Winter comfort food – three hearty soups

You can find summer veggies and produce all year long in a Canadian grocery store, but they aren’t near peak taste so why bother. I wouldn’t want to eat like my pioneer ancestors did, but I do bypass the faux green vegetable bounty for foods better suited to the winter table – warm and rich foods to simmer and roast, and fill the house with hunger inducing aroma.

On a dark, cold winter day there is very little that gives me more joy than a bowl of creamy soup. Nearly all the great storing vegetables make good soups.

There are three secrets to a hearty cream soup:

  1. roast the veggies
  2. let the soup sit in the fridge over night to develop the flavours
  3. don’t skimp on the butter
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One cilantro leaf makes a pretty garnish.

Roasted Carrot and Ginger Soup

Chop and roast 6 medium carrots in oil with a touch of salt and pepper at about 375 until the start to brown. Throw them in vegetable stock with grated ginger and minced garlic. I use a tablespoon of ginger and a teaspoon of garlic to a litre and half of soup. Simmer for a couple hours. Puree and add a pat of butter. Take off the heat and refrigerate over night. Reheat the next day and shortly before you plan to serve the soup, add some heavy cream and another pat of butter. Use Creme Fraiche instead of cream for a flavour boost.

 

Parsnipity Soup

A drizzle of harissa infused olive oil adds a nice kick.
A drizzle of harissa infused olive oil adds a nice kick.

I don’t peel the parsnips. Chop and roast about 6 parsnips with some salt, pepper and chili flakes at a bout 375 until they brown. Fry some onions. Add chicken stock and the roasted parsnips to the pot. Add a pat of butter. I also add a clove of roasted garlic and more chili flakes. Simmer, cool, and keep in the refrigerate over night. The next day reheat, and shortly before you are ready to serve add some cream and some good Parmesan cheese.

 

Creamy Potato and Sour Cream Soup

I dotted this with harissa oil too just because I love the extra spice.
I dotted this with harissa oil too just because I love the extra spice.

Use new potatoes. Peel and cube two small potatoes and boil them in salted water until they fall apart. Puree them. In a separate pan, fry some onion, bacon and celery. Keep the celery leaves aside. Cube two potatoes with skin on. Add the cubed potatoes, bacon, onion and celery to the pot with some more water and cook until the potatoes are just about tender. Put this in the fridge over night. Next day reheat, add a pat of butter and some sour cream. Cook until the potatoes are fork tender. Add the celery just before you serve.

Food vacations – New Orleans

Every year my husband and I tack a couple days onto his annual convention and make a little vacation out of it.

The highlight of the trip was our morning coffee at Rouler. I’m pretty sure my IQ is 20 points lower pre-coffee so an excellent Americano can make or break a vacation for me. They made the mornings great, and their incredible buttery pastries were a bonus.

Emeril’s pork chop was almost a half pig.

We were full-on tourists our first night and ate at Emeril’s. I had a grape and mushroom salad that was a bit short on grapes (I love roasted grapes, so boo!) and swordfish. Hubby had a craw fish appetizer, and a pork chop. I do not normally take photos of my food when I’m out, but I did this time because I thought this chop was shockingly large.

Neither of us were blown away by the food, but the service was exceptional though. We got help ordering wine (the list was longer than War and Peace) and our waiter was the perfect balance of attentive and unobtrusive.

The next night we found a place called Cellardoor. Hubby had nachos (which turned out to be pork rinds and beans), mussels, a hurricane and bread pudding. I had gumbo, two local beers, and strawberry shortcake. The food was tasty, the room comfortably intimate, and the service friendly. I ended up stuffed and a wee bit giddy from the beer.

We then left New Orleans and headed to Thibodaux where we had a lovely meal at Fremins. I had onion soup, and Red Fish Belle River with pecan wild rice. There were two large lively groups of happy locals that we la-cookbook-1assumed were celebrating Mardi Gras, which I enjoyed being a spectator to. Our waiter was an attentive and friendly young man. The food was good.

After one night in Thibodaux we headed to Oak Alley Plantation. By the second morning my waiter had figured out that I wanted a one egg omelet with no ham, which to me is always a sign that a server cares. We ordered in one night – I had beans and rice, and a salad. la-cookbook-2The true selling point for Oak Alley was the beautiful location though, both as a point from which we explored the area and as the place we relaxed in the evenings.

I picked up two cookbooks at Laura Plantation. At least two of the recipes will get a pass but I really bought them for the history behind the recipes.

Louisiana and New Orleans were a nice visit, but not the foodie heaven I anticipated. We’ve skipped beans since we came home because too many legumes was too, too shocking to our systems. We’ve been back to weeks now though and my upcoming meal plan includes my cheater version of red beans and rice:

Cheaters Red Beans and Rice
Fry the veggies with the bacon. Add the beans and BBQ sauce. Cook until the beans are soft, squish a few. Serve over the rice.

Next year the convention is in Seattle. They have an excellent food scene so I will be reporting on that trip for sure.

Winter window gardens

I watch Jamie Oliver cooking shows with such envy. I covet his winter-gardenwonderful kitchen garden.

For about half of the year I have a garden, but then the Canadian winter comes and my access to fresh veggies, herbs and cheerful flowers gets blanketed in ice and snow.

This year we had a kitchen renovation done, which included running a counter under a west facing window. I’ve tried to grow herbs indoors before with spotty success – I am infamous for my annual early winter rosemary death img_20161229_132133watch. Part of the new kitchen plan was that to create this sunny spot that would, hopefully, be able to support a few potted herbs and cheery flowers.

The kitchen renovation dragged out a bit longer than I had hoped, and potted kitchen herbs aren’t in stores right now,  indoor-crocusesbut shortly before Christmas I managed to pick up a ‘turkey’ herb mix and some bulbs at Home Depot. The herbs and some tulips are sitting in my kitchen window now, and I have some some crocuses are in my office.

indoor-tulipsI’ve already used snips of rosemary for some roasted grapes and some fresh parsley in chicken soup. Hopefully I will find further uses for some of the four herbs I have.

I’m gaining daily consolation from my tulips and crocuses. They remind me spring will come back sooner, rather than later.

Hopefully I will be able to find and nurture a broader range of herbs and repeat my spring bulb success over all my future winters in my new sunny kitchen window.