Love this? Pin it for later!
I still remember the first time I made this Spicy Beef and Black Bean Soup. It was one of those raw, drizzly Tuesdays that felt more like November than April, and I’d promised the high-school track team I coach that I’d bring something "high-protein and warming" to our post-meet potluck. I wanted a dish that could stand up to hungry teenagers who’d just run 5 K and still feel sophisticated enough for the parents who tagged along. One spoonful of this brick-red brew—thick with black beans, fork-tender beef, and a gentle chile glow—and the entire cafeteria went quiet. That’s when I knew I’d struck soup gold. Fast-forward five years and it’s still the most-requested recipe at every chili cook-off, ski-trip cabin weekend, and Sunday meal-prep session I host. If you need a single pot that delivers restaurant-level flavor, 40 g of protein per bowl, and the kind of leftovers that taste even better the next day, bookmark this page right now.
Why This Recipe Works
- Two-Stage Spice: We bloom the spices in hot fat first, then add a fresh chile finish so every layer sings.
- Lean + Rich Combo: Sirloin for leanness, short rib for collagen silkiness—no greasy puddles on top.
- Bean Power: Two cans of black beans puréed into the broth create creaminess without dairy.
- One-Pot Wonder: Sear, simmer, and serve from the same Dutch oven—fewer dishes, deeper flavor.
- Freezer Hero: Portion, freeze flat, and reheat straight from frozen on busy weeknights.
- Scalable Heat: Keep jalapeños on the side and let each eater customize the fire level.
Ingredients You'll Need
Great soup starts at the grocery store. Look for beef that’s bright cherry-red with thin, white fat veins; avoid anything gray or overly wet. I use ¾ pound top sirloin (economical yet tender) plus ½ pound boneless short ribs for the collagen that breaks into velvety gelatin. If you can’t find short ribs, chuck roast works, but trim the larger fat seams. For the beans, seek low-sodium or no-salt-added black beans so you control the seasoning. Canned beans save time, yet if you cook dried black beans from scratch, you’ll need 3 ½ cups. The chipotle peppers in adobo are the smoky soul of this soup—grab the small 7-ounce can, then freeze leftover peppers in a snack-size bag for future soups or taco nights. Fresh produce matters: firm jalapeños with unwrinkled skin and cilantro that still stands at attention when you hold the bunch. Finally, stock quality equals soup quality; if you don’t have homemade, buy low-sodium beef stock and boost it with a ½ teaspoon soy sauce for deeper umami.
How to Make Spicy Beef and Black Bean Soup for a Protein Punch
Season & Sear the Beef
Pat the sirloin and short-rib pieces very dry with paper towels—moisture is the enemy of browning. Toss with 1 tablespoon cornstarch, 1 teaspoon kosher salt, 1 teaspoon ground cumin, and ½ teaspoon black pepper. Heat 2 tablespoons canola oil in a 5-quart Dutch oven over medium-high until it shimmers. Sear beef in a single layer 3 minutes per side until crusty. Transfer to a bowl; don’t wipe the pot clean—those browned bits equal flavor.
Build the Flavor Base
Reduce heat to medium. Add diced onion and poblano; sauté 4 minutes until translucent. Stir in 4 minced garlic cloves, 2 minced chipotle peppers, 1 tablespoon adobo sauce, 1 teaspoon dried oregano, and ½ teaspoon smoked paprika. Cook 60 seconds; the spices will bloom and turn brick red.
Deglaze & Purée Magic
Pour in ¼ cup dry sherry (or broth) and scrape the pot bottom with a wooden spoon to lift the fond. Add 1 can of black beans with liquid, 1 cup broth, and 1 bay leaf. Using an immersion blender, purée until silky. This creates a creamy body without dairy.
Simmer the Beef
Return seared beef (and any juices) to the pot. Add remaining 3 cups broth and bring to a gentle boil. Reduce to low, cover partially, and simmer 45 minutes, stirring twice. The collagen will break down, turning the broth glossy.
Add Remaining Beans & Veg
Stir in the second can of rinsed black beans, 1 cup corn kernels, and 1 diced red bell pepper. Simmer 10 minutes more; the beans hold their shape while the corn and pepper stay crisp-tender.
Finish with Zest & Heat
Off heat, add the juice of 1 lime, ½ cup chopped cilantro, and 1 thinly sliced fresh jalapeño. Taste and adjust salt. Let stand 5 minutes so flavors meld.
Expert Tips
Control the Burn
Remove seeds and membranes from jalapeños for milder heat; add ½ teaspoon cayenne for extra fire.
Make-Ahead Friendly
Flavor peaks 24 hours later; refrigerate in sealed containers up to 4 days or freeze 3 months.
Thick vs Brothy
For brothier soup, skip puréeing the first can of beans; for stew-style, purée both cans.
Budget Swap
Replace short ribs with chuck stew meat; add 1 teaspoon unflavored gelatin for similar silkiness.
Variations to Try
- Green Chile Turkey: Swap beef for shredded turkey and use Hatch chiles instead of jalapeños.
- Slow-Carb Keto: Omit beans and add 2 cups diced zucchini plus 1 cup black soybeans (lowest carb bean).
- Vegan Power: Replace beef with 8 ounces soyrizo and 1 cup quinoa; use veggie broth.
- Sweet Potato Twist: Stir in 1 large diced sweet potato during the last 20 minutes of simmering.
Storage Tips
Let the soup cool to 140°F within two hours of cooking (I fill my sink with ice water and set the pot right in). Transfer to shallow containers for rapid chilling. Refrigerated, it keeps 4 days; flavors deepen each day. For freezer success, ladle into pint-size silicone bags, press out air, and freeze flat on a sheet pan. Once solid, stack like books—saves 40% freezer space. Thaw overnight in the fridge or submerge the sealed bag in cold water for 1 hour, then heat gently. When reheating, add a splash of stock; beans continue to absorb liquid. Microwave on 70% power, stirring every 90 seconds, or warm on the stove over low heat until the center hits 165°F.
Frequently Asked Questions
Spicy Beef and Black Bean Soup for a Protein Punch
Ingredients
Instructions
- Season & Sear: Toss beef with cornstarch, 1 teaspoon salt, cumin, and pepper. Heat oil in Dutch oven over medium-high; sear beef 3 min per side. Remove.
- Sauté Aromatics: In same pot cook onion and poblano 4 min. Add garlic, chipotle, adobo, oregano, paprika; cook 1 min.
- Deglaze: Pour in sherry, scrape browned bits. Add 1 can beans (with liquid), 1 cup stock, and bay leaf. Purée smooth with immersion blender.
- Simmer Beef: Return beef plus remaining 3 cups stock. Bring to a boil, reduce heat, and simmer covered 45 min.
- Add Veggies: Stir in remaining beans (rinsed), corn, and bell pepper. Simmer 10 min.
- Finish: Off heat add lime juice, cilantro, and jalapeño. Rest 5 min before serving.
Recipe Notes
For deeper flavor, make a day ahead; soup thickens as it stands—thin with stock when reheating. Taste and adjust salt at the end since canned beans and stocks vary.
