


Making Julia Child’s cream of mushroom soup is easier than you may expect. The rich and creamy soup is comfort food in a bowl.

If you’re looking for a healthy dish to incorporate into your diet, this is not your recipe. However, if you looking for a rich, refined starter to serve at a dinner party, cream of mushroom soup is a wonderful option. You don’t have to serve a lot of the creamy soup – just a little of the velouté will go a long way toward satisfying your hungry guests, especially on a chilly night.
Ingredients

Here’s the full list of ingredients required to make Julia Child’s cream of mushroom soup:
- Bay Leaf
- Butter
- Chicken Stock or Low Sodium Chicken Broth
- Egg Yolks
- Heavy Cream
- Flour
- Lemon Juice
- White Button or Cremini Mushrooms (caps and stems separated)
- Onion
- Salt
- Parsley
- Thyme
Ingredient quantities are detailed in the printable recipe card below.
It’s no secret this recipe requires a whole lot of butter – it’s the ingredient that brings decadent creaminess to cream of mushroom soup. If you have a problem with the butter quantity, our best recommendations are to either focus on portion control or make a different kind of soup.
Also, while you can purchase pre-made chicken stock or broth, we encourage you to make your own stock for this recipe. Doing so will make a huge difference in the final product.
How To Make Cream of Mushroom Soup
This is a soup recipe that’s completed in four phases. First, you make the roux. Next, you constuct and thicken the broth. Then you steam sauté the mushroom caps. Finally, you finish and serve the soup. That’s how Julia Child designed the recipe. You can alternatively combine the roux and mushroom sauté steps into one step. We plan to try that method in the future but, for now, we’ve chosen to emulate the spirit of the classic recipe.

After you gather all of the ingredients, start the recipe by slowly sautéing the onions and three tablespoons of butter for about 10 minutes over a moderately low flame until the onions are softened. This step infuses onion flavor into the butter.
Pro Tip
Start heating the chicken stock while the onions are sautéing. You want it at a boil by the time you finish your roux.

Next, start making the roux, which in this recipe is a simple white roux that thickens the broth. The key is to cook the roux until the flour has just cooked into the butter. Otherwise, the roux will caramelize, which you don’t want to happen.
Once the roux is done and the stock is boiling, add the stock to the roux along with the aromatics (i.e. the mushroom stems, the bay leaf and the thyme). Cook the entire solution for about 20 minutes.



Halfway through cooking the broth, steam sauté the mushroom caps in butter for about five minutes or until the mushrooms are soft and have given up a decent amount of their liquid.
Add the sautéed caps to the broth after you strain the broth of the stems, the onion and the aromatics. On our second recipe run through, this is where we skipped the straining step.
We were initally disappointed by the faux pas but noticed no material difference in the overall flavor or eating experience of the soup. (Our first try, when we followed all of the classic steps, created a soup with a slightly more refined, luxurious texture.) Another option is to liquify the soup with a blender but that’s not a Julia technique.


Once the mushrooms are added, simmer the entire soup for 10 minutes.

To finish the soup, carefully temper an egg yolk and cream mixture and lightly “poach’ the mixture in the hot soup liquid over the stove.


Julia’s recipe includes an option of serving this soup with sautéed “turned” mushrooms. Turning mushrooms is a secret skill that requires a method of knife turning that’s next level. The easier option is to garnish the soup with chopped parsley which is what we do. That being said, there’s plenty of refinement in a chopped parsley garnish atop ultra creamy soup.
Add another couple tablespoons of softened butter to finish the dish since that’s the way the French (and Julia Child) roll.

Is this an every day soup? Heck no. Instead, it’s a wonderful dish to start a dinner party with a bang. Your guests will be impressed and the creamy soup will warm them up from the inside out.
For the Roux
- 3 tablespoons butter
- 3 tablespoons flour (all purpose)
- 1/4 cup onion (minced)
For the Base Broth
- 1/3 bay leaf
- 6 cups chicken stock (or low sodium chicken broth)
- 1 pound white button or cremini mushrooms (caps and stems separated – stems to be used for the initial broth)
- 2 sprigs parsley
- 1/8 teaspoon thyme (chopped)
- pepper (to tatste)
- salt (to taste)
For the Mushroom Cap Sauté
- 2 tablespoons butter
- 1 teaspoon lemon juice
- mushroom caps (from the previous pound of whole mushrooms)
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
For the Finished Soup
- 2 egg yolks
- 3/4 cup heavy cream
- 3 tablespoons butter (softened)
- parsley ( chopped)
Making the Roux
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Cook the onions and butter over low to medium heat in a 3 to 4 quart saucepan until the onions are just softened. Do not let the onion brown. In the meantime, bring the stock to a boil.
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Once the onions are softened, evenly pour in the flour. Cook until the ingredients incorporate into a white roux – don’t let the mixture turn brown. Once the mixture is incorporated, add the chicken stock, the parsley sprigs, the mushroom stems, the bay leaf and the thyme. Add salt and pepper to taste.
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Simmer the mixture, partially covered, for 20 minutes, skimming occasionally.
Mushroom Cap Steam Sauté
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Meanwhile. about hallway through the cooking of the broth, sauté the mushroom caps in 2 tablespoons of butter along with the lemon juice and salt. Keep the pan covered until the mushrooms are soft and have given up their liquid – about 5 minutes,
Cooking the Soup
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Once the mixture is cooked, strain the entire mixture, pressing the mushroom stems, and place the strained mixture back into the pot. Pour in the sautéed mushroom caps along with the mushroom cap cooking liquid. Simmer for 10 minutes.
Finishing the Soup
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Beat the egg yolks and heavy cream in a mixing bowl. Once incorporated, temper the mixture by pouring in the hot soup one spoon at a time until about six spoons are mixed in. Pour the rest of the yolk/cream mixture into the soup and cook just under a simmer for about 2 minutes until the entire yolk mixture is incorporated.
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Add in 1 to 3 tablespoons of softened butter to finish the soup. Garnish with chopped parsley. Serve.
If you plan to serve the soup later, Julia recommends making the soup until the finishing step and then covering it with a spoonful of cream. Another option is to do the same thing but cover the soup with plastic wrap. When you reheat the soup, heat it for a couple minutes until it’s hot but not boiling (a bare simmer) and temper it with the egg yolk/cream mixture and, of course, the butter finish.
💡 Frequently Asked Questions
Potage velouté aux champignons is French for cream of mushroom soup. Regardless of which name you use, it’s a rich starter that’s wonderful to serve at dinner parties during the autumn and winter seasons.
Cream of mushroom soup was likely first served in France centuries ago when great chefs of the royal court refined and pioneered the art of sauce cookery. The Campbell’s Company brought the soup to the masses when it introduced a canned version in 1934.
Bay Leaf, Butter, Chicken Stock, Egg Yolk, Flour, Heavy Cream, Lemon Juice, Mushrooms, Onion, Parsley, Pepper, Salt and Thyme
This soup’s richness makes it ideal to serve as a dinner party first course. It’s a lush dish that’s best served in small portions and slowly savored.
If you plan to serve the soup later, Julia recommends making the soup until the finishing step and then covering it with a spoonful of cream. Another option is to do the same thing but cover the soup with plastic wrap. When you reheat the soup, heat it for a couple minutes until it’s hot but not boiling (a bare simmer) and temper it with the egg yolk/cream mixture and, of course, the butter finish.
⚙️ Disclosures
Article Updates
We update our articles regularly. Some updates are major while others are minor link changes and spelling corrections. Let us know if you see anything that needs to be updated in this article.
Funding
We purchased the ingredients and tools used to create this recipe.
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