This is the real mountain-style potato soup—simple, humble, filling, and made from pantry basics. No fancy ingredients. Just comfort, warmth, and tradition passed down through Appalachian kitchens.
🧺 Ingredients (Serves 4–6)
- 2 lb (900 g) potatoes, peeled and diced
- 1 small onion, finely chopped
- 4–5 cups water (or light broth)
- 1 cup milk (or evaporated milk for richer soup)
- 2 tbsp butter
- ½–1 tsp salt, to taste
- ½ tsp black pepper
Optional (Very Traditional Add-Ins)
- Cooked bacon grease (1 tbsp, instead of butter)
- Crumbled bacon
- Green onions
- Cornbread on the side
👩🍳 Step-by-Step Instructions
Step 1: Cook the Potatoes
- Add diced potatoes and onion to a pot.
- Pour in water just to cover.
- Bring to a boil, then reduce to a gentle simmer.
- Cook 15–20 minutes until potatoes are very tender.
Step 2: Mash for Thickness
- Using a spoon or potato masher, mash some of the potatoes right in the pot.
- Leave plenty of chunks—this soup is rustic, not smooth.
Step 3: Add Milk & Fat
- Stir in milk.
- Add butter or bacon grease.
- Season with salt and black pepper.
Step 4: Simmer Gently
- Simmer on low heat for 5–10 minutes
- Do not boil once milk is added
Taste and adjust seasoning.
⭐ What Makes It Appalachian
- Uses water instead of broth
- Thickened by mashed potatoes, not flour
- Very few ingredients
- Often finished with bacon fat
- Served with cornbread, not crackers
🍽️ How It’s Traditionally Served
- Big bowl of soup
- Crumbled cornbread stirred right in
- Bacon or green onions on top
- Eaten slow, usually on a cold day
🔄 Old-Timer Variations
- 🥛 Use evaporated milk for extra richness
- 🧄 Add a pinch of garlic (modern touch)
- 🧀 Add cheese only if you’re feeling fancy
- 🌶️ Add hot pepper vinegar at the table
❄️ Storage
- Keeps 3–4 days refrigerated
- Thickens overnight—add a splash of milk when reheating
This soup proves one thing:
Simple food feeds the soul best.
If you want, I can share:
- 🥓 Coal miner–style version
- 🥣 Crockpot Appalachian soup
- 🍞 Cornbread exactly how it was made in the hills
- 🥔 Depression-era variations
Just tell me 🌾