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Roasted Tomato Basil Soup: The Recipe That Turns Farmers Market Tomatoes Into Something Extraordinary

Bowl of deep crimson roasted tomato basil soup garnished with fresh basil leaves and cream swirl

Written by: Amy Larsen

Amy Larsen spent 25 years as a marketing executive helping mutiple industries develop growth strategies - including Food & Beverage. A health scare changed how she thought about food. She founded Butter & Sage Market to rebuild the connection between local food makers and the communities around them. She lives in Round Rock, TX.

Published: July 2, 2026

There's a moment mid-July when the farmers market tomato situation becomes genuinely overwhelming in the best way. The tables are piled high with Romas and heirlooms and cherry tomatoes in seventeen different colors, and the farmer who's been selling you eggs all spring is suddenly also selling the best tomatoes you've seen all year. This is the moment to buy more than you think you need.

Because this soup is what you make with the extra ones. And it will ruin grocery store tomato soup for you forever — which, honestly, is a trade worth making.

Why Roasting Changes Everything

A fresh tomato has a lot of water in it. That water is great for slicing and eating raw, but it works against you in a soup — it dilutes flavor and creates a thin, acidic base that needs a lot of coaxing. Roasting evaporates that water, concentrates the sugars, and creates the kind of deep, jammy, almost caramelized flavor that you cannot get any other way.

The trick is to not rush it. A 40–45 minute roast at 425°F is not a guideline — it's a commitment. You want the edges to start to char. You want the garlic to turn golden and sweet in its skin. You want the juices on the pan to look almost like a glaze. That's when you know you've gone far enough, and that's when the soup becomes something worth making again and again.

Which Tomatoes to Use (And Where to Find Them)

Roma tomatoes are the classic choice for roasted tomato soup because they have more flesh and less water than beefsteak or heirloom varieties. But if your farmers market vendor is selling a tomato that smells incredible, use those. The quality of the tomato is the quality of the soup — this is a recipe where raw material matters more than technique.

Peak season in most of the country runs from July through September, though some regions get tomatoes earlier. If you're lucky enough to have a cottage food producer near you who sells sun-dried tomatoes or tomato jam, a spoonful stirred in at the finish adds a layered depth that's worth trying.

Make It Yours

The base recipe is simple on purpose. From there, the variations are wherever you want to take it: stir in harissa or smoked paprika for heat and depth; roast some red peppers alongside the tomatoes for sweetness; add a parmesan rind to the simmering soup and pull it out before serving. Finish with a swirl of cream, a drizzle of herb oil, or just really good olive oil. Serve with the best sourdough you can find — preferably from your local market, too.

If you make this one, share it with us — tag @butterandsagemarket and show us what your farmers market tomatoes turned into. And if you found them from a vendor you love, we'd love to know that too. That's exactly the kind of discovery we're here for.

Roasted Tomato Basil Soup

The richest, most deeply flavored tomato soup you'll ever make — and it starts with one simple technique: roasting. Use the best summer tomatoes you can find, preferably straight from a farmers market stall, and this soup will taste like concentrated summer in a bowl.

Roasted Tomato Basil Soup
Prep 15 min
Cook 55 min
Total 1 hr 10 min
Yield 6 servings
Level Easy
6

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. Preheat your oven to 425u00b0F. Line a large rimmed baking sheet with parchment paper.
  2. Arrange the halved tomatoes cut-side up on the baking sheet, along with the quartered onion and unpeeled garlic cloves. Drizzle everything with olive oil and sprinkle with salt and pepper.
  3. Roast for 40u201345 minutes, until the tomatoes are deeply caramelized and starting to char at the edges. The onion should be golden and soft. Don't rush this step u2014 the caramelization is where all the flavor comes from.
  4. Let everything cool for 10 minutes. When the garlic is cool enough to handle, squeeze the roasted cloves out of their skins into a blender or large pot. Add the roasted tomatoes, onion, and all the juices from the pan u2014 those browned bits are liquid gold.
  5. Add the vegetable broth and balsamic vinegar. Blend until smooth using an immersion blender, or transfer in batches to a regular blender. Be careful u2014 hot liquids expand when blended, so fill the blender no more than halfway and vent the lid.
  6. Pour the blended soup into a pot over medium heat. Add the fresh basil and red pepper flakes if using. Taste and adjust salt. Simmer for 5u201310 minutes to let the basil infuse.
  7. If you'd like a richer soup, swirl in the heavy cream just before serving. Serve hot with crusty bread, a grilled cheese on the side, or a drizzle of good olive oil on top.

Notes

This soup is even better the next day — the flavors deepen overnight. It freezes beautifully for up to 3 months, so make a big batch at peak tomato season and you'll have summer in a jar all winter long. For a smoother texture, strain through a fine-mesh sieve after blending. For a vegan version, skip the cream or swap in full-fat coconut cream.
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