pumpkin soup with coconut milk

Posted on July 5, 2026

Modified: July 5, 2026

By Daniel
Creamy pumpkin soup with coconut milk in a white bowl, topped with seeds and herbs.

The first time I made pumpkin soup with coconut milk, it was one of those gray October afternoons where the light disappears by four o’clock and you need something warm just to feel human again. I remember standing at the stove, stirring a pot of roasted pumpkin and onions, and the moment I poured in that can of coconut milk, the whole kitchen filled with this creamy, tropical sweetness that made me stop and just breathe it in.

My grandmother never made soup like this. She was a chicken-noodle-from-scratch woman, and I loved her for it. But this soup? This one reminds me of the year I spent sharing a tiny apartment with my friend Mara, who grew up in Kerala and taught me that coconut milk could transform anything into comfort food. We’d make variations of this on Sundays, still in our pajamas at noon, while her cat knocked things off the counter.

What I love most is how forgiving it is. You can roast the pumpkin ahead, use canned in a pinch, or play with the spices depending on your mood. If you’re in a soup phase like I’ve been lately, you might also want to try my asparagus chicken soup for something lighter and greener.

What You Need to Make This Recipe

The pumpkin itself matters more than you’d think. I prefer sugar pie pumpkins or kabocha squash because they roast up sweeter and less stringy than the big carving varieties. The coconut milk is non-negotiable for me , full-fat, from a can, the kind that separates into thick cream and thin water. That’s what gives pumpkin soup with coconut milk its velvety body without any actual cream. I also reach for fresh ginger and a touch of red curry paste, which wakes everything up without making it taste like Thai takeout. If you’re building your soup repertoire, my creamy chicken and mushroom soup uses a similar technique of building depth before adding liquid.

How to Make pumpkin soup with coconut milk

I always start by roasting the pumpkin, never boiling it. The dry heat concentrates the sugars and gives you those caramelized edges that make the final soup taste complex instead of one-note. While that’s happening, I soften onions and garlic in a heavy pot with a little coconut oil, then add grated ginger and a spoonful of curry paste. The smell at this stage is intoxicating , warm and sharp and slightly exotic.

Once the pumpkin is tender and scooped from its skin, it goes into the pot with vegetable broth. I let it simmer gently for maybe fifteen minutes, just long enough for the flavors to marry. Then comes the coconut milk, poured slowly while I stir, watching the color shift from bright orange to something softer, more golden. The immersion blender is my tool of choice here; you want it completely smooth, with no fibrous bits. Taste, adjust salt, maybe a squeeze of lime at the end. If slow-cooker soups are more your speed, my crockpot butternut squash soup uses a similar hands-off approach.

Pro Tips

Roast the pumpkin cut-side down on a parchment-lined sheet. The trapped steam keeps the flesh moist while the edges still caramelize, and the skin practically falls away when it’s done.

Don’t skip the acid at the end. A little lime juice or even rice vinegar brightens the coconut milk’s richness and keeps the soup from feeling heavy on your palate.

Toast your spices first. If you’re using ground cumin or coriander, let them hit the hot oil for thirty seconds before adding liquid. The heat unlocks their volatile oils and the difference is dramatic.

My Secret Trick: I save the thick coconut cream from the top of the can and swirl it on top of each bowl just before serving, then drag a toothpick through it to make a simple design. It looks restaurant-fancy but takes ten seconds, and that extra hit of cold cream against the warm soup is genuinely special.

How to Store pumpkin soup with coconut milk

  • Refrigerate in airtight glass containers for up to 4 days. The soup thickens considerably as it sits, so thin with a splash of broth or water when reheating.
  • Freeze in individual portions for up to 3 months. I use silicone muffin trays to freeze perfect single servings, then transfer to freezer bags. The coconut milk may separate slightly upon thawing, but a quick whisk or blend restores the texture completely.
  • Reheat gently over medium-low heat, stirring frequently. Never boil vigorously , the coconut milk can break and become grainy. Microwave works in 60-second intervals with stirring between each.

Nutritional Benefits

Pumpkin soup with coconut milk delivers serious beta-carotene from the roasted squash, which your body converts to vitamin A for immune and eye health. The coconut milk provides lauric acid, a medium-chain fatty acid that’s easier to metabolize than long-chain saturated fats, plus it helps you absorb all that fat-soluble vitamin A in the first place. It’s nourishing in a way that actually satisfies, not the hollow fullness of something processed.

FAQs

Can I use canned pumpkin instead of fresh?

Yes, though the flavor will be milder and less complex. Look for pure pumpkin puree, not pie filling. You’ll miss the caramelized depth from roasting, so compensate with a longer sauté of your aromatics and maybe an extra pinch of spice.

Why did my coconut milk separate in the soup?

High heat or acidic ingredients can cause separation. Always add coconut milk at a gentle simmer, not a rolling boil, and stir it in gradually. If it does separate, an immersion blender usually brings it back together.

Can I make this soup vegan?

Absolutely , this pumpkin soup with coconut milk is naturally vegan as written. Just use vegetable broth instead of chicken stock, and double-check that your curry paste doesn’t contain shrimp paste, which some brands do.

What can I use instead of red curry paste?

A combination of mild curry powder and a pinch of cayenne works, or try harissa for a different direction. You could also leave it out entirely and lean into warm spices like cinnamon and nutmeg for a more classic autumn profile.

Creamy pumpkin soup with coconut milk in a white bowl, topped with seeds and herbs.
Daniel

Pumpkin Soup with Coconut Milk

Silky, warmly spiced pumpkin soup enriched with coconut milk for a luxurious finish that's weeknight simple yet dinner-party worthy.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 35 minutes
Total Time 50 minutes
Servings: 4 servings
Course: Dinner, lunch, Soup
Cuisine: American, Thai-inspired
Calories: 320

Ingredients
  

For the Soup
  • 2 tbsp unsalted butter
  • 1 large yellow onion diced (about 1.5 cups)
  • 3 cloves garlic minced
  • 1 tbsp fresh ginger peeled and minced
  • 1 tsp red curry paste optional, for warmth
  • 29 oz pumpkin puree two 15-oz cans, or 3.5 cups fresh roasted
  • 4 cups low-sodium vegetable broth
  • 14 oz coconut milk full-fat, divided
  • 1 tbsp maple syrup
  • 1 lime juiced, about 2 tbsp
  • 1 tsp fine sea salt plus more to taste
  • 0.5 tsp black pepper freshly ground
For Garnish
  • 0.25 cup toasted pepitas
  • 0.25 cup fresh cilantro leaves only

Equipment

  • Large Dutch oven or heavy pot
  • Immersion blender or standard blender
  • Chef's Knife
  • Cutting board

Method
 

Prep
  1. Melt butter in a large Dutch oven over medium heat. Add onion and cook until softened and translucent, about 6-8 minutes, stirring occasionally. Add garlic, ginger, and curry paste (if using). Cook until fragrant, about 1 minute.
  2. Stir in pumpkin puree and vegetable broth, scraping up any browned bits from the bottom. Bring to a gentle boil, then reduce heat to low and simmer uncovered for 15 minutes to meld flavors.
  3. Remove from heat and blend until completely smooth using an immersion blender, or carefully transfer to a standard blender in batches. Return to pot if using standard blender.
  4. Stir in 1 cup of the coconut milk, maple syrup, lime juice, salt, and pepper. Simmer gently for 5 minutes. Taste and adjust seasoning - add more salt, lime, or maple syrup to balance.
Serve
  1. Ladle into warm bowls. Drizzle remaining coconut milk over each portion and swirl with a spoon. Top with toasted pepitas and cilantro leaves. Serve immediately with crusty bread.

Notes

For the creamiest texture, use full-fat coconut milk and don't skip the lime juice - it brightens the entire soup. Make ahead through step 4 and refrigerate up to 3 days; the flavor actually improves overnight. Substitute butternut squash puree if pumpkin is unavailable, and use vegetable stock instead of broth if that's what you have on hand.

Conclusion

This pumpkin soup with coconut milk has become my October ritual, the thing I make when the first real cold snap hits and I need my kitchen to feel like a refuge. I hope it finds a place in your rotation too. For another coconut-forward dinner, my coconut curry ramen hits that same creamy-spicy comfort note with noodles instead of a spoon.

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