Posts Tagged soup

It’s Not About the Soup

delicata or della cotta, it's good squash

delicata or della cotta, it's good squash



This post is not about the soup that I made last night. Not that it was a bad soup. Missy even ate the beet greens that were in it after only a few moments of hesitant prodding with her spoon. It’s not about the soup because I made the soup in a hurry. I was sick. I’d spent the weekend blowing my nose a lot and talking in the way that people do when their heads are great sacks of mucous. I felt ready for work on Monday, rode in, and suffered some embarrassment when a co-worker caught me staring blankly at my personal email for, like, seven or eight minutes. Having thus obtained independent verification that I was not in a productive state, I packed it in and went home early.

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Simple Summer Soup: Gazpacho

gazpacho_1

I can’t believe that I’d never made—or worse, even had—gazpacho before. Well, actually, I can. I didn’t grow up eating the most exotic, or daring—or hell, even sophisticated-sounding—foods. I was 23 before I realized that a crudité is just a veggie plate and that chèvre is goat cheese. And while I’ve known that gazpacho was just pureed tomato-based soup for quite some time, I still hadn’t actually attempted to make it—until Monday, when I looked in my fridge and realized I had the basic foundation for a simple gazpacho: tomatoes, cucumbers and onions.

After glancing at a few recipes online (anyone who has read my book knows that in my life I’ve only followed one recipe from start to finish) I decided I would up the bell pepper factor—most recipes called for one green pepper, I saw that green pepper and raised it a yellow one—make it a tad spicy and try something I now like to call the half-and-half method.

The half-and-half method is, simply, halving all of your gazpacho ingredients and pureeing one half while chopping the other—both in the blender, separately—and then combining the two.

While I have very little to compare it to (remember, I’d never had gazpacho before) I’m considering it a success.

Recipe after the jump…

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My First Time: Quinoa

quinoa

Do you ever stop and look at something you’re eating or cooking and think, “My ten-year-old self would never have eaten this?” Are you then a little proud of yourself for eating it, and even liking it?

That is exactly how I felt about this sort-of “curried” quinoa soup-type thing I accidentally made last night when trying to cook with the “super grain” for the first time.

Like first-time sex, my first-time quinoa was a little sloppy and I didn’t quite know when it was done. And like sex, my ten-year-old self probably would have said “Gag me with a spoon!” when thinking about it while my adult self really wants some more.

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Free Food Friday: The mysterious bulbs in the front yard

mystery-bulbs

You know what I really like about moving into a new house (besides the obvious stuff, like, well…the new house)? Seeing what bulbs come up in the spring, planted by the previous owner. We moved to Portland in September 2007, leaving behind our Brooklyn garden full of irises, tulips, lilies, narcissus, and grape hyacinth –all of which had been planted by the previous owner or spread there on their own. Spring 2008 rolled around, and it was time to see what would pop up in the yard of our Portland house. There were some tulips, some daffodils, and some weird (but oddly familiar) stuff with thick green stems that would send off a center stalk but never quite flower. This spring the mystery non-flowering bulbs returned–many more of them than the three or so we had last year. A couple days ago, after staring at them for weeks, I finally realized what they were. Leeks. Volunteer leeks, scapes and all. Knowing the previous owners, I seriously doubt they planted leeks. They were strictly ornamental gardeners. So how the hell did the leeks get there?

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Cari’s spending, Week 3: Yes, I’m sure I counted everything

Legumes are cheap and tasty but not as pretty as the Oregon coast.

Legumes are cheap and tasty but not as pretty as the Oregon coast.

$69.66. Not per person. Total. We spent $69.66 so far this week (including $13.00 for two lunches Billy had to buy at work because he forgot his lunch once and I forgot to pack one for him another day), and there’s now just the weekend to go* and plenty of food in the house. And no, we’re not hungry. Nor are we eating bark chips at the playground. (Okay, maybe a few, but only for the fiber.) How did we do it? Cooking ahead, and legumes. Go ahead, say it with me: Legumes.

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