Showing posts with label soup. Show all posts
Showing posts with label soup. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Mushroom Barley Soup

Third time's the charm, it seems.




The secret is to use sherry and a little flour.

Ingredients:

500 gr. mushrooms, sliced
1/2 cup barley
1/4 onion, chopped
1 clove garlic, minced
1/2 teaspoon fine herbs
2 Tbsp. olive oil
2 teaspoons all purpose flour
2 liters water
3 chicken bullion cubes, low-fat, low-sodium
1/4 cup sherry
2 bay leaves
Worcestershire sauce to taste
Ground black pepper to taste

Directions:

In a soup pot heat the olive oil, next add the mushrooms and saute for about three minutes. Add the barley (raw), garlic and onion, keep cooking until the mushroom begin to brown, or about 5 minutes. Add the flour and stir well. Keep cooking until the mushrooms are a nice golden brown, or around two minutes more. Reduce the heat to medium and add the sherry. Stir well and cook for about a minute. Reduce heat to low and add the water. Bring to a slow boil. When the water's hot, add the bay leaves and fine herbs. When it begins to bubble, add the bullion cubes.

Let the soup simmer until the barley's tender. Taste from time to time and add pepper and Worcestershire as needed.

Sunday, September 30, 2012

Onion Soup

This had all the makings of  a disaster. Really. I looked at dozens of recipes and couldn't settle on one. I forgot to get beef broth. I had last minute ideas. Well, all things considered it turned out almost right. I'll tell you what I did, and what I should have done:


Mmmmm... soup!




Ingredients:

2 Tbsp. Olive oil
2 Large onions, cut into large pieces
1 Clove of garlic, minced
1 Bay leaf
8 Cups (2 liters) chicken broth (I use low-fat and low-sodium)
1/2 cup white wine
1/8 cup balsamic vinegar
1 Tbsp. Soy sauce (I use low-sodium)
Worcestershire sauce to taste

Heat the oil in a large pot. Add the onions and garlic. I cooked the onions until they were soft and somewhat translucent. this turned out well, but I think I should have cooked them until they were softer an almost transparent. In any case, you want to stir them constantly so they won't burn.

When they're close to done, add the wine, soy sauce and vinegar. For the sake of convenience, it would be best to combine them in a cup or bowl beforehand. Reduce the heat to medium and keep cooking and stirring for a few minutes, until the liquid is reduced to about half.

Add the chicken broth and the bay leaf. Reduce the heat to minimum and bring to a slow boil, stirring on occasion. When it boils, add the Worcestershire if you like. Let it simmer for a few minutes and remove from the heat.

I have it plain out of the pot, but there's no reason you can't add a slice of garlic bread and grated cheese on top. If the soup's not hot enough to melt the cheese, you can pop it in an oven for a minute or two, I suppose (I haven't tried it). Or just add some croutons.

Sunday, September 2, 2012

Sopa de Fideos Seca

This week's home cooking recipe is very similar to last week's Sopa de Pasta except this is a "dry" soup, meaning there's no appreciable broth in it. It also uses a specific type of pasta called "fideo," similar to angel-hair pasta.

 Ingredients:

200 gr. Fideos
2 Cups chicken broth
350 gr. Can of diced red tomato (or two red tomatoes peeled and seeded)
1/2 cup tomato puree or tomato paste
1/3 Onion, quartered
1.5 Cloves of garlic, quartered
Cilantro to taste
1 Dried morita chile, or the chile of your choice (optional)

Put the tomato, onion, garlic, cilantro, tomato puree and chile in the blender and liquefy well. In a pot set two cups of chicken broth and the salsa from the blender on high heat. When the mix begins to boil, add the fideos and reduce the heat to medium-low. Stir well. Keep cooking while stirring occasionally until the liquid is consumed.

The result should be a very red, soft, gloppy pasta.traditionally it is served with some crumbled or grated cheese, chopped onion and sour cream.


Although I used a non-stick coated pot, the fideos tended to stick to the hot bottom. It's important to keep stirring so none of the pasta will burn. Also place a lid half on the pot, as the thick tomato, broth and pasta mix tends to splatter a bit while it boils.


Enjoy!

Sunday, August 26, 2012

Sopa de Pasta

This is a rather simple dish commonly served in Mexican homes and small restaurants.

The pasta can barely be made out!

Essentially this is chicken broth with tomato and small pasta shapes. The typical recipe calls for frying the pasta a golden brown. But this being a low-fat cooking blog, I didn't do that. It works as well with un-fried pasta, so long as you don't over-cook it. So first you want to almost-cook the pasta in plain water.

Ingredients:

2 liters chicken broth
200 gr. small pasta shapes,a bit under-cooked
350 gr. peeled, seeded, diced  red tomato (or about one medium red tomato, peeled and seeded)
1/3 Onion, quartered
1 clove garlic, quartered
A pinch of fine herbs
1 Bay leaf

Under-cook and drain the pasta and set aside. In a blender place the tomato, onion and garlic. Liquefy the lot and set aside. In a large pot heat the chicken broth slowly, seasoning with fine herbs and a bay leaf (if you've seasoned it when you made it, you can skip this step), and the liquefied tomato from the blender. Stir well.


When the soup begins to bubble, add the pasta and stir. Let it boil, turn off the heat, let it cool a bit and serve.

Traditionally it's seasoned individually with lime to taste. I favor a whole small lime, or half a large one. Other people prefer less. You can also add chopped onion, cilantro or serrano chilies if you like.

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

"Dry" Lentil and Barley Soup

In Mexico it's customary to serve a "dry" soup, either instead of soup or in addition to it. This recipe works for both the "dry" and regular kinds of soups.

Dry Lentil Soup


Ingredients:

1 Cup of green lentils
3 Tablespoons barley
3 Strips turkey bacon
1 teaspoon olive oil (or any other vegetable oil you like)
1/4 Onion, chopped
1 Clove of garlic, minced
1/3 Teaspoon powdered cumin
1/4 Teaspoon fine herbs
Ground black pepper to taste

For "dry" soup use 1.5 liters of water (that's six cups) and 3 Chicken bullion cubes, low-fat, low-sodium
For regular soup use 2.5 liters of water (that's ten cups) and 4 Chicken bullion cubes, low-fat, low-sodium

Preparation:

Soak the lentils in plain water for a couple of hours. Drain and set them aside

Put a soup pot on high heat on the stove. When it heats a little, add the strips of turkey bacon and fry them only until they begin to release some fat. Add the olive oil, carefully, and saute the onion and garlic along with the bacon.

When the onions begin to turn translucent, reduce the flame to low heat and add the water carefully. The hot pot will tend to boil the first of the water fast, so be very careful. Add the lentils and barley and bring the pot, uncovered, to a slow boil. When the water begins to boil, add the bullion cubes, cumin, fine herbs and black pepper. Stir well until the bullion cubes dissolve completely.

Simmer covered for 1.5 to 2 hours, or until the lentils are tender.

Let it cool a bit end serve.

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