This week we
had our first snow here in the western Maine mountains. Winter time is the time for soup.
Another book
that is interesting is Twelve Months of Monastery Soups by Brother
Victor-Antoine d’ Avila-Latourrette.
If this book does anything, it teaches you that just about anything you
can throw together in a broth can be called soup.
Let me cover
the basis of soup making. Most soups
start with the Trinity: diced onions, sliced celery and thinly sliced carrots sautéed
in olive oil. I always start with the
Trinity-plus-One: a clove of minced garlic added the last two minutes of sauté.
Just before
adding the broth, I add either a tablespoon of dried thyme or marjoram or
parsley to the sauté.
Nest comes
the broth. I always us McKays
instant beef or chicken stock and seasoning.
Finally I
add any left overs in the refrigerator, and if I choose, either pasta, potatoes
or can beans; and usually a large can of diced tomatoes.
That’s soup.
The one I
made last week was:
Trinity-plus-One
(two stalks of celery, two carrots and one diced onion)
Leftover Kentucky
sliced smoked ham diced
1 tbsp. thyme
4 cups
chicken stock
1 large can of diced tomatoes
1 can of garbanzo
beans (rinsed.)
Brought it
up to temperature for ten minutes and it was delicious.
If you like
more liquid add more stock or tomatoes.
If you add potatoes or pasta you will have to heat it until they are
tender. I often use canned beans in
place of pasta or potatoes to cut down the cooking time and the starch.
Another
favorite is Mushroom Soup
Sauté onions
and mushrooms until tender
Add a
tablespoon of dried parsley.
Add 4 cups
of chicken stock
Bring to a
boil for a few minutes
Add one cup
of sour cream and process with a hand-blender until smooth.
My wife
makes a cauliflower soup
Cauliflower buds
cut in half
4 cups of
chicken stock
1 block of
firm tofu cubed
A sprinkle
of red pepper flakes
Blend with a
hand blender until smooth.
Any time can
be soup time. Quick to make and great
with hardy bread.
The Ol’Buzzard
I like soup once in awhile but can't eat a lot of it. I ate a river of soup as a kid and that's enough for a lifetime for me, LOL!
ReplyDeleteLove soup. Apparently you do too. I will have to try out your recipes. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteI made a really nice hardy beef, vegetable and barley soup last week when we had a cold snap hit. Yesterday I made my favorite corn chowder. so good and warming for the soul.
ReplyDeleteI can eat soup every day. Tanya makes about three basic soups which I can get tired of. today she made green lentil soup and it was wonderful. Her chicken broth is always chicken based. No powder. I made yellow pea and ham soup one day and inhaled it. I do have to try your mushroom soup recipe.
ReplyDeleteI made a huge pot of 15 bean soup for center. I have made chicken noodle, chicken dumplings, potato soup, chili and stew. Going to make potato soup for center the next Friday we are open. maybe on a Tuesday..depends.I love soup...always make so much I give to either the grands or friends in apts..I have some great soup cookbooks too.
ReplyDeleteI like to make soup, then freeze individual servings for later dinners. It's about soup time here too though no real cold weather. It's just November - soup and stew time!
ReplyDeleteGood Lord, these QAnons. They wouldn't know how to make soup if you spotted them the first three ingredients and the broth.
ReplyDelete