Roasted Butternut-Apple and Pumpkin Soup is flavorful, healthy and satisfying and the flavors of fall in a soup! Enjoy in a bowl or as a shooter and teaser to whet your appetite for a fall dinner party or Thanksgiving feast.

Roasted Butternut-Apple and Pumpkin Soup makes a perfect appetizer to serve your guests in the form of a shooter~ just a teaser to whet their appetite for the Thanksgiving feast!
You can make this soup a couple of days in advance, freeze the remainder and Give Thanks when you have it to pull out on a day when you don’t have time to cook.
This post contains affiliate links. For more information see my disclosure policy. As an Amazon associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. If you purchase anything through an affiliate link, I earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.

I had an open can of pumpkin puree that I wanted to use and found a couple of recipes using a combination of fall flavors in a soup. I ended up with a cornucopia of ingredients from several recipes, making it similar to our favorite fall soup, but with the addition of apple instead of pear.
You could cook your vegetables and apples in the stock in this soup, but I like the flavor that comes from roasting. Once you add the roasted vegetables to your hot stock, your soup is 10 minutes away from being ready.
In addition to adding your roasted veggies and either chicken or vegetable stock this soup uses evaporated milk to thicken and give it a creamy texture.
Benefits of using evaporated milk:
Creamy texture: It adds a velvety mouthfeel to soups, like potato, clam chowder, and creamy chicken noodle, giving them a smooth, rich texture.
Reduced fat: Evaporated milk has significantly less fat than heavy cream, offering a lighter option for creamy soups without sacrificing flavor.
No curdling: The sterilization process evaporated milk undergoes makes it resistant to curdling.
Long shelf life: As a canned product, evaporated milk is convenient to keep in your pantry for whenever you need it.

Roasted Butternut-Apple and Pumpkin Soup
Ingredients
2 apples, peeled, cored and chopped (I used Granny Smith)
2 pounds butternut squash, peeled, seeded and cut into 1-inch pieces (look for cubed butternut squash in the produce department for a shortcut)
2 medium tomatoes, cored and quartered
2 leeks, pale green and white parts only, rinsed and chopped (for how to clean leeks, see here)
2 cloves garlic
1 cup pumpkin puree
½ teaspoon pumpkin pie spice
2 tablespoons brown sugar
1 cup (or more) evaporated milk
Olive Oil
Salt & Pepper, to taste
6 cups (or more) reduced-sodium chicken or vegetable stock (I used chicken)

Directions
Preheat oven to 400 degrees F.
Combine apples, squash, tomatoes, leeks, garlic, oil, salt and pepper in a large bowl; toss to coat. Spread evenly on two large rimmed baking sheets. Roast, stirring occasionally, until the vegetables are tender, about 45 minutes. I set the timer so I don’t forget and stir twice, at 15 minutes and again at 30.
While vegetables are roasting, heat stock in large Dutch oven. When vegetables are tender, add to heated stock, along with pumpkin, brown sugar, pumpkin pie spice. Use an immersion blender in your pot or transfer to a regular blender in batches, blending until smooth. Add milk, stirring to combine and heat through, about 10 minutes.
If you’re in the market for an immersion blender, this one has 4.6 out of 5 stars with 5,224 global ratings. It also comes with a chopper, whisk and frother, handy for soup, baby food, smoothies and whipped cream.
Notes:
Add more milk or stock as needed for your desired soup thickness. Garnish with pomegranate seeds, rosemary, or roasted pepitas.
I used Libbey Just Dessert Glass Mini Parfait Glasses.
‘Shooter’ or mini parfait glasses can also be found at World Market, Bed, Bath & Beyond and party stores.
Le Creuset Stoneware Pumpkin Gravy Boat with Lid, 14 oz.
Keep your soup warm (or gravy!) for serving

The perfect combination of sweet and savory~ if serving a bowl, we enjoy the addition of savory toppings. . . chopped walnuts, crumbled bleu cheese and bacon or crispy prosciutto.
Roasted Butternut-Apple-Pumpkin Soup Shooters
Equipment
- immersion or regular blender
Ingredients
- 2 Granny Smith apples peeled, cored and chopped
- 2 pounds butternut squash peeled, seeded and cut into 1-inch pieces
- 2 medium tomatoes cored and quartered
- 2 leeks pale green and white parts only, rinsed and chopped
- 2 cloves garlic
- 1 cup pumpkin puree
- ½ teaspoon pumpkin pie spice
- 2 tablespoons brown sugar
- 1 cup evaporated milk or more to thin to desired consistency
- Olive Oil
- Salt & Pepper to taste
- 6 cups reduced-sodium chicken or vegetable stock
Optional garnish
- rosemary sprigs
- pomegranate arils
- roasted pepitas or chopped walnuts
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 400 degrees F.
- Combine apples, squash, tomatoes, leeks, garlic, oil, salt and pepper in a large bowl; toss to coat. Spread evenly on two large rimmed baking sheets. Roast, stirring occasionally, until the vegetables are tender, about 45 minutes.
- While vegetables are roasting, heat stock in large Dutch oven. When vegetables are tender, add to heated stock, along with pumpkin, brown sugar, pumpkin pie spice. Use an *immersion blender to blend until smooth. Add milk, stirring to combine and heat through, about 10 minutes.
Notes
- Add milk or more stock as needed to your desired thickness. Serve as shooters for an appetizer. Garnish with pomegranate seeds, rosemary, or roasted pepitas if desired.
- *If you don’t have an immersion blender, you can process soup, in batches, in a blender until smooth. Return to Dutch oven, add pumpkin, pumpkin pie spice and sugar to pureed mixture. Add milk, stirring to combine and heat through.


Find 20+ recipes you’ll want to gobble for your Thanksgiving feast, HERE.

Thank you for your visit, I’m joining:
Metamorphosis Monday
Discover more from Home is Where the Boat Is
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.









Mary, This sounds delicious, is pretty and certainly would impress guests.
This sounds wonderful and looks like it will fit into my Dollar Tree green champagne flutes perfectly for Thanksgiving! They do double duty as shrimp shooters so why not soup? The bowl is the same size as the shooter glasses from Pier 1 !. Thanks for the recipe!!!
The soup sounds great Mary and your pics with the seasonal colors are pretty! Love the pouring action shot:@)
What a lovely start to a special meal, and I love the way you have garnished the shooters! I would certainly be thankful to be served one of these, sounds divine! I am so jealous that you can buy butternut squash cubes, I am tackling a butternut recipe today and am dreading that part! Your photos are mouth watering!
Jenna
what a great idea and one of my favorite soups … butternut and pumpkin. Happy happy happy!
The soup looks delicious Mary and I love the way you choose to serve it!
Love this idea! Now if I can just find enough glasses for all the people who will be here!
I love this, Mary! It’s a great idea and your beautiful photos make it look mouth-watering.
Food for thought!!! franki
I’ve been looking for something special to add to the feast…especially for my vegetarian and special dietary need guests. This will work perfectly! Thank you. And as always, everything you do is beautiful!
I know how hard those “pouring action” shots are…well done!
I’ve been trying to think of something to make in my little Libby parfait glasses…this may just be it. THANKS, Mary!
Very, very pretty post.
Great idea and beautiful presentation! Will be using this recipe for Thanksgiving. Thanks!
Sounds delicious and I too love the presentation…The fresh cranberries and rosemary sprigs certainly add a ‘holidayish’ touch…
wild over your combo of rosemary and poms, PERFECT PARTNERS! these are darling and i adore your styling with the turkey, cute cute cute!
Those shooters are visually stunning, dear Mary, and I know must taste even better. What a great idea! Are you sure you’re not a professional food stylist??!! Well, you should be! xxoo
I am always looking for great soup recipes and this one is going in my recipe box and pinterest! As always the presentation is spectacular!
Great idea! Your presentation always inspires me, Mary.
Sounds great Mary,
but I NEED to know where you got that turkey kitchen towel?
It’s a napkin, it came from Williams-Sonoma last year :)
This would make the meal so exciting. I love your garnish. Anything in mini size is so fun. We love shot glasses for little bites like this. Your roasting sounds wonderful to add a depth of flavor. Certainly a lot of fun.
Wow, the toppings really sound great with the recipe!
Serving soup as shooters is a great entertaining idea, and I love the way you finished these with pomegranate seeds and rosemary – beautiful.
The soup looks delightful. And it is creative to serve it as a shooter.
Heidi’s Wanderings
We love soups so this recipe will go into the file for sure! I love that you are doing printable recipes now! Thank you!!! Have a truly blessed Thanksgiving.
Just curious- how many cups of soup did this recipe make?
where did you get your shooter glasses? It makes a great presentation, and I’ve been dying to try a shooter soup. This is wonderful.
Hi Linda, you can find various sizes and shapes at World Market, Bed, Bath & Beyond and Pier 1 :)
>
Can you serve this cold or room temp?
Hi Michele, You could serve it cold or room temperature but it has much more flavor warm :)
You can use small glass votive candle holders for a shooter glass also, more cost effective.