Cabbage soup is a great fall soup and for year round. And when you add beet juice, you get a beautiful color… you can’t beat that!

This is an Ayurvedic melody. You can get your sweet vegetable, savory, sour, and umami tastes in one bowl. You can also add some heat if you’re feeling cool (and more Kapha or Vata in fall Vata season).
Tamarind is the sour taste that’ll set your soup apart from the rest. It’s commonly used in more exotic sauces and dishes.
If you buy tamarind paste that has seeds, to remove the seeds: pull apart taffy-texture-like pieces. Then place the tamarind paste in a bowl with heated water (just below boiling water is good). You can leave for a few hours or even overnight. Then the tamarind taffy-sticky texture should slip off more easily.
Add go right into your warming cabbage beet soup. You can make this soup without beets if you’re not a fan. And use red cabbage.
But if you’re a beet lover, this is the fall color you can BEAT!
And at the farmers markets or maybe your own farm
Cabbage soup is a healthy and light soup you can enjoy year round. It’s better warm, but you can enjoy it cold too. Either way, it’s LOW SODIUM healthy.
Cabbage is a great veggie to lose weight. And in a soup, it’s soup-er tasty. When cabbage is raw, it has a crunchy texture that can be satisfying like chips.
And what you don’t use, you can save for a future cabbage soup or dish. Or a lettuce wedge salad.
Iceberg lettuce is the common cabbage head. Sometimes they’re the size of a head or a volleyball.
It’s a filler that’s a good way to stretch a grocery bill, like the cost of a common loaf of bread..
And since cabbage is over 90% (and mainly) water, it’s underestimated as a healthy food.
For starters, it has K vitamins, some B vitamins, and minerals. It also has Vitamin C, that’s an antioxidant.
And best of all, cabbage is a high source of fiber, so it’s great for digestive reasons and losing weight.
The cabbage soup that my mom used to make did not have tomatoes. She used soy sauce that gave it a umami taste.
And instead of just heating the cabbage to soften, you can do what I call the radish method. Which is adding the cabbage to the freezer overnight and then bringing to the fridge or in room temp when you’re ready to work it in a soup.
It will turn mushy and you can cut into strips like for a radish salad.
You don’t want to skip cutting down the cabbage into smaller pieces as it’s hard to swallow fibrous whole cabbage leaves. Like a palm leaf, it would be good shade cover.
So to avoid a big mass wad of cabbage, you can take a pair of kitchen shears and cut, cut, cut… similar to as if you were trimming hair, making many micro-cuts. Keep cutting through the fibers.
And this will allow for an enjoyable soup experience that you can serve as an appetizer or starter bowl.
For a little heat that creeps us, wasabi powder (or horseradish powder that’s white color) is a sharp and pungent way or cayenne pepper for more heat.
If you’re game for a healthy comfort bowl of soup, you can also try an anti-inflammatory rainbow soup with cauliflower, a fall vegetable soup with fresh veggies and fall spices, and other easy homemade low-sodium soups.
Low Sodium Cabbage Beet Soup
Ingredients
- 1 cup cabbage
- 1 can whole beets
- 1 tbsp Five Spice
- 1/4 cup soy sauce
- 1/2 cup beef broth
- salt and pepper to taste
- wasabi powder or cayenne pepper (optional for heat), to taste
- tamarind
Instructions
- Add beef broth, soy sauce, beets, and beet juice (from the beet can) to a cooking pot.
- Cut cabbage into small strips, and add to pot.
- Add spices and seasonings.
- Cook on heat until cabbage is soggy and soft.

