thanks for taking the time to leave such a nice review, Jen! I am so happy you found my site and are enjoying my recipes! I hope you have a wonderful week and find more recipes that make you look forward to leftovers!
Heather Del Rio says
This is definitely different than my normal Albondigas soup, but it looks incredible!! I have some Chipotle Better Than Bouillon that would be perfect in this!!
Jen says
That is going to make it next level – yum!
Jacqueline S Strand says
Mint seems like a strange ingredient for a Mexican soup – especially for meatballs. I also find it strange that you don’t brown the meatballs first, though I found that most recipes for this soup do not brown first. And one more thing is that I think hominy would be a great ingredient for this soup. I am definitely going to try your version as I love your recipes.❤️
Jen says
I think you’ll love the twist of mint! You are welcome to brown the meatballs if you like, but not browning is more traditional ;).
Dee says
It’s been raining off and on for the last few weeks here in North County…We need comfort food & this Soup was a hit everyone loved it …Thank you Dee
Jen says
Thanks Dee! I’m so glad that this was the perfect food for the rainy days!
Claudia says
Hello, this soup sounds so good, I can’t wait for cooler weather! Can the meatball recipe be doubled and then frozen? As a working Mom, I would love to have some extras. Thank you
Jen says
Absolutely! That would work brilliantly!
Teh-Teh says
Can’t wait to try this
How would you adapt this to use a slow cooker?
Jen says
This soup would take some experimenting to adapt to the slow cooker because of the cooking times for the meatballs, rice, and vegetables. You would want to brown the meatballs first and probably add them and the rice after cooking the other ingredients for 1-2 hours; otherwise, the potatoes won’t be tender at the same time. Good luck!