Showing posts with label Leek. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Leek. Show all posts

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Soup for Summer: Part 2 - Asparagus

Come summer, a recipe has to be pretty intriguing for me to get the energy to turn on the stove (otherwise it's cold salads and microwaved meals). But the asparagus soup recipe from Eating Well looked good enough to risk sweltering in an already overheated kitchen. After all, asparagus season was ending, and it was my last chance to use up the half bunch in the crisper. So on a recent "cool" evening (with temperatures finally dipping into the 60s and 70s), I fired up the gas burner and made soup. In the summer.
With a little tweaking (leeks for onions, garlic scapes for garlic clove), the end result was more like a vichyssoise -- perfect for enjoying hot or cold. Or, in other words, a perfect soup for summer (as long as you can bear standing over the stove)!
Asparagus Spinach Vichyssoise
Ingredients
1 T. Light whipped butter
2 T. Olive oil
2 Leeks, cleaned and chopped
1 Clove of garlic, mashed
1/2 t. Salt
1/2 t. Curry powder
1/2 t. Ginger root, grated
1 Lemon, zested and juiced
2 C. Red potatoes, diced
3 C. Chicken broth
1 C. Lite Coconut milk
2 C. Asparagus, chopped
2 C. Baby spinach Black pepper
Method
In a large pot or dutch oven, heat the butter and olive oil over medium heat; add leeks and cook until soft.
Add garlic, salt, curry powder, ginger root and lemon zest; cook for three minutes.
Add potatoes, broth and coconut milk; simmer for 10 minutes.
Add asparagus; summer for 5 minutes more.
Remove pot from heat; add baby spinach and then puree mixture using immersion blender.
Season with additional salt, freshly ground black pepper and lemon juice to taste.
Serve hot or cooled.

Monday, November 9, 2009

Keuka Gold meets Green Leeks: Potato Leek Soup

Hard to believe there are only two more weekends for most outdoor farmers markets (many shut down the weekend before Thanksgiving). Judging by the weather, and bounty of produce and prepared food at my local market on Saturday, you'd never guess. Since the end is near, I went a bit wild, dropping a bundle on staples like red onions, apples and yams, but also special items like Tuscan kale and vanilla yogurt and Indian food (you gotta love a market that has a stand selling samosas next to a stand that sells winter squash). However, despite being in a buying mood, I wasn't really in a cooking mood over the weekend. But with a new bunch of leeks, and those Keuka Gold potatoes from the Irvington market sitting on my counter for almost a month, I decided to throw together a quick potato leek soup. Keuka Gold (featured in The New York Times last month) have really thin skins, so I just left them unpeeled and diced the well-scrubbed spuds. Perhaps because I chose to leave the skin on, the final product took on the slightest greenish (leek) gray (potato skin) cast. But it tasted great. And was simple to make, leaving me more time to enjoy the Indian summer sun and less at the stove.
Easy Potato Leek Soup
Believe it or not, this soup actually freezes ok, but the components do separate, so you must add dairy after it's thawed to bind the ingredients back together. And if you bring a frozen container to work to heat up for lunch? Stir in one or two of those small containers of creamer at the end! This recipe makes two, 2-cup servings.
Ingredients
2 Leeks, washed and roughly chopped
1 T. Butter
1 T. Olive oil
1 Shallot, roughly chopped
2 Slices of Bacon, diced
1 Lb. of Potatoes, 1/2 inch dice (I used Keuka Gold, but you can sub Yukon Gold)
3 C. Chicken broth
Splash of milk/half and half/cream
Chives, minced (for garnish)
Salt
Fresh ground black pepper
Method
Saute leeks in butter and oil over medium heat for about eight minutes (until softened but not browned).
Season liberally with salt and pepper; add shallot and bacon to the leeks and cook for two minutes.
Add potatoes and broth; bring broth to a boil and then turn down heat and simmer, uncovered, until potatoes are tender.
Turn off heat and let cool slightly; puree with an immersion blender (or in batches in a regular blender) until desired consistency.
Stir in a splash of milk, half and half, or cream before serving; garnish with chives.