Thursday, 6 February 2014
Potato and Caraway Soup
Wow! This is my 200th post! Who knew I'd still be doing this thing (oh, wait, I said this all when I did my 100th soup recipe didn't I? Anyway, thanks for sticking with me, and there are still so many exciting soups to come, I promise...)
Due to circumstances beyond my control I couldn't make the polish soup I'd planned this week (again) and I needed to throw together a quick 'cupboard' soup. I can't think of any other kind of food where you can just throw random things into a pot and out comes a tasty result - that's why soups are so brilliant, but I wanted to also have something that had a bit of character, not just a random veggie thing.
I had a look in the cupboards where vegetables lurk and found a few things that would go well together, then added some caraway (I'm still addicted to the stuff in a way that's probably unhealthy) and some sausage to add a little meaty savoury taste to the whole thing, and voilà - a tasty soup was born...
Ingredients
600g Potatoes
1 Leek
1 Large Onion
2 Stalks Celery
40g Butter
3 Cloves Garlic
2tsp Caraway Seeds
1tsp Marjoram
1.2l Chicken Stock
2 Polish Sausages
Method
1. Finely chop the leek, garlic, celery and onion, Heat the butter in your soup pan then gently fry the vegetables until the start to soften
2. Peel and cube the potatoes, then add them to the pan, letting them soften slightly too.
3. Add the stock, marjoram and caraway seed, then bring the soup to the boil, reduce the heat to a simmer and let cook for 25-30 minutes, until the potatoes are just starting to break up.
4. Transfer half the soup to a blender and puree it, then return it to the pan (or alternatively, just use a potato masher - this soup works best with a few lumps in it)
5. Slice the sausage and then fry it in a little oil
6. Serve the soup with slices of sausage as a garnish. Enjoy
Tuesday, 21 January 2014
Zupa Koperkowa - Polish Dill Soup
I had some friends who went on holiday to various East European countries, and when they returned, the brought back tales of culinary horror. Not only was it nigh-on impossible to get a decent vegetarian meal in Latvia, but in Poland - horror of horrors - they put dill on EVERYTHING. And my friends REALLY couldn't stand dill. Now I can't vouch for the veracity of these stories, but I'm pretty sure my friends would hate this soup...
This is a really simple soup that is really all about the dill, although it is really filling and creamy and would be good as a winter warmer, or as a summer soup. Of course, the recipe I really wanted to do this week was a Polish Tripe soup, but the supermarket seems to have stopped stocking cow's stomach linings, so I will have to take a trip to Leeds Market to procure some. You have been warned...
Ingredients
1 Carrot
1 Potato
2 Parsnips
250ml Sour Cream
150g White Rice
1.5l Chicken Stock
1 Bunch of Fresh Dill
2 Bay Leaves
Salt and Pepper
Method
1. In a large pan, heat your chicken stock. Add the bay leaves and the carrot, potato and parsnip, all peeled and cubed. Bring to a simmer and cook for 20 minutes
2. After 20 Minutes, add the rice and continue to simmer for another 15 minutes, until the rice is cooked and the vegetables are soft.
3. Finely chop the dill and add to the pan, along with the sour cream. Heat through
4. Adjust seasoning to taste and serve with some extra dill for garnish. Enjoy!
Labels:
Carrot,
Dill,
Parsnip,
Polish,
potato,
recipe,
soup,
Sour Cream,
White Rice,
Zupa Koperkowa
Tuesday, 14 January 2014
Krupnik - Polish Barley Soup
So, because I like to have themes on the blog (mainly as it's a good way to get inspiration for new soup recipes), welcome to Polish Month on Soup Tuesday!
I used to live down the road from a rather brilliant Polish restaurant - the food was cheap and cheerful, but blimey it was filling, and I think that's where I first got addicted to Polish cuisine. The owner / waiter was always helpful in pointing out what was the special of the day and they did some killer pirogi, but one thing I never tried was the soup - being equally as addicted to dumplings as I am to soup, I always went for them first - and occasionally, the restaurant did serve tripe soup (which will be coming to the blog shortly...)
Since starting this blog, I've done a number of East European soups, and they have always been brilliant. This one is no exception. Krupnik is a sort of Polish minestrone, it seems - with various recipes adding or subtracting different elements - you could always try it without the mean - but the constant is the pearl barley. Its a chunky soup that works well (as you would imagine) on a cold night.
Krupnik is not to be confused with the honey sweetened alcoholic drink of the same name, but I'm pretty sure it would go well with this soup too! Also, the dried mushrooms I used in this recipe were given to me as part of a foodie pen pals parcel ages ago and I'd never used them until now, but they gave a nice meaty edge to the soup.
Ingredients
250g Chicken Breasts
150g Pearl Barley
1 Large Onion
2 Cloves Garlic
2 Carrots
2 Potatoes
1 Leek
1 Stalk Celery
2 Bay leaves
25g Butter
15g Dried Mushrooms
1/2tsp Ground Allspice
1.5l Chicken Stock
Fresh Dill
Method
1. In your soup pan, heat the stock, bringing it to the boil. Cut the chicken breasts into small cubes, then put them in the stock, poaching them for 3 minutes until the meat is cooked. Skim any scum from the stock as you do this. Remove the chicken from the stock and set aside. Take the stock off the heat for the moment
2. Heat the butter in a large frying pan. Into this add the finely chopped onion and celery. Cook until the veg starts to soften, then add the garlic, cubed carrot and leek, cook for another few minutes and then add the cubed potato. Cook for another few minutes until all the veg is softened.
3. Add the vegetables to the stock with the pearl barley, allspice and bay leaves. Wash the dried mushrooms to remove any grit and then add these to the pan also. Bring the soup to the boil and then simmer for 30 minutes.
4. Check the mushrooms and barley are cooked and soft, then add the chicken back into the pan and heat through.
5. Adjust seasoning to taste and then serve. Garnish the bowls with plenty of finely chopped fresh dill. Enjoy!
I used to live down the road from a rather brilliant Polish restaurant - the food was cheap and cheerful, but blimey it was filling, and I think that's where I first got addicted to Polish cuisine. The owner / waiter was always helpful in pointing out what was the special of the day and they did some killer pirogi, but one thing I never tried was the soup - being equally as addicted to dumplings as I am to soup, I always went for them first - and occasionally, the restaurant did serve tripe soup (which will be coming to the blog shortly...)
Since starting this blog, I've done a number of East European soups, and they have always been brilliant. This one is no exception. Krupnik is a sort of Polish minestrone, it seems - with various recipes adding or subtracting different elements - you could always try it without the mean - but the constant is the pearl barley. Its a chunky soup that works well (as you would imagine) on a cold night.
Krupnik is not to be confused with the honey sweetened alcoholic drink of the same name, but I'm pretty sure it would go well with this soup too! Also, the dried mushrooms I used in this recipe were given to me as part of a foodie pen pals parcel ages ago and I'd never used them until now, but they gave a nice meaty edge to the soup.
Ingredients
250g Chicken Breasts
150g Pearl Barley
1 Large Onion
2 Cloves Garlic
2 Carrots
2 Potatoes
1 Leek
1 Stalk Celery
2 Bay leaves
25g Butter
15g Dried Mushrooms
1/2tsp Ground Allspice
1.5l Chicken Stock
Fresh Dill
Method
1. In your soup pan, heat the stock, bringing it to the boil. Cut the chicken breasts into small cubes, then put them in the stock, poaching them for 3 minutes until the meat is cooked. Skim any scum from the stock as you do this. Remove the chicken from the stock and set aside. Take the stock off the heat for the moment
2. Heat the butter in a large frying pan. Into this add the finely chopped onion and celery. Cook until the veg starts to soften, then add the garlic, cubed carrot and leek, cook for another few minutes and then add the cubed potato. Cook for another few minutes until all the veg is softened.
3. Add the vegetables to the stock with the pearl barley, allspice and bay leaves. Wash the dried mushrooms to remove any grit and then add these to the pan also. Bring the soup to the boil and then simmer for 30 minutes.
4. Check the mushrooms and barley are cooked and soft, then add the chicken back into the pan and heat through.
5. Adjust seasoning to taste and then serve. Garnish the bowls with plenty of finely chopped fresh dill. Enjoy!
Thursday, 9 January 2014
Smoked Haddock Chowder
So, it's the new year and here is a new blog post. And it's a special one. This soup recipe makes 100 soups on the blog! Wow. When I started doing this blog, mainly as a way to keep occupied and to inspire me to cook new and interesting things, I never thought I'd make it this far. In the 3 years I've been doing this, I have found by cooking becoming increasingly more adventurous and that I've also gotten a lot more passionate about what I eat.
And the soups - who would have thought that there even were more than a hundred types of soup in the world? And it seems that I've just scratching the surface - not just in terms of 'Ooh, what veg do I have in the cupboard? Let's jam them into a soup...' which is a perfectly acceptable way of coming up with recipes, but also in terms of national dishes, soups particular to countries, cuisines and regions. So many wonderful tastes and recipes yet to come.
So thanks to you, my lovely readers - some of whom I have talked to on twitter (and if I haven't, why not say hello - I'm @souptuesday) for reading this blog, and hopefully enjoying the soups I've made so far, and put up with my occasional ramblings and bad jokes.
As well as more soups this year, you can look forward to some more posts about what else I'm eating (after getting more than my own bodyweight in cookbooks for Christmas, I'm itching to try out some fancy-pants new dishes) and also the World Cup Food Challenge - much like the Olympic Food Challenge, where I will be cooking selected dishes from some of the countries taking part in that whole football thing (and showing off my shocking lack of knowledge about the beautiful game) If you want to know more about it, you can read more (and find out which other food blogs are taking part) by clicking here
And without further ado, the 100th soup recipe - suggested by Mrs Soup, without whom, this blog wouldn't exist...
Ingredients
300g Smoked Haddock
450g Potatoes
150g Sweetcorn
1 Large Onion
2 Leeks
75g Smoked Bacon
30g Butter
1 Bay Leaf
1tsp Fresh Thyme
700ml Water
500ml Milk
150ml Single Cream
3 Hard Boiled Eggs
Method
1. In a large pan (I used a frying pan) gently heat the milk and then put the haddock in, simmering over a low heat for 5 minutes, until the fish it poached. Take the pan off the heat, and using a slotted spoon, remove the haddock, putting it into a bowl for later, flaking it with a fork. Also keep the poaching milk for later too!
2. Cut the bacon into small pieces. Heat the butter in your soup pan and gently fry the bacon
3. Finely chop the onion and leeks. Add them to the pan and then sweat the vegetables until they are soft
4. Peel and cube the potatoes, then add these to the pan, cooking for a further few minutes.
5. Add the water, milk, sweetcorn, thyme and bay leaf. Bring the soup to the boil and then simmer for 25-30 minutes, until the potatoes are soft and starting to break up.
6. Using a potato masher, break up the potatoes a little more, then add the haddock back into the pan, along with the single cream and reheat gently. Test seasoning and adjust to your preference.
7 Serve with crusty bread and sliced boiled eggs on top of each bowl. Enjoy!
And the soups - who would have thought that there even were more than a hundred types of soup in the world? And it seems that I've just scratching the surface - not just in terms of 'Ooh, what veg do I have in the cupboard? Let's jam them into a soup...' which is a perfectly acceptable way of coming up with recipes, but also in terms of national dishes, soups particular to countries, cuisines and regions. So many wonderful tastes and recipes yet to come.
So thanks to you, my lovely readers - some of whom I have talked to on twitter (and if I haven't, why not say hello - I'm @souptuesday) for reading this blog, and hopefully enjoying the soups I've made so far, and put up with my occasional ramblings and bad jokes.
As well as more soups this year, you can look forward to some more posts about what else I'm eating (after getting more than my own bodyweight in cookbooks for Christmas, I'm itching to try out some fancy-pants new dishes) and also the World Cup Food Challenge - much like the Olympic Food Challenge, where I will be cooking selected dishes from some of the countries taking part in that whole football thing (and showing off my shocking lack of knowledge about the beautiful game) If you want to know more about it, you can read more (and find out which other food blogs are taking part) by clicking here
And without further ado, the 100th soup recipe - suggested by Mrs Soup, without whom, this blog wouldn't exist...
Ingredients
300g Smoked Haddock
450g Potatoes
150g Sweetcorn
1 Large Onion
2 Leeks
75g Smoked Bacon
30g Butter
1 Bay Leaf
1tsp Fresh Thyme
700ml Water
500ml Milk
150ml Single Cream
3 Hard Boiled Eggs
Method
1. In a large pan (I used a frying pan) gently heat the milk and then put the haddock in, simmering over a low heat for 5 minutes, until the fish it poached. Take the pan off the heat, and using a slotted spoon, remove the haddock, putting it into a bowl for later, flaking it with a fork. Also keep the poaching milk for later too!
2. Cut the bacon into small pieces. Heat the butter in your soup pan and gently fry the bacon
3. Finely chop the onion and leeks. Add them to the pan and then sweat the vegetables until they are soft
4. Peel and cube the potatoes, then add these to the pan, cooking for a further few minutes.
5. Add the water, milk, sweetcorn, thyme and bay leaf. Bring the soup to the boil and then simmer for 25-30 minutes, until the potatoes are soft and starting to break up.
6. Using a potato masher, break up the potatoes a little more, then add the haddock back into the pan, along with the single cream and reheat gently. Test seasoning and adjust to your preference.
7 Serve with crusty bread and sliced boiled eggs on top of each bowl. Enjoy!
Thursday, 28 November 2013
Matar ka Shorba - Indian Pea Soup
This is pea soup recipe number 5 on the blog! Who would have thought that I could get so much mileage out of the humble pea? And unlike the others, which are variations on two themes, this one is a little different.
You could use frozen peas or fresh, but the great thing about frozen ones is that using those makes this pretty much a cupboard soup - as long as you have a vaguely well stocked spice cupboard - and the fact that its quick and easy to throw together, like most soups, makes it perfect for a tasty lunch or when surprise visits happen. In fact that could apply to most soups - they really are perfect food, aren't they?
Also, I love the fact that a curry sauce is also known as gravy, as you all know just how much I love gravy. I assume that the term was taken to India by the British, but you, lovely readers, may know better. If so, please let me know...
Ingredients
250g Peas
1 Large Onion
1 Tin Chopped Tomatoes
1 Bunch Spring Onions
1tsp Garlic Purée
1tsp Ginger Purée
2tsp Turmeric
2tsp Coriander
1 Green Chilli
1tsp Garam Masala
1tsp Mustard Seeds
1tsp Cumin Seeds
4 Cardamom Seeds
2 Bay Leaves
Method
1. Heat some oil in your soup pan. Once it's hot, add the mustard seeds, cumin seed, cardamom and bay leaves and fry them for 2 minutes, so they flavour the oil. Watch out, because the mustard seeds can pop in the oil and go everywhere!
2. Add the finely chopped onion, garlic and ginger puree, then cook through until the onions are browned a little
3. Add the chilli, turmeric and coriander, stir them through the onions, and then add the tomatoes, cooking until everything reduces down to a thick, spicy paste.
4. Add 900ml of water, chopped spring onions and half the peas. The other half of the peas should be smashed to a pulp - I used the end of a rolling pin - and then added too. Add some salt, then bring the soup to a simmer, cover and cook for 25-30 minutes.
5. Add the garam masala and then serve. Accompany with naan or boiled rice. Enjoy!
London Particular
There's a bit in one of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy Books (The Restaurant at the End of The Universe, I think, but I could be wrong) which says that 85% of species in the Galaxy eventually discover a drink called Gin and Tonic, or something similar. In Battlestar Galactica, The song 'All Along The Watchtower' features prominently, even though the characters have never been to Earth or heard of Jimi Hendrix*. When quizzed about it, the producers said that something were so perfect that they would exist everywhere in the Universe at one time or another.
So what does this geekery have to do with soup, I hear you ask. Well, much like Gin and Tonic and All Along the Watchtower, split pea and ham soup seems to have appeared in a great many guises on my culinary travels (all of which pretty much happen from the comfort of my living room, in a rather magical fashion)
I've done at least 4 other pea soups on the blog, but never this Particular classic (See what I did there?) It's a soup that demands a little investment of your time - soaking the peas and cooking the ham before its ready, but it is totally worth it.
This is the soup that is named after the famous Smog of London, and it's so thick and rich and gloopy (I love that word, gloopy,) that you really can see why an all obscuring yellowish green fog would have inspired such a soup. The smog may now have lifted, but on a chilly winter's eve, I can't think of a more perfect soup to enjoy!
* Yes I know Bob Dylan wrote that song, but a) I hate Bob Dylan and b) I may be a cylon
Ingredients
1 Ham Hock
3 Stalks Celery
1 Large Onion
2 Carrots
2 Bay Leave
Black Peppercorns
2l Water
250g Dried Peas
1tsp Bicarb of Soda
1 Large Onion
1tbsp Worcestershire Sauce
20g Butter
1. Soak the peas for 24 hours, with a teaspoon of Bicarb and enough water to cover them properly. The bicarb helps to soften the peas, and lets them cook quicker - the same thing works with chickpeas if you are making hummus from scratch
2. In a large pan, place the ham hock, 2 litres of water, roughly chopped celery, carrot, bay, onion and peppercorns. Bring to a simmer, cover and cook for 2-3 hours, depending on how big the ham hock is. Once it's cooked through, take the ham out of the cooking liquid and allow to cool
3. Strain the cooking liquid to get all the veg out of it, and then set that to once side too.
4. In your soup pan, fry off a thinly sliced onion in the butter until its soft and golden. Next add the liquid the ham was cooked in.
5. Drain and wash the peas, then add those to the pan and bring to the boil, then cover and cook over a low heat for 2 hours or until the peas have softened and are cooked through.
6. Using a stick blender, puree the soup (you can do this just a bit to give the soup more texture, or completely blend it if you prefer)
7. Add most of the ham from the hock, and the Worcestershire sauce and bring back to the heat to warm through, then serve with crusty bread and garnish with some of the ham hock shredded on top. Enjoy
Tuesday, 12 November 2013
Eshkeneh - Persian Onion Soup
I have a friend who is obsessed with creating the perfect curry. As obsessions go, its far from a bad one, but it can make going out for a meal with him an, umm, interesting experience. On more than one occasion, when visiting local curry houses he has spent inordinate amounts of time quizzing the harassed looking staff on the ingredients used in various dishes, and has from time to time been invited into the kitchen to talk to the chef (although this may have just been a ploy by irate serving staff to get him out of their hair)
This friend has shelves laden with curry recipe books, and his kitchen is a mountain of jars and packets (which even put my obsessively labelled jars to shame) and like some Dr Frankenstein with a turmeric stained lab coat, he one day staggered out of the kitchen after experiencing his eureka moment. And that moment was adding fenugreek to his curry dishes. Now obviously, this doesn't work across the board, but when added to some curries it adds an amazing savoury deep note of flavour which really makes you think you are in a really good curry restaurant.
And now, yes, I too am a little bit obsessed with the flavour, sprinkling it liberally on dishes where it probably doesn't belong. But oh the flavour. It's like my caraway obsession from last year all over again )although less likely to get stuck between your teeth...)
And so, obviously, I had to see if there was such a thing as a fenugreek soup. And whilst there wasn't an actual fenugreek soup, I did come across this tasty little number. It is an egg drop soup, which I hadn't really tried before - I was always worried about making a soup with the consistency of runny scrambled eggs (a dish that once made me cry as a child, but that's a story for another day...) but this actually turned out rather nice!
Ingredients
4 Large Onions
1 Large Potato
4 Eggs
30g Butter
2 tbsp Dried Fenugreek Leaves
3 Sprigs Fresh Thyme
1 Bay Leaf
1 Lemon
2 Cloves Garlic
1.2l Chicken Stock
Method
1. Peel and thinly slice the onions, peel the potato and cut into small cubes and finely chop the garlic.
2. Heat the butter in your soup pan and cook the onions over a low heat until they soften and turn golden.
3. Add the garlic and potato and cook for another few minutes
4. Add the stock, thyme, fenugreek and bay leaf, then bring the soup to the boil, cover and reduce the heat to a simmer. Cook for 30-40 minutes, until the potatoes are soft.
5. Add the lemon juice and adjust seasoning to taste
6. In a separate bowl, beat the eggs, then stir them into the soup just before serving, stirring the soup constantly to make sure the egg mixes thoroughly.
7. Serve in warm bowls. Enjoy!
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