Showing posts with label Cauliflower. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cauliflower. Show all posts
Wednesday, 23 October 2013
Cauliflower Cheese Soup
I think we can all agree that winter is finally here and that means two things - 1) everyone moans about the weather and 2) my blog gets more hits as everyone rather sensibly says 'ya know what, now the nights are drawing in, I need some soup, tasty and comforting, to take my mind off the rain and the fact that I can't afford to put the heating on any more...
And like some kind of soup supplying fairy, I can make that wish come true! And there can be few better and more comforting soups than this cauliflower cheese recipe.
One of the things that we did here at soup HQ over the summer was convert the patch of weeds behind the house into a vegetable garden. Being that I was our first year of properly flexing our green fingers, the garden more or less resembled the patch of weeds it had previously been, but with some brave veggies poking their way through the canopy of bind weed (next yearm I shall be more prepared for just how much work even a small veg patch can be to maintain)
Amongst the things that did grow really well were cauliflowers. I love caulis and ours were turned into all manner of tasty dishes (gobi aloo being my favourite) but I realised that not a single one had been soup-ified. That was quickly rectified with the last two being added to this recipe. The stronger the cheddar the better when making the soup, and if you feel like you need some meat in the dish, garnish with some crispy bacon bits, although the soup works fine without them.
Next year, I'll be growing lots more stuff - if anyone has any suggestions for their favourite veg to , grow, especially ones that are fairly idiot proof and grow anywhere, Id love to hear from you...
Ingredients
2 Carrots
1 Onion
2 Stalks Celery
1 Large Potato
2 Cloves Garlic
1 Cauliflower
150g Mature Cheddar Cheese
800ml Vegetable Stock
400ml Milk
40g Butter
2 Sprigs Thyme
1 Tbsp English Mustard
Method
1. Peel and slice the carrot, potato, onion and garlic, chop the celery and cut the cauliflower into florets
2. In your soup pan, heat the butter and then gently fry the carrots, onion, garlic and celery until it starts to soften.
3. Add the cauliflower, potato, thyme, mustard and stock, bring to the boil and then reduce to a simmer, covered, for 30 minutes, until the cauliflower is softened
4. Remove the pan from the heat and allow the soup to cool
5. Blend until smooth, then return to the pan
6. Add the milk and cheese and bring to a simmer again. Adjust seasoning to taste and then serve
7. Garnish with some more grated cheddar and some crispy bacon bits
Tuesday, 5 February 2013
Creme Du Barry : French Cauliflower Soup
A cauliflower recipe, my kingdom for a cauliflower recipe! A few weeks ago I had a surfeit of cauliflower, doe to getting them two weeks in a row in our veg box delivery and not quite getting round to eating them with anything. I asked around on twitter and got quite a few suggestions for what to do with the vegetable, as all I could think to do was either cauliflower cheese or a curry, neither of which took my fancy at the time.
One of the recipes that I made was a Cauliflower cake, which was savoury and much nicer than it sounds - indeed, I mainly only made it as a challenge and due to the fact that I seem to be drawn to odd recipes.
Another suggestion, made by Jac on twitter (@clickerjac if you want to follow her) was Creme Du Barry which, contrary to my first guess, is NOT a soup made by or from a guy called Barry but instead a cream of cauliflower soup. Anyway, Jac sent me a recipe, which I have to admit to slightly altering, just because it's cold and miserable and I felt like jazzing things up a bit to make it a bit more rich and comforting, and here it is...
You could always add some meat to the mix if you wanted - I'm thinking some crispy bacon or cubes of black pudding liberally sprinkled on top would be great too (In fact, what am I thinking, I have no idea why I didn't try that myself. I must be slipping...)
Ingredients
500g Cauliflower
1 Large Onion
1 Potato
2 Leeks
3 Cloves Garlic
20g Butter
1l Chicken Stock
200ml White Wine
150ml Single Cream
Method.
1. Heat the butter in your soup pan, then gently sweat the finely chopped leeks and onion for 5 minutes
2. Add the cubed potato and garlic then cook over a moderate heat for a further 5 minutes.
3. Add the wine and simmer until the liquid has reduced by half.
4. Add the stock and cauliflower florets, but put a few aside for later. Bring the soup to the boil and then simmer for 30 minutes, until the cauliflower is cooked through and soft.
5. Take the soup off the heat, leave to cool and then blend until smooth, then return to the pan.
6. In a frying pan, heat some more butter and then gently fry the remaining cauliflower florets until they are golden.
7. Heat the soup up, then add the cream and season to taste. Serve and garnish with the fried cauliflower florets. Enjoy
One of the recipes that I made was a Cauliflower cake, which was savoury and much nicer than it sounds - indeed, I mainly only made it as a challenge and due to the fact that I seem to be drawn to odd recipes.
Another suggestion, made by Jac on twitter (@clickerjac if you want to follow her) was Creme Du Barry which, contrary to my first guess, is NOT a soup made by or from a guy called Barry but instead a cream of cauliflower soup. Anyway, Jac sent me a recipe, which I have to admit to slightly altering, just because it's cold and miserable and I felt like jazzing things up a bit to make it a bit more rich and comforting, and here it is...
You could always add some meat to the mix if you wanted - I'm thinking some crispy bacon or cubes of black pudding liberally sprinkled on top would be great too (In fact, what am I thinking, I have no idea why I didn't try that myself. I must be slipping...)
Ingredients
500g Cauliflower
1 Large Onion
1 Potato
2 Leeks
3 Cloves Garlic
20g Butter
1l Chicken Stock
200ml White Wine
150ml Single Cream
Method.
1. Heat the butter in your soup pan, then gently sweat the finely chopped leeks and onion for 5 minutes
2. Add the cubed potato and garlic then cook over a moderate heat for a further 5 minutes.
3. Add the wine and simmer until the liquid has reduced by half.
4. Add the stock and cauliflower florets, but put a few aside for later. Bring the soup to the boil and then simmer for 30 minutes, until the cauliflower is cooked through and soft.
5. Take the soup off the heat, leave to cool and then blend until smooth, then return to the pan.
6. In a frying pan, heat some more butter and then gently fry the remaining cauliflower florets until they are golden.
Labels:
Cauliflower,
Creme Du Barry,
Leeks,
potato,
recipe,
soup,
white wine
Thursday, 24 January 2013
Cauliflower Cake, Lamb & Sesame Stirfry and more. A Week of Meals 003
Week 3 of the meal planning odyssey and to be honest I'm surprised that I've made it this far. As far as new year's resolutions go, this has lasted twice as long as my other resolutions, go running 3 days a week (I'm blaming that one on the snow), cut down on the alcohol (I'm blaming that one on the fact it tastes too nice) and build a robot sidekick (I'm working on that one...)
So without further distractions, on with the list...
Friday - Chickpea and Chorizo Stew
This one was a quick and simple meal as there are many more important things to do on a Friday evening, and I always like something a bit mediteranean every now and then. This is a Nigella recipe, which made me inclined not to cook it as I really do not like her TV shows. However, woman can cook, and this was rather amazing for something that took 15 minutes to prepare...
Should you wish to cook this (and you won't regret it), here is linkage
Sunday - Lamb and Sesame Stir fry
This was my pick from the book Mrs Soup chose, as per the rules of Recipe Club (Well, the second rule actually. The first rule is do not talk about Recipe Clu... oh drat) The book was 'What's Cooking - Chinese' by Jenny Stacey, and whilst it was nice, Im not sure how authentic a lot of the dishes are - alarm bells always ring when cook books don't include the name of the dish in the original language (or am I just being a food snob?)
Anyway, I chose it because I don't think I've ever encountered lamb on a chinese restaurant menu before, so I thought I'd give it a go. It turned out nice, as George Formby might have said, if he'd eaten it...
Monday - Leek and Goats Cheese Tart / Poached Pears
Mrs Soup's pick of the week, from a book called 'Farmer's Market Cookbook'. Because of another new year's resolution - i.e. the whole healthy eating thing, we swapped out the shortcrust pastry for layers of filo pastry - a tip that the Hairy Bikers did on one of their recent shows. It made the whole thing a lot lighter and rather nice, although it could have done with some bacon or similar to give it a bit more kick.
Tuesday - Ezogelin Soup
This week's soup. See blog post below
Wednesday - Cauliflower and Cheese Cake
The weekly veg box delivery left us with a couple of Cauliflowers which I had absolutley no idea what to do with, having grown bored of Cauliflower curry and Koftas, so I did what all sensible people do in the 21st Century - ask twitter. I got some amazing suggestions, including fritters, making them into a pizza base and a tasty soup which may appear on the blog next time I have cauliflowers.
However, the one that caught my eye was a recipe by Yotam Ottolenghi for a cake! It was an experiment, to say the least, and I didn't have high hopes - especially with my aversion to all things baking related. However, the end result was something of a triumph. I highly recommend it if you have no idea what to do with the brain shaped vegetable lurking in your cupboard...
The recipe is here
So without further distractions, on with the list...
Friday - Chickpea and Chorizo Stew
This one was a quick and simple meal as there are many more important things to do on a Friday evening, and I always like something a bit mediteranean every now and then. This is a Nigella recipe, which made me inclined not to cook it as I really do not like her TV shows. However, woman can cook, and this was rather amazing for something that took 15 minutes to prepare...
Should you wish to cook this (and you won't regret it), here is linkage
Sunday - Lamb and Sesame Stir fry
This was my pick from the book Mrs Soup chose, as per the rules of Recipe Club (Well, the second rule actually. The first rule is do not talk about Recipe Clu... oh drat) The book was 'What's Cooking - Chinese' by Jenny Stacey, and whilst it was nice, Im not sure how authentic a lot of the dishes are - alarm bells always ring when cook books don't include the name of the dish in the original language (or am I just being a food snob?)
Anyway, I chose it because I don't think I've ever encountered lamb on a chinese restaurant menu before, so I thought I'd give it a go. It turned out nice, as George Formby might have said, if he'd eaten it...
Monday - Leek and Goats Cheese Tart / Poached Pears
Mrs Soup's pick of the week, from a book called 'Farmer's Market Cookbook'. Because of another new year's resolution - i.e. the whole healthy eating thing, we swapped out the shortcrust pastry for layers of filo pastry - a tip that the Hairy Bikers did on one of their recent shows. It made the whole thing a lot lighter and rather nice, although it could have done with some bacon or similar to give it a bit more kick.
Tuesday - Ezogelin Soup
This week's soup. See blog post below
Wednesday - Cauliflower and Cheese Cake
The weekly veg box delivery left us with a couple of Cauliflowers which I had absolutley no idea what to do with, having grown bored of Cauliflower curry and Koftas, so I did what all sensible people do in the 21st Century - ask twitter. I got some amazing suggestions, including fritters, making them into a pizza base and a tasty soup which may appear on the blog next time I have cauliflowers.
However, the one that caught my eye was a recipe by Yotam Ottolenghi for a cake! It was an experiment, to say the least, and I didn't have high hopes - especially with my aversion to all things baking related. However, the end result was something of a triumph. I highly recommend it if you have no idea what to do with the brain shaped vegetable lurking in your cupboard...
The recipe is here
Thursday, 23 August 2012
Spicy Cauliflower and Chard Soup
After the craziness of the Olympic Food Challenge, normal service resumes now (although I know it's not Tuesday, but hey, I have made soup). We have been, for the last few weeks, getting a veg box every week, and so for the next few weeks, I'll be making some random soups, based on whatever comes in the box on a Thursday.
After the random allocation of countries in the Olympic Food Challenge, I like the idea of this. Also, I was running out of inspiration for new soups every week. Now I have all the ingredients I need quite literally on my doorstep.
Today's soup is a bit healthy as I've been working odd hours and days this week, eating junk food and generally feeling a bit run down - hopefully all the vegetables will perk me up as I'm working until Sunday (today is my only day off - hence the non-Tuesday soup)
When I blended it all together, I was vaguelly horrifed as it appeared at first glance that I had made piccalilli soup - and I hate piccalilli. However, after the chard and coconut milk was added, it no longer looked like piccalilli, and definately didn't taste anything like piccalilli. (Did I mention I can't stand the stuff?)
Recipe after the jump >>
After the random allocation of countries in the Olympic Food Challenge, I like the idea of this. Also, I was running out of inspiration for new soups every week. Now I have all the ingredients I need quite literally on my doorstep.
Today's soup is a bit healthy as I've been working odd hours and days this week, eating junk food and generally feeling a bit run down - hopefully all the vegetables will perk me up as I'm working until Sunday (today is my only day off - hence the non-Tuesday soup)
When I blended it all together, I was vaguelly horrifed as it appeared at first glance that I had made piccalilli soup - and I hate piccalilli. However, after the chard and coconut milk was added, it no longer looked like piccalilli, and definately didn't taste anything like piccalilli. (Did I mention I can't stand the stuff?)
Recipe after the jump >>
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