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Vegan Vegetable & Barley Soup for the Winter Festive Season and Beyond

Vegetable Soup for #Veganuary?

Well The Holiday Week is now well and truly underway and I’ve taken the opportunity to help my Beagle, Millie and I work off a few of the pounds we just put on, by hiking up and down the hills of the Hudson Valley and wandering around the Lower East Side of Manhattan

It’s pretty cold out and about in New York this time of year and I almost chilled my fingers off!  So,  when I got home, I thought it might be a good idea to cook up a home made soup, the ideal dish for defrosting and a meal in a bowl with low danger of adding much to the weight already gained this season

2-ingredients

Some of the Ingredients I used

My personal recipe for Vegetable Soup has been something I’ve been working on for at least a couple of decades, with the definitive edition finally coming together on a vacation in Croatia over 10 years ago

This soup has one added benefit: it is a great means of disposing of just about every left over vegetable in one’s pantry at the end of the festive season, turning those forgotten odds and ends into a delicious wholesome meal

Try out my recipe and see if you agree?

Ingredients

  • Root Veggies
    • 2 potatoes (peel and dice into 1/2 inch cubes)
    • 2 carrots (peel and slice in rounds)
    • 1/2 a medium swede / Rutabaga (peel and dice into 1/2 inch cubes)
    • 1 small purple top turnip (peel and dice into 1/2 inch cubes)
  •  Other Veggies
    3-pile-of-veg-chopped-and-ready-to-saute

    Pile of Chopped Veggies for the Soup

    • 1 medium to large red onion (slice into 1/2 inch pieces
    • 1 clove of garlic (roughly chopped)
    • 3 sticks of celery (slice horizontally)
    • 1 leek (slice in rounds)
    • 2 tomatoes (chop roughly)
    • 1 red pepper (dice into 1/2 inch pieces seeds removed)
    • 1 handful of green beans
    • 1 handful of garden peas
    • 1 handful of broccoli florets
  • Other ingredients
    • Fresh parsley (roughly chopped)
    • 1/2 tsp each of dried rosemary, thyme, parsley, basil and oregano
    • 1/2 cup pearled barley (rinsed)
    • 2 cups (500 ml) Vegetable stock
    • 2 bay leaves
    • 1 dessert spoon of marmite
    • 1 cup of passatta
    • 1 tbsp tomato paste
    • 2 tbsp olive oil
    • Salt and pepper to taste
    • (Sour Cream as a vegetarian option)

Method

4-sauteeing-the-veggies

Sautee those veggies

  • Warm up the olive oil in a large saucepan / stockpot
  • Simply throw in all your chopped root and other veggies into the saucepan adding the dried herbs and a pinch or two of salt and pepper to taste
  • Stir into the oil, increase the heat to medium and sautee for around 10 minutes until the vegetables soften and reduce
  • Add the tomato paste, then the passatta and work into the vegetables
  • Add the vegetable stock, marmite and bay leaves and bring to the boil adding a further 8 cups (2 litres) of boiling water and a handful of the chopped fresh parsley
  • Reduce the heat, cover the saucepan and simmer for between 30 to 40 minutes

That’s it! You are done. Serve piping hot and thaw out….. (and, if you are not vegan, feel free to add a large dollop of sour cream to the mix)

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Millie the Beagle is after my Soup

Great healthy winter fare to warm you up after venturing into the cold outdoors, whether your companion is of the canine persuasion, or not!!

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Festive Food Pairing #3: Plum Pudding Beer with Xmas Pud

Happy Holidays &  Seasons Greetings to all! I have enjoyed an eventful time leading up to hosting a Chrismukkah dinner for 10 ( I think that’s the correct term combining Xmas & Chanukah!) but that is another story and post to share with you later on.   I wanted to include a pudding or dessert to pair with a beer after previous posts of pairing#1 (Sirloin steak) & 2# (Sea Bass).  Even though a glass of wine would be my go to choice with a  special meal I have really enjoyed tasting some great beers and pairing them with food – a trend that continues to grow in the USA, UK and globally. Lee @BeerAsylumPinner picked a fab final craft beer – a Plum Pudding Porter (6.5% APV) from Wiper and True, Bristol, UK (@wiperandtrue). A porter is a dark malt beer, a bit like a stout like Guinness. Those clever craft brewers of Bristol  have added mixed fruit, cinnamon and lemon zest. The beer is exceptionally smooth and not bitter with caramelised sugar, dark fruit flavours and a toasted finish. This is the kind of beer I would use in my Xmas Pudding recipe. For the recipe please look at the archives in December 2015 under flaming festive Christmas Pudding. I actually made this year’s pudding last year and have been ‘maturing’ it in a cool dark cupboard for a year, well wrapped up, just adding a teaspoon of rum every month or so to keep lovely & moist. I served the pudding in the British tradition  – flaming it at the table, with the lights dimmed before serving as in this video clip:

 

Plum Pudding Porter Craft Beer

Plum Pudding Porter Craft Beer

The whole family enjoyed the pudding, even my Uncle Norman who never usually eats desserts & is a huge foodie – said he loved it! Plum Pudding Porter Craft beer & Xmas Pud – a festive hit!

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Latkes With A Slight Twist

This is one of those rare years where Christmas & Chanukah (the Jewish Festival of Lights) coincide. Both kick off on the 25th. So keeping with the spirit of the Holiday Season, I thought I’d share my Latkes recipe which I first posted last year. Similar to a Potato Rosti, the Latke is synonymous with the festival, when one is encouraged to eat oily foods based on the events on the miracle of Channukah. Happy Holidays Everyone!

simsalb's avatartaste2taste

Tonight is the first night of the Jewish Festival of Light, Chanukah and the tradition, based on the story of the holiday, is to consume lots of things connected to oil.  So, I decided I would share my own recipe for the ever popular Latke, a potato dish cooked in….you guessed, oil!

The Ingredients needed The Ingredients needed

This is a great way to cook one’s spud, tatty or even potato. delicious, irresistibly crispy on the outside and moist potato within and is popular in mainstream US cuisine too

The way I make Latkes is with a nod to the tradition but adding a little bit of something else. Being a veritable kleptomaniac, when it comes to the use of a dash of color, I thought it might be fun to help this classic dish along the culinary trail by bringing some colorful vegetable interlopers to the party

Ingredients (serves 6+) 

Plain, Carrot & Kale Latke mix Plain, Carrot & Kale Latke mix

  • 6 x large potatoes (peeled and grated)
  • 2 x large onions…

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