An Elegant Broccoli Soup

Just in time for St. Patrick's Day. A beautiful green broccoli soup.

Veggies tend to build up in our refrigerator. With the very best of intentions, we subscribe to a CSA produce box that arrives every other week. In the off weeks, we wander over to the Sunday farmer’s market to supplement. Certain that we will gorge ourselves on fresh produce, we accumulate food we know we should be eating. Once in a while we fall out of cycle because of meals out or travel and all our good intentions catch up with us.

We recently received a beautiful head of broccoli in our farm box that, after a week in the fridge, needed attention before it faded and became compost. Jason recommended soup and since we had a fresh batch of chicken stock on hand, it was the perfect solution. Mind you, the chicken stock was made from the leftover bones and carcass of a roasted chicken from Limon Rotisserie which means the resultant stock was ultra savory. But while the Limon bones aren’t something everyone has access to, you can make extra savory soup broths by simmering lots of aromatic vegetables, fresh and dry herbs and plenty of spices. With just the right amount of sea salt, a decent broth can be made extraordinary.

So, the leftover broth went into a soup pot where it was brought to a simmer on the stove. Once hot, we added the broccoli stems to cook before adding the florets which can lose their color if cooked too long. With this soup, we let the stock and stems cook down to concentrate the flavors. In went the florets and a little water before covering the pot to bring it back up to temperature. The broccoli needed to cook long enough to become tender without turning khaki. It probably took about 10 minutes for it to soften enough before going into a blender where it was pureed until smooth. My first instinct was to strain the puree through a fine mesh sieve, but I wasn’t happy with the consistency of the watery soup it produced so I added the pulp back to the pan along with the liquid. The puree was fine enough that there were no unpleasant fibers in the finished soup so why waste the nutrient dense broccoli?

While tasty, the soup seemed to be missing something and for a minute I considered adding vinegar or lemon juice, both of which would have been fine, but it wasn’t what I was looking for. Then it hit me – BUTTER! Not just any fat would do. Extra virgin olive oil would certainly add flavor, but it was the wrong flavor for this delicate vegetable soup. No, this needed what any good professional kitchen would consider indispensable and that’s plenty of sweet, unsalted butter. So, back into the blender the soup went. Still steaming hot I separated it into two batches and then blended each with two tablespoons of butter. The finished soup was velvety and rich without being oily. It was perfect!

Broccoli Soup

6 cups savory chicken or vegetable stock (or a combination of broth and water)

1 large head broccoli, stems and florets separated

4 tablespoons cold unsalted butter

Salt and pepper to taste

Bring the stock to a boil and add the stems of the broccoli. Cook for about 10 minutes than add the florets. Cook for another 10 minutes. Transfer ½, or so, of the soup to a blender and puree until very smooth. Add two tablespoons of cold butter and continue to puree for another minute. Transfer to a new pot and do the same with the remaining broccoli and stock. Warm the soup slightly before serving.

Potato Leek Soup

Potato Leek Soup w/ Sandwich and Salad

Potato Leek Soup

It’s winter and the air has been cold. We’re expecting a rainy week and I’ve got a feeling we’ll be eating a lot of soup to keep us warm. When we make soup, we like to make a big batch so we have extra to freeze for another day. This potato and leek soup never made it to the freezer. It was just too good and with the weekend upon us, leftovers mean easy lunches. The heavy cooking can wait for evening.

Potato leek soup is a simple, hearty meal made all the better with the added rich flavors of bacon fat and savory homemade chicken stock. An enriching dollop of crème fraiche or sour cream, a grind of black pepper and a dash or five of Tabasco round out the steaming bowl of thick, savory yum.

The stock used for this beauty was made from the leftover bones of a Limon Rotisserie chicken be brought home for an easy takeout meal. We love the restaurant’s Peruvian take on roasted chicken and we love what the extraordinary mix of herbs and spices used to flavor the birds adds to the stock we create with what most folks would discard (a terrible waste, in our opinion).

With a small sandwich (goat cheese and prosciutto on our no-kneed loaf pictured) and a romaine salad with a simple bleu cheese dressing (bleu cheese, a bit of sour cream, mayo, white wine vinegar, olive oil, salt and pepper whisked together) made for a perfect after-run lunch this afternoon.

The Recipe:

2 slices of bacon

3 leeks washed and trimmed of darkest green parts (save them for stock!), chopped

1 lb. organic Russet potatoes, peeled and diced

4 cups chicken or vegetable stock

2 bay leaves

Salt and pepper to taste

Heat large straight-sided frying pan over medium high heat and add bacon strips. Fry until crisp to render fat. Remove to a plate to drain on paper towels. (The bacon can be put aside for another use or crumbled on top of the hot bowl of soup at serving time.)

Add leeks to pan and sauté in bacon fat until wilted. Add stock, potatoes and two bay leaves. Cover and simmer on low until potatoes are tender, approximately 15 minutes.

Remove the bay leaves. In batches, puree the potatoes, leeks and broth in a blender. Pour each blended batch into a clean pot and continue to puree until all of the soup has been well blended.

Serve soup in warmed bowls and top with your favorite condiments – crème fraiche, sour cream, plain yogurt … you get the picture.