Here’s a simple, classic way to make miso soup with paste at home, plus a few twists and tips to make it feel like something you’d see in a modern food blog or forum thread.

Quick Scoop

  • Use miso paste plus dashi (or broth) as your base.
  • Never boil miso once it’s added: heat kills flavor and probiotics.
  • Dissolve the miso in a small bowl of hot broth first so it doesn’t clump.
  • Add tofu, seaweed, and green onion at the end for that restaurant-style bowl.

Basic Ingredients (1–2 servings)

  • 2 cups water or light broth (ideally dashi)
  • 1–2 teaspoons dashi granules (if you’re not using ready-made dashi)
  • 1½–2 tablespoons miso paste (white or yellow is mild; red is stronger)
  • Small piece of tofu, cut into small cubes
  • Small handful dried wakame seaweed (optional but classic)
  • 1–2 green onions, thinly sliced
  • Optional: a dash of soy sauce or tamari to taste

Step‑by‑Step: How to Make Miso Soup with Paste

1. Make the Broth Base

  1. Add 2 cups of water to a small pot.
  2. Bring just to a gentle boil, then lower to a simmer.
  3. If using dashi granules, stir in 1–2 teaspoons until dissolved.

If you don’t have dashi:

  • Use vegetable or chicken broth for a quick hack.
  • For a more Japanese flavor later, you can simmer a small piece of kombu (dried kelp) in the water for 5–10 minutes, then remove it before adding miso.

2. Prep Toppings

While the broth is heating:

  • Cut tofu into small cubes (about 1 cm or ½‑inch).
  • Soak a pinch of dried wakame in a small bowl of water for a few minutes until it puffs up, then drain.
  • Slice green onions thinly.

3. Make a Miso Slurry (Key Step)

This is the part that makes the soup smooth instead of lumpy.

  1. Ladle a small amount of hot broth from the pot into a bowl or cup (about ¼ cup).
  2. Add 1½ tablespoons miso paste to that bowl.
  3. Whisk or stir with chopsticks/spoon until completely smooth, like a thin sauce.

Think of this like tempering eggs in custard: you’re gently introducing the miso to the hot liquid so it blends evenly.

4. Combine and Warm (But Don’t Boil)

  1. Turn the heat under the pot down to low or even off.
  2. Pour the miso slurry back into the pot and stir gently.
  3. Taste:
    • If it’s too light, dissolve another ½ tablespoon miso the same way and add.
  4. Add tofu cubes, rehydrated wakame, and green onions.
  5. Warm the soup gently for 1–2 minutes, but do not let it boil once the miso is in.

5. Serve

  • Ladle into small bowls.
  • Stir just before serving so miso doesn’t settle to the bottom.
  • Drink it hot, ideally right away—miso soup is best fresh.

Simple Variations (Like You’d See in Forum Threads)

  • “Lazy weekday miso”
    • Water + dashi granules + miso paste only.
    • Maybe just green onion if you’re out of tofu/seaweed.
  • Veggie‑boost miso
    • Add thinly sliced mushrooms, shredded cabbage, spinach, bok choy, or sliced carrots.
    • Simmer the veggies in the broth before adding the miso slurry.
  • Noodle miso
    • Add cooked soba or ramen noodles to make it a light meal.
    • Keep the miso amount higher so the flavor doesn’t get washed out by noodles.
  • Spicy miso
    • Stir a little chili paste (like gochujang or chili oil) into the miso slurry.
    • Great on cold evenings or when you feel a bit under the weather.

Tips and Common Mistakes

  • Start with less miso, then add more: miso can be salty; it’s easier to increase than fix over-salting.
  • Don’t boil after adding miso: this flattens the flavor and reduces live cultures.
  • Taste your miso: different brands and colors vary a lot in salt and umami.
  • Store leftover broth separately: if you want to keep some for later, store the plain dashi and add miso fresh each time for best flavor.

Mini FAQ

Can I just stir miso paste directly into the pot?
You can , but it often leaves clumps at the bottom. Dissolving in a small bowl with hot broth first gives a smooth, even soup. How much miso paste per cup of water?
A good starting point is about 1 tablespoon miso paste for every 1–1½ cups of liquid. Adjust to taste: lighter for delicate, stronger for hearty. What type of miso should I buy?

  • White (shiro) miso: mild, a little sweet, very beginner‑friendly.
  • Yellow: a bit deeper and saltier.
  • Red (aka) miso: stronger and saltier; use a bit less, or mix with white.

Short Summary (TL;DR)

  • Simmer water + dashi.
  • Dissolve miso paste in a small bowl of hot broth, then stir back into the pot on low heat.
  • Add tofu, seaweed, and green onions; gently warm and serve, never boiling after miso goes in.