Hopping John Soup has black-eyed peas, ham, and collard greens, and this is my favorite dish to make for luck in the New Year! And this lucky New Year’s soup does have some carbs, but see tips in this post for making a version that’s lower in carbs if you prefer.

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Hopping John Soup close-up photo of soup in bowl

For years I’ve been making this tasty Hopping John Soup for good luck in the New Year, and if you’re willing to eat a few carbs to get good luck, I highly recommend this soup! It has all the luck-bringing properties of the traditional dish of Hopping John that’s made on New Year’s Day, and go ahead and make it early if you want to get started on the luck. 

If you’re not familiar with Hopping John, it’s eaten throughout the southern U.S. on New Year’s Eve or New Year’s Day. The origin of the name is uncertain, but it’s thought to have come from the Creole French pronunciation of the pigeon peas used in the dish.

I took the Hopping John ingredients of black-eyed peas, ham, and collard greens and turned them into a soup a few years ago. This recipe has been something I’ve made for New Year’s luck ever since, so I’m picking it as my Friday Favorites  pick for the last Friday of the year in hopes you’ll make it and get some good lucky; Happy New Year everyone!

What ingredients do you need for this recipe?

(This is only a list of ingredients; please scroll down for complete printable recipe. Or if you use the JUMP TO RECIPE link at the top of the page, it will take you directly to the complete recipe.)

What is the symbolism of the Hopping John ingredients?

Recipe variations for Hopping John abound, but all contain ham, black eyed peas, and collard greens, the peas representing coins and the collard greens representing dollar bills for financial luck in the new year.

What are Black-Eyed Peas?

Black-Eyed peas are legumes that are grown around the world. Here’s more about this tasty ingredient that are sometimes called Black-Eyed Beans. In the United States they are often made into a southern dish called Hopping John.

How can you make Hopping John Soup lower in carbs?

If you want good luck but don’t want so many carbs, you can definitely make this soup with more ham, celery, and collards and fewer black-eyed peas which will make it lower in carbs.

Want more ideas for Black-Eyed Peas?

Hopping John Soup collage of recipe steps

How to Make Hopping John Soup:

(This is only a summary of the steps for the recipe; please scroll down for complete printable recipe. Or if you use the JUMP TO RECIPE link at the top of the page, it will take you directly to the complete recipe.)

  1. Chop the onions and celery and cook them just until they start to soften, adding garlic the last few minutes. While the onions cook, chop the ham.  (If you ham has a rind, save it to add to the soup for more flavor.)
  2. After onions/celery/garlic mixture is done, add the chopped ham and saute over very low heat for about 10 minutes.
  3. In a large soup pot, add the ham/onion/celery/garlic mixture, chicken stock (or if you have Homemade Ham Stock I would definitely use that for this recipe), black-eyed peas, dried thyme, and ham rinds if you have them.  Let this cook at a low simmer for about an hour.  (These photos are a double batch of soup.)
  4. While the soup simmers, cut away the thick inner rib of the collard greens, then coarsely chop the greens.
  5. After soup has simmered for one hour, taste for flavor, adding some ham flavor base (affiliate link) if needed and adding a little water if the soup seems too thick. 
  6. Add chopped collard greens to the soup and let simmer for about one hour more. When the black-eyed peas are as soft as you’d like, remove the ham rind and then use an immersion blender to partially puree the soup, being careful not to overdo it if you want a soup with some chunkiness to it. 
  7. Add the red pepper flakes and vinegar and simmer 10 minutes more (or longer; I sometimes cook it an hour or so longer at this point.)
  8. Serve hot and enjoy the good luck!

square image of Hopping John Soup in soup bowl with spoon

More Black-Eyed Peas for New Year’s:

Hopping John Soup for Good Luck in the New Year (Black-Eyed Pea, Ham, and Collard Greens Soup) found on KalynsKitchen.com
Yield: 8 servings

Hopping John Soup

Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 2 hours
Total Time 2 hours 10 minutes

Hopping John Soup is a tasty soup recipe with ingredients that are supposed to bring luck in the new year!

Ingredients

  • 1 small onion, chopped in fairly small pieces
  • 1 cup celery, chopped in fairly small pieces
  • 1 T olive oil
  • 1 tsp. minced garlic
  • 3 cups diced ham (cut off the ham rind and save; you can get by with a bit less ham if needed)
  • 8 cups homemade chicken stock (see notes)
  • 2 16 oz. packages frozen black-eyed peas (see notes)
  • 1/2 tsp. dried thyme
  • 1 bunch fresh collard greens, chopped (see notes)
  • pinch red pepper flakes (optional)
  • 1 T apple cider vinegar, or more to taste
  • Optional: ham flavor base

Instructions

  1. In large frying pan, saute onion and celery in olive oil about 5 minutes, until starting to soften. Add garlic and cook about 2 minutes more.
  2. Then add ham and saute over very low heat 10 minutes. (Don't skip this step, which concentrates the ham flavor into the vegetables.)
  3. Transfer mixture to large soup pot, add chicken stock, black eyed peas, dried thyme, and ham rinds if available, and cook at very low simmer for one hour.
  4. After soup has cooked one hour, taste for flavoring. Add more water and ham flavor base if needed. (It will depend on your ham, but I usually add a tiny bit. I added about 2 cups more water to the soup at this point.)
  5. Add chopped collard greens, stir into soup and simmer one hour more, or until black-eyed peas are quite soft.
  6. When black-eyed peas are as soft as you want them, remove pieces of ham rind, then use an immersion blender, food processor, or hand masher to partially process about half the soup. You want a mixture of broken and unbroken black-eyes peas, with some thickening of the soup from the pureeing process. Be careful not to over process.
  7. Add red pepper flakes and vinegar and simmer 10 minutes more (or longer, I sometimes cook as much as an hour more at this point.)
  8. Serve hot.

Notes

If you don't have homemade chicken stock you can use water with Better than Bouillon Roasted Chicken Base (affiliate link) or canned chicken broth (affiliate link) instead. I also like to use Goya Ham Flavor Concentrate (affiliate link) for more ham flavor. (Or if you have Homemade Ham Stock I would definitely use that for this recipe, in which case you won't need the ham flavor base!)

You can also use 6 cups freshly cooked black-eyed peas or 4 cans black-eyed peas to make this soup. One bunch of collard greens is about 2 cups when measured after chopping, but next time I would use more.

This recipe created by Kalyn with inspiration from The Gourmet Cookbook.)

Nutrition Information:

Yield:

8

Serving Size:

1

Amount Per Serving: Calories: 342Total Fat: 9gSaturated Fat: 2gUnsaturated Fat: 5gCholesterol: 50mgSodium: 1023mgCarbohydrates: 28.5gFiber: 9gSugar: 9gProtein: 31g

Nutrition information is automatically calculated by the Recipe Plug-In I am using. I am not a nutritionist and cannot guarantee 100% accuracy, since many variables affect those calculations.

Did you make this recipe?

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Low-Carb Diet / Low-Glycemic Diet / South Beach Diet Suggestions:
Black-eyed peas are not low in carbs, but if you want to reduce the carbs for this soup use more ham, celery, and collard greens in proportion to the other ingredients. Hopping John Soup would be approved for any phase of the original South Beach Diet, but limit serving sizes for phase one.

Find More Recipes Like This One:
Use Soup Recipes to find more recipes like this one. Use the Diet Type Index to find more recipes suitable for a specific eating plan. You might also like to follow Kalyn’s Kitchen on Pinterest, on Facebook, on Instagram, on TikTok, or on YouTube to see all the good recipes I’m sharing there.

Historical Notes for this Recipe:
This lucky Hopping John Soup was first posted in 2006, and I’ve been making it every year since then! The recipe was last updated with more information in 2023.

Pinterest image of Hopping John Soup

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