
Thick, creamy loaded potato soup topped with cheddar cheese, bacon, sour cream and chives — everything you love about a loaded baked potato in soup form. This easy potato soup recipe is the ultimate comfort food for cold days.
Loaded baked potato soup takes the concept of a fully loaded baked potato — cheddar, bacon, sour cream, chives — and transforms it into a warming, substantial soup. Blending half the potatoes creates body while leaving chunks gives texture. The garnishes are not optional — they're the entire point.
Serves 6
Cook diced bacon in a large pot until crispy. Remove with a slotted spoon, leaving the fat in the pot.
Add butter to the bacon fat. Soften onion for 5 minutes, then add garlic for 1 minute. Sprinkle flour and stir for 1 minute to cook the raw flour taste out.
Pour in stock gradually, stirring. Add potatoes and bring to a boil. Simmer 15–20 minutes until potatoes are completely tender.
Use an immersion blender to partially blend — you want roughly half blended for a creamy-but-chunky texture. Stir in cream and sour cream. Simmer gently (don't boil after adding cream) for 5 minutes. Stir in half the cheddar until melted. Season.
Ladle into bowls. Top with remaining cheddar, crispy bacon, a dollop of sour cream and chives.
Russet potatoes are best — their high starch makes the soup thicker naturally.
Don't boil the soup after adding cream and sour cream — it can split.
The garnishes make the soup — don't skip them.
Lighter version: replace cream with extra stock and use low-fat sour cream.
Broccoli cheddar potato soup: add 200g steamed broccoli florets along with the potatoes.
Refrigerate for up to 4 days. Reheat gently over low heat, adding a splash of stock or milk as needed. Freeze without the cream and dairy for up to 2 months.
The loaded baked potato became popular in American restaurants and steakhouses in the 1960s and 70s. The soup version is a natural evolution — all the same toppings in a comforting liquid form. It became a staple of American casual dining chains in the 1990s.
Russet (floury) potatoes give the creamiest result because they break down more. Yukon Gold potatoes also work well and have a buttery flavour.
Blend some of the soup with an immersion blender. Or remove and mash a cup of cooked potatoes, then stir back in.
Yes — combine everything except cream, sour cream and cheese. Cook on low 6–8 hours, then blend partially and stir in dairy before serving.
It's better to freeze it before adding cream and dairy. Thaw in the fridge and add dairy when reheating.
Per serving (400g / 14.1 oz) · 6 servings total
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