Creamy soup made with last summer's canned tomatoes, a pesto "cube" etc. Simple and delicious recipe below. |
In a world with so much hunger and need, this is embarrassing. Two people—it seems we could feed the world, or at least the neighborhood. We need to share more and also get a grip on garden quantity, unless we decide to supply our larger community. In the meantime, we are loaded with everything tomato and enough beets to supply an army of borscht-starved Ukrainians. Thus I developed a menu plan to plumb the depths of our stores during the coming weeks (days?) when the Adventuring Son will be home for a visit. I shall strive to replenish any caloric deficit that he may have developed during his four months in Africa and a couple weeks in Brazil.
I think he goes to sleep hungry sometimes, not that that would be unusual for the native people in the far-away and exotic and sometimes dangerous places he finds himself. (Do you know anybody who has illegally camped, unprotected, on a river beach in a tiger reserve in India alongside huge paw prints? I do.)
Chris and his exploring/adventuring/risk-taking pals sometimes go for days with only what they can carry in their kayaks, and villages along the waterways don't always have food to share or sell. I know he's gotten by on candy bars and skinny dried fish, full of bones. So big mama here enjoys cooking up a storm when he occasionally alights on home turf.
Coming soon, all including remains of the 2011 harvest:
- Jambalaya
- Chili
- Lasagne
- Eggplant Parmesan
- Rama Shower - Thai curry dish, which uses a huge amount of spinach plus the peanut sauce in the freezer
- Borscht (beets, beets, beets!)
Then: young beets happy in the sun and soil. Now: frozen beets wondering what the hell? And there I go again, anthropomorphizing food! |
Creamy Tomato Delight Soup
1 quart canned whole tomatoes, preferably home-grown
1 medium onion, cut into quarters
1 large celery stalk, cut into 2-inch lengths
4 ounces cream cheese or sour cream (or more)
1 heaping Tbsp pesto (one pesto cube)*
salt and pepper to taste
ground pepper flakes to taste
Top with grated Parmesan cheese or dollop of sour cream, if desired.
Liquify the canned tomatoes in food processor and dump into a sauce pan. Add cut-up onion and celery. Cover, bring to a boil, then simmer for 30-45 minutes til onion and celery are soft. With a slotted spoon, remove onion and celery. Reduce the soup if it seems too watery. Add the basil cube, or pesto. Add the cream cheese. (May substitute sour cream). Mix with an immersion blender til smooth. Do not boil after cream cheese or pesto is added, if the pesto includes cheese.
Season. Serve with grated cheese and pepper flakes.
*About pesto cubes below.
From a 2010 blog post:
Making pesto is easy, easy, easy. Don't stress about measurements as much as taste.
Here's how I make pesto.
Peel 8-10 large cloves of garlic and process in a large food processor. I use a Cuisinart.
Amass enough fresh basil (stripped from largest stems) to compress into food processing bowl.
Pour at least a half cup of olive oil into the bowl, add salt to taste, and whirl it up. If it appears dry, add oil until the consistency is loose but not soupy. Add a half cup of pine nuts or shelled walnuts and mix until well blended.
If freezing, spray ice cube trays with oil and fill. Once frozen, remove cubes to plastic bags and store in the freezer. If not freezing, add a cup of grated Parmesan cheese and mix well before adding to pasta, pizza, or crusty French bread.
Combine it all in a food processor.
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Freeze and transfer to plastic storage bags. Pesto cubes!
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Yum! Maybe you could freeze-dry it and send it along with Chris on his next trip!
ReplyDeleteHe likes to take dried tomatoes with him, which I forgot to mention we have piles of.
ReplyDelete