Urban foodie

Posts Tagged ‘soup’

Chorizo and Spring Green Broth with Sherry

Friday, November 14th, 2008 by urban foodie

Chorizo and Spring Green Broth with SherryI was a bit surprised to receive a head of spring greens in my veg box this week - the missing link between a cabbage and a sprout, cabbage leaves on a sprout like central trunk - surely the name suggests that this is not a November staple. Apparently I was not the only one, a fellow foodie blogger helengraves.co.uk had a similar shock, Able & Cole helpfully informed her that Spring Greens are the hardiest of veg bridging the green gap in earliest spring, hence the name, they are actually in season right through the winter - phew!

Helen not only helped with the research but also offered a delicious and filling soup that combines the sprightly folliage (which has a really bright, fresh taste) with smoky, spicy chorizo. Pork and cabbage is an eternal combination, as much a delight to the eye as to the palate. Thanks Helen!

Ingredients
(From helengraves.co.uk, I have adapted it slightly to suit)

1 large onion
2 cloves garlic
100g chorizo (I used a pre-cooked one sliced very thinly, but any will do)
1/2 head spring greens
2 medium potatoes
A slug of dry sherry
500 ml chicken stock
Olive oil, S&P

Serves 2/3

1 Chop onion finely and add to a heated 10cm pool of oil, fry gently for 5 minutes
2 Chop/crush the garlic, wash and cube potatoes (no need to peel) add pan with sherry, cook for 2 minutes
3 Add stock, a bit of S and lots of P, cook for a further 15 minutes
4 Chop greens finely
5 3 mins before end fry chorizo in hot frying pan (no need for oil)
6 Mash pots in soup a bit then add chorizo and oils from pan (I use a bit of water to deglaze) and greens, cook for further 4 mins
7 Serve with a hunk of bread (we had sourdough) warming, filling quick and simple

Borscht

Monday, September 8th, 2008 by urban foodie

borschtI have to confess to a soft spot for Eastern European food - my great grandfather was Russian, I hold a Pole very close to my heart and have spent some months in the motherland. I can’t say I love it all, pork fat, dirty snow and kasha can stay right away, but I adore springtime on the banks of the Neva, dancing in old palaces, pirogi (a cross between a meat dumpling and a tortellini), and most especially beetroot - so when a juicy bunch arrived in the veg box last week I knew what had to be made - borscht, the king of soups!

You need an afternoon to make this soup, preferably a frosty/rainy one in which you pop out and get good and cold before eating.

Ingredients
Recipe (slightly adapted) from www.cookuk.co.uk/ethnic/russian/borsch.htm

600g betroot (fresh or vacuum packed)
1 med onion
2 small potatoes
2 med tomatoes
250g beef cubes (stewing steak is ideal)
1 big clove garlic
1 teaspoon vinegar
1 lemon
1/4 white cabbage
1 med carrot
small pot soured cream
dill (fresh or dried)
parsley, S&P, butter

Serves 3 generously

1 If using fresh beetroot, heat oven to 170 degrees, wash beetroots and cut off all but an inch of the tops (leave the tails intact), wrap loosely in two layers of foil and pop in the oven for 3 hours. After 1 1/4 hours (or, if using pre-cooked beetroots start at step 2)…
2 Chop onion into slices (thin half rings) and chop dill finely. Put Beef, 2 litres of cold water, the chopped onion and dill into a pan, cover and bring to the boil. Simmer for 1 1/2 hours.
3 After 1 1/4 hours peel carrots, chop into half moons and saute gently for 15 mins in butter with the garlic crushed into it.
4 Whilst the carrots are cooking take out the beetroots, cool under the tap and peel off skin with your fingers (it should just slip off - I have been known to use surgical gloves to avoid the staining). Chop these, or your pre-cooked ones into strips. Chop tomatoes into small cubes. Chop cabbage into thin strips
5 Check beef broth for scum (remove with spoon)
6 Add beetroot, carrots, cabbage and tomatoes to beef broth (this is where it goes purple and begins too look like it should). S&P generously. Cook for 10 minutes
7 Chop parsley, wedge lemons and put on table with soured cream for diners to finish the soup to their liking. Add vinegar to pot, mix and serve in deep bowls with hunks of bread on the table.

Note: this soup is practically a stew you won’t need more for a very filling and excellently healthy dinner (tons of veg, protein from the beef and a little bit of fat from the creme fraiche).

Leek and Potato Soup

Wednesday, April 16th, 2008 by urban foodie

Leek and Potato SoupHome made soup, there really is nothing to making it but it tastes so much more delicious than anything shop bought. Honestly it is the cheapest most cheerful food - pop it on on a rainy Sunday afternoon whilst you lounge on the sofa with the papers and you’ll have enough for 4/5 servings which in our house does for Sunday supper (if we’ve had a big lunch) and a couple of weekday lunchtimes too - I am determined to take my own lunch to work, although it will mean not eating at lovely Leon*,  - I am, I am!

This recipe is adapted from a Delia one (Delia Smith’s Complete Cookery Course), I have just simplified her method a little and added some herbs. All quantities are approx with soup so don’t worry if you add a bit more/bit less if that’s what’s in the fridge.

Ingredients

4 medium leeks
2 medium potatoes
1 medium onion
150 ml milk
1L veg stock/water
50g butter
2 bay leaves
1 tablespoon thyme
S&P

Serves 4/5 (can be kept in the fridge for 3 days and reheated as needed)

1 Dice potatoes (I like to keep the skins on for extra roughage and flavour, plus it means no peeling!), chop leeks and onion quite finely
2 Melt butter in large deep pan on low heat
3 Add above veg, mix well with butter, cover and sweat for 15 mins
4 Add milk, stock, herbs and S&P to pan, cover and simmer for 25 mins
5 Let it cool for a few minutes and then blend veg to smoothish texture (tip: there is no need to put the liquid in the blender, just fish out veg with slotted spoon - or pass through a sieve if you don’t have a blender)
6 Put puree back into pan with liquid, mix well and reheat, serve with a hunk of bread for dipping

*If you haven’t had the chance to eat at a Leon yet I would strongly recommend them, they use seasonal produce and free range meat to produce the most delicious fast food ever, with lots for vegetarians too - aioli chicken wraps to moroccan vegetable tagines, plus hot chocolate to die for - simply hot organic milk with shaved Valrhona chocolate flakes - oof!


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