A bowl of vegetable and bean soup.

Image Credit: YelenaYemchuk/iStock/Getty Images Soup is a quick, hot meal that offers plenty of health benefits. You can throw a variety of ingredients into a slow cooker in the morning before you leave for work or school and return home to a delicious meal in the evening. The healthiest soups include fresh, low-fat ingredients and a minimum of salt and extra fat. You can use up leftovers in a soup pot and create new variations of favorite recipes, since soup lends itself to experimentation.

  Advertisement
 
Vegetables

The American Heart Association recommends adults consume eight or more servings of fruits and vegetables every day. That’s 4 ½ cups. Soups can contribute to that total. Almost any vegetable lends itself to use in soup, from creamy squash or tomato bisques to vegetable beef or chicken vegetable soup. Add fresh or frozen vegetables to canned soups to increase the servings of vegetables and add flavor.

  Advertisement
 
  Video of the Day
  
Nutrients

Soups made with beans and lean meats such as fish provide lean protein. Beans also give you fiber. Tomatoes are a good source of lycopene, an antioxidant that may help reduce the risk of cancer, particularly prostate cancer, according to Penn State University. Vegetables in soup contain many vitamins, such as A and C. Cream soups supply calcium and vitamin D.

  Advertisement
 
Low Fat

Most soups, if made with lean meat, are low in fat, making them a good choice for anyone concerned about fat in his diet. Use fat-free broths and lean meat to reduce the fat content of soups. se skin milk for cream soups; or, instead of milk, you can use pureed white beans to thicken soup. To further reduce the fat content of your soup without sacrificing flavor, chill it and skim off the fat before reheating and serving.

  Advertisement
 
  Advertisement
 
Filling

Because soup contains so much water it fills you up with fewer calories. When Barbara Rolls, Ph.D., conducted research at Penn State University, she discovered that students who ate chicken and rice soup instead of a chicken and rice casserole, consumed fewer calories yet reported being equally satisfied. Rolls is author of the book, The Volumetrics Weight Control Plan, in which she explains how eating soup and other high-volume, low-calorie foods can help you lose weight.

  Advertisement
 
  Advertisement
  
  references
  
      American Heart Association: About Fruits and Vegetables
    
      Kansas State University: January is National Soup Month
       




  references
  
      American Heart Association: About Fruits and Vegetables
    
      Kansas State University: January is National Soup Month
    




A bowl of vegetable and bean soup.

Image Credit: YelenaYemchuk/iStock/Getty Images

Image Credit: YelenaYemchuk/iStock/Getty Images

      American Heart Association: About Fruits and Vegetables
    
      Kansas State University: January is National Soup Month