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Is it Soup Season Yet?

9/3/2015

8 Comments

 
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September is a bridge of suspension between two of the loveliest Michigan seasons. The focus shifts to back to school and closing up the summer season of pools and boats and wanderlust. In the coming weeks we'll suffer the typical Midwest conflict of emotional decisions . . . do we force the adjustment of the back to school schedule or let the kids stay up just a little later in the lingering summer light (how I remember those days)? . . . Do we plan one more quick trip for the long Labor Day Weekend or responsibly tend to the business of autumn preparation . . . rotating wardrobes and sweeping out the dust of summer and shopping for school supplies? Do we take one more bittersweet dip in the cool blue of the backyard pool . . . or make a pot of soup? 

Right now I'm listening to the rumble of distant thunder outside my office window, so my thoughts turn to the latter. It's a balmy 85 degrees outside,  but, really, it's not so very hard to imagine the comfort of a simmering pot. Just imagine a swirling gust of yellow leaves. . . and spicy chili bubbling on the stove . . . Imagine the pepper-flecked flavor of a thick corn chowder or a hearty get well chicken noodle with a side of cheddar biscuits . . . and frost on the windowpane.

Food, in the end, in our own tradition, is something holy. It's not about nutrients and calories.  It's about sharing. It's about honesty. It's about identity. ~ Louise Fresco
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Are you there yet? If you weren't going to get it, you've probably stopped reading by now, because, really . . . it's a blog about soup, for heaven's sake! Not my mode of operation in writing that is typically steeped in profundity. But if you are still with me . . . then you might just get it. Soup is anchored in memory for me, and tied to emotion. My earliest memory of soup is when my grandmother would pluck a can for us to share from her pantry shelf that was a sea of Campbell's red and white. It was just an ordinary can of vegetable beef, but I've never been able to replicate the way she seasoned it, in southern fashion. It tasted like pepper and herbs and mountain sunshine on autumn afternoons. My mother served my brother and I tomato soup (Campbell's again) and grilled cheese sandwiches on the afternoon she announced that she and my father would be divorcing. I'll never forget the wonder of coming home for lunch to find her there when she should have been at work, and suddenly understanding the reason why. Every bite of rich warmth after that moment anesthetized the pain and helped me to breathe. Tomato soup tastes like hope and elusive normal. Since I've become a food snob (that's another blog), I don't eat much Campbell's anymore. I've discovered herbs and Pioneer Woman and that I can make Olive Garden's Zuppa Toscana in my own kitchen. I made it for the bridal party's lunch on the day of my daughter's wedding, and I get a bowl of it with a glass of Merlot every time I meet a friend for lunch there. Zuppa Toscano tastes like friendship and happily ever after.

Last winter, I took my lifelong love affair with soup to a new level with the launch of my annual Soup Project (I've decided to make it annual just this very minute because it sounded really good, but actually I like the idea:). Because soup means love and comfort and just plain good living to me, I decided to bless people who've blessed me with a flavor that just seemed to fit what they've meant to me in my life. My friend Jill (and her family) got vegetable beef because she's steady and sage and just really good . . . and good to me in that lifelong friendship kind of way.  My in laws got a beefy mushroom stroganoff cause they're down to earth and give my children roots and . . . well, cause that's what they asked for. Another close friend got an Asian chicken noodle (the recipe for Tom Kha Gai is below) because she's introduced me to so many different  ethnic foods and brought so much color to my life that it just couldn't be something conventional for her. And also, she was sick. It went kind of like that. Gratitude doesn't really need a reason. And I guess soup doesn't really need a season. If you're interested and you qualify (you know who you are) feel free to put in your order for this year.

Some other recipes that made it beyond my kitchen last year were Pioneer Woman's Tomato Basil and Potato Kale. A few that I kept to myself, but might be willing to share;) were Chicken Tortilla and Spicy Sausage with tri-color Cheese Tortellini. An unexpected benefit in my whole growing Soup Project was that I got an education in the more obscure ingredients that will take a recipe from good to sublime . . . Rotel and cooking sherry, chicken stock, fish sauce, and herbs . . . Oh, the herbs that keep me busy and surmising just the right amount of water for each . . . and the perfect winter window angle of sunlight . . . If you've ever taken on an indoor herb garden, you know what I'm talking about . . . Last year I only managed NOT to kill the sage and the rosemary . . . indoor gardening tips welcome . . . 
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Tom Kha Gai . . . my all time favorite . . .  I discovered it at the Whole Foods soup bar on a random Thursday afternoon lunch hour adventure in the company of some extraordinary people . . . and then made some for them . . . every time I eat it, I think two things . . . OMG it's just soup. . . . how can it be so good?! . . . and how much I miss the simple gift (that went unnamed for too long) of every day and every year with them . . . My variation goes like this . . . 

1 can (14oz) Coconut Milk
1 can (14oz) Chicken Broth
6 quarter slices of fresh ginger peeled and chopped fine or an inch sized chunk peeled and grated
1 stalk fresh lemongrass cut into 1 inch pieces or 2 dried lemongrass herb sticks (simmered and removed) OR a few drops of Doterra Lemongrass Essential Oil
1 pd boneless chicken breasts or thighs shredded
1 cup sliced gourmet mushrooms ( I recommend the Shittake, Cremini, & Oyster combo that I can find at Kroger)
1 tbls fresh lime juice
1 tbls fish sauce
1tsp sugar
1-3 tsp  Thai Chili Paste (season to taste. . . maybe 3 tbls:)
1/4 cup each fresh chopped basil and cilantro leaves
Thai Rice Noodles (gluten free!)
More Green Stuff

Bring all of the ingredients to a boil and then simmer for 30, and then add the rice noodles to boil for 10 more minutes.  

Some tips for the ingredients -- a little extra trouble to find them, as well as the careful preparation is well worth it!  The coconut milk, fish sauce, Thai chili paste, and rice noodles can all be found in the international Asian section of any grocery store.  Now let's talk specifically about the fish sauce.  If you've ever cooked with fish sauce, you know what I'm going to say.  It's like the anomaly of recipes.  You don't really want to use it, or touch it, or really be anywhere near it because of the horrible odor.  You can't imagine how anyone could have ever conceived of incorporating something so putrid into the culinary world.  But once you taste the difference in a recipe with it and without it, you have to add it.  It's just that simple.  My husband is staunchly opposed to me using it, but he feels the same way about the mushrooms, too (horrible and putrid).  He wouldn't prefer the coconut milk or the rice noodles or the green stuff, either.  Actually, he wouldn't come anywhere near this soup, so his opinion shouldn't be factored in here (I have a very simple chicken soup recipe stored in the freezer that I'll bring out just for him next time I make Tom Kha Gai).  Anyway, when adding the fish sauce, take a deep breath and hold it as you screw off the cap, very carefully measure and pour in a tablespoon, and then quickly screw the cap back on tightly (If you get any on your skin, scrub vigorously with lye soap and consider taking the next day off work. . . just kidding about the lye).  Breathe.  Then double ziploc it and store it in the back of the refrigerator until you need it again.  Moving on. . . the lemongrass in fresh form is virtually impossible to find (I even went to Randazzo's).  I imagine it could be found in an authentic Asian market, but I didn't try that.  What I did find was dried form in the spice aisle at Kroger. The label says McCormick Lemongrass, and it looks like cinnamon sticks.  Crush them just a little before adding them to release the flavor, and then remove them after simmering.  It seems like a lot of trouble, but it's an essential, basic ingredient.  Finally, in addition to the herbs, I like a lot of green stuff.  Broccoli is good.  Kale is great.  I happened to have some the last time I made it, and tossed some in, along with a handful of frozen peas.

Seriously, try this soup.  If it wasn't worth all the trouble, at least you've had the fish sauce experience and will have something to talk about at your next dinner party.

PS Look what I discovered after my epic lemongrass search.
Tom Kha Gai
8 Comments
Jill
9/3/2015 06:58:33 pm

Your vegetable beef soup was delicious on the cool evening. After a long day at work it was so nice to come home to a yummy bowl of soup knowing it was made with love from my dear friend. I Really Live your corn chowder... Hint Hint :)

Reply
Charlotte
9/4/2015 06:43:22 am

I really like the Olive Garden Tuscan soup

Reply
Rachel link
9/11/2015 09:41:32 am

I love soup!! My favorite is broccoli and crabmeat. I will have to try your recipe, I've never made an Asian soup before!

Reply
Cori link
9/11/2015 09:48:41 am

Amen! I need my soup!

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Rae Goldman link
9/11/2015 09:58:51 am

I can't wait for soup season. This year I've vowed to get out of my comfort zone when it comes to soups I make and this one seems like a good place to start!

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Chrissa - Physical Kitchness link
9/11/2015 01:34:29 pm

I'm so with you on discovering herbs and my comfort-food idol, Pioneer Woman!

Reply
Chrissa - Physical Kitchness link
9/18/2015 10:43:36 am

Ooo yummy! I definitely want to try your recipe. I love sops with a coconut milk base!

Reply
Becki S link
9/19/2015 07:51:03 am

We are half thai, I love tom gai. Definitely pinning this as I've never made it at home! Thanks for sharing.

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    I'm Aerin Leigh.  I'm a once upon a time teacher and a forever reading cheerleader.  I'm a writer, a reading specialist, and a a believer in the power of words.  I've seen a little of the world, but my first love is Michigan.  I live here with my husband and two spoiled Boxer dogs, Merlot and Riesling.  We're happy empty nesters and we spend a lot of time in our hot tub. . . to stay warm.  Winter is my solace, but Summer has been my teacher and my friend.  I'm an occasional runner, and a constant connoisseur of wine and friendship and gel nails.  Anything that lights up is magic to me . . .  like fireflies, the glow of a storybook moon, Christmas lights under the stars, and my Colorado grandbabies' faces when they see me on Skype.  I embrace quirky things like Feng Shui and Acupuncture and prayer . . . because they just might work.  I'm a survivor of much and of many, but I leave my heart wide open.  My children are my role models, my current passion is possibility, and my God is good. 


    Come follow my leap of faith journey . . . There'll probably be a lot of crazy, but you just might get to witness a soft landing.  
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