Bistro French Onion Soup

Panera Bistro French Onion Soup

Enjoy the French Onion Soup, packed with:

  • Onions
  • Tomato sauce
  • Gastrique
  • Soy sauce
  • Corn starch
  • Guar gum
  • Thyme
  • Black pepper
  • Gruyère cheese

About The Panera Bistro French Onion Soup

Bistro French Onion Soup is a warm, savory soup served at Panera Bread that builds on the classic French bistro tradition. It features a rich broth base loaded with sweet caramelized onions, topped with melted Gruyère cheese and black pepper focaccia croutons. It’s the kind of soup that feels like a full meal on a cold afternoon.

Panera updated its original French Onion Soup to the “Bistro” version back in 2016. That change swapped out Asiago-Parmesan cheese for Gruyère and replaced the old Asiago croutons with black pepper focaccia. The result is a milder, slightly more approachable flavor that leans into comfort over sharp complexity.

I’ve seen a lot of people order this without really knowing what’s in it. That’s worth changing. Whether you’re watching your sodium, curious about the ingredients, or just want to know if it’s worth ordering, this breakdown gives you everything you need.

SoupCalories (Cup)Sodium (Cup)Protein (Cup)Price (approx.)
Bistro French Onion1901,330mg6g~$7.99–$8.49
Broccoli Cheddar240980–1,010mg8g~$8.49
Creamy Tomato260770mg4g~$7.99
Homestyle Chicken Noodle1201,040mg10g~$7.49
Cream of Chicken & Wild Rice190940mg5g~$7.99

Panera Bistro French Onion Soup Ingredients

The ingredient list at Panera is longer than you might expect from a soup that looks this simple. Panera does publish its full ingredient information, and here’s what goes into the Bistro French Onion Soup:

  • Water
  • Onions
  • Tomato sauce (tomatoes, salt, onion powder, garlic powder, red pepper, citric acid)
  • Gastrique (sugar, tomato concentrate, sherry wine vinegar, caramel)
  • Soy sauce (water, wheat, soybeans, salt)
  • Butter (sweet cream, milk, salt)
  • Corn starch
  • Sea salt
  • Natural caramelized onion flavor
  • Chicken stock and natural chicken flavor
  • Soybean oil
  • Natural roast chicken flavor
  • Yeast extract
  • Guar gum
  • Thyme
  • Black pepper
  • Black pepper focaccia croutons
  • Gruyère cheese

The gastrique — that combination of sherry wine vinegar, caramel, and tomato — is what gives the broth its distinctive sweet-savory depth. It’s also why this soup doesn’t taste quite like the version you’d get at a sit-down French restaurant.

Panera Bistro French Onion Soup Calories by Size

Calorie count shifts significantly depending on which size you order. Most people don’t realize how much the bread bowl changes the math. Here’s a clear look at what each size delivers:

SizeCaloriesBest For
Cup (8 oz)190Light lunch side, calorie-conscious diners
Bowl (12 oz)290Standard lunch portion
Bread Bowl860–900Hearty, filling meal

The cup and bowl are reasonable choices if you’re keeping an eye on your intake. The bread bowl is a different story. Most of its calories come from the sourdough shell itself, which adds somewhere around 570 calories on top of the soup. If you’re ordering it as a full meal, that’s fine. Just go in knowing what you’re getting.

What Makes the Panera French Onion Soup Different?

Panera’s version isn’t trying to be a traditional French bistro soup. It’s designed for speed, consistency, and wide appeal across hundreds of locations. Once you accept that, a few things stand out that genuinely set it apart from other fast-casual soups.

Gruyère instead of processed cheese. Most chain restaurants use a cheese blend or a processed topping. Panera uses actual Gruyère, which melts cleanly and adds a nutty flavor that cheaper alternatives can’t replicate.

Black pepper focaccia croutons. These aren’t just bread cubes. The focaccia croutons have a light peppery heat and a texture that holds up in the broth longer than standard croutons. That contrast between soft soup and slightly crispy bread is part of what makes this version satisfying.

The gastrique base. That sherry wine vinegar and caramel gastrique in the broth adds a complexity you won’t find in most competitors. It’s what makes the broth taste a little sweet, a little tangy, and distinctly different from a plain beef stock.

No artificial preservatives. Panera’s commitment to removing artificial preservatives and flavors aligns with its clean-label stance, and that applies here. The ingredient list is long, but you won’t find artificial colors or preservatives in this soup.

Chicken stock base, not beef. This surprises people. The broth uses chicken stock and natural chicken flavor rather than a traditional beef stock. It reads like beef broth in taste, but the base is different — which also means it’s not suitable for anyone avoiding poultry products.

Panera Bistro French Onion Soup vs Other Panera Soups

Wondering how it stacks up against the rest of the menu? Here’s a side-by-side look at the main options:

SoupCalories (Cup)Sodium (Cup)Protein (Cup)Price (approx.)
Bistro French Onion1901,330mg6g~$7.99–$8.49
Broccoli Cheddar240980–1,010mg8g~$8.49
Creamy Tomato260770mg4g~$7.99
Homestyle Chicken Noodle1201,040mg10g~$7.49
Cream of Chicken & Wild Rice190940mg5g~$7.99

The French Onion carries the highest sodium of the group by a significant margin. If sodium is something you track closely, the Creamy Tomato or Chicken Noodle are easier options. For protein, the Chicken Noodle wins cleanly at 10g per cup with only 120 calories.

FAQ’s

A cup contains 190 calories and a bowl contains 290 calories. The bread bowl version climbs to around 860–900 calories once you factor in the sourdough.

The soup is built on a base of water, caramelized onions, tomato sauce, and a gastrique made from sherry wine vinegar and caramel. It’s topped with black pepper focaccia croutons and Gruyère cheese. The full ingredient list also includes soy sauce, butter, corn starch, chicken stock, guar gum, thyme, and black pepper.

No. Panera’s version uses beef broth confirmed via ingredient lists, and true vegetarian French onion soup requires vegetable stock. The soup also contains butter and Gruyère, so it’s not vegan either.

No. The Bistro French Onion Soup lists wheat as an ingredient and is not gluten-free. The focaccia croutons contain enriched wheat flour, and the soy sauce in the base also contains wheat.

The Bistro French Onion Soup is priced at around $8.49 for a bowl, though pricing varies by location. Cup pricing typically runs slightly lower, around $7.49–$7.99.

The beef base, cheese, and focaccia croutons all contribute to the higher sodium level, reaching 1,840–1,990mg per bowl. Salt also acts as a flavor enhancer in commercial kitchens, so it appears in multiple parts of the recipe — the soup base, the croutons, and the cheese.

Yes. The soup is topped with melted Gruyère cheese. For dine-in orders, the croutons are typically melted under the cheese. For to-go orders, they may be packed separately.

Panera updated its recipe to the “Bistro French Onion Soup” in 2016, replacing Asiago-Parmesan cheese with Gruyère and swapping Asiago croutons for black pepper focaccia. The gastrique base also adds a sweet-tangy depth that sets it apart from both traditional bistro versions and most fast-casual competitors.

Panera Bread – Customer Service

  • Panera Headquarter: St. Louis, Missouri, USA
  • Official Website: https://www.panerabread.com/
  • Mobile App: Panera Bread App
  • Panera Locations: https://www.panerabread.com/en-us/cafe/locations
  • Panera Careers: https://careers.panerabread.com

Conclusion

The Panera French Onion Soup is a solid comfort option if you go in with the right expectations. It’s not trying to replace a classic Parisian recipe. What it does deliver is a consistently satisfying bowl of soup with real Gruyère, a thoughtfully flavored broth, and a texture contrast that most chain soups don’t pull off well. The cup is a smart choice if you’re pairing it with something else — it keeps calories reasonable while still giving you the full flavor experience.

The one thing I’d flag before you order is the sodium. Nearly 2,000mg in a single bowl is significant, especially if the rest of your day includes other salty items. If you’re eating this occasionally, that’s not a dealbreaker. But if you’re managing blood pressure or following a low-sodium diet, the cup is the better call — or consider one of the lower-sodium options on the menu.

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