Archive for the ‘pesto’ Category

Soup Night XXXIV

Tuesday, July 5th, 2011

I host a soup night, ideally once a month, but really it happens when we have a free weekend night. I make a huge pot of soup, customized each time for the number of people coming and the allergies/preferences/aversions of the guests. It’s really, really fun and it gives us a way to actually get together with our friends regularly even when life is hectic. It’s a different group of people each time…and if there is every a time that everyone on the invite list can show up, I’m not sure what we’ll do, our house isn’t nearly big enough!

This time I live-tweeted the making of the soup, just for fun. A sort of step-by-step recipe without instructions! This is enough soup for 16-18 people.

3 onions:

Onions

Onions

4-5 quarts chicken stock simmering on the back burner:

Chicken Stock Simmering

Chicken Stock Simmering

3-4 carrots (mulitcolored, they looked cool!):

Added Carrots

Added Carrots

1 fennel bulb and 4 stalks celery:

Fennel and Celery

Fennel and Celery

Cooking all that stuff down, entertaining myself with the camera:

Waiting for veggies to cook down

Waiting for veggies to cook down

4 yellow potatoes:

Potatoes will go in next

Potatoes will go in next

3/4 bottle white wine and 6 cloves garlic:

Added white wine and garlic

Added white wine and garlic

One bunch kale, somewhat “julienned”…I’d say finely shredded:

Shredded Kale

Shredded Kale

6 small zucchini:

Zucchini

Zucchini

Snap peas, halved:

Lastly, snap peas

Lastly, snap peas

In there with the zucchini went 3 cans of cannellini beans and then the soup was ladeled over spaghetti that I broke in half before boiling (so it would be possible to eat it with a spoon!)

To serve it was first pasta, then soup, pesto on top of that (basil-walnut-lots of lemon), and for everyone but me, shredded parmesean.

Topped with pesto for serving

Topped with pesto for serving

Yum.

Grilled Snapper with Cilantro Pesto and Napa Cabbage Slaw

Friday, July 16th, 2010

Rub snapper fillets with grated ginger and garlic. I grate them on my microplane grater right over the fish…works pretty well. Pour juice of 2 limes over the fish. I let it sit for about 30 minutes. Not long enough to cure the fish but long enough to get a good flavor. Drizzle with olive oil, sprinkle with salt and grill.

For the pesto:
1 clove garlic
1/2 cup almonds
1 – 1 1/2 cups or so cilantro leaves
Juice of 1 lime
salt, pepper
Blend all that in the food processor then add enough olive oil, with blade going, to reach the consistency you like. I like drier pesto so I stop when it’s a paste.

For the slaw, well, it wasn’t my recipe…*gasp!* I got it from Epicurious and it was really good. Highly recommend that one.

Butternut Squash Soup

Friday, November 6th, 2009


I made this soup a few times last year and each time I had to wing it because I forgot to write down the recipe. I had told my mom how I made it though and so this year she sent me the ingredients which had no amounts. So I was sorta winging it again but it worked! I made it for about 25 people so I scaled this recipe down (hope i did the math right!). I’m guessing this will serve about 8.

5 lbs butternut squash
1 lb potatoes
10 cups stock (I use chicken, but veggie stock is easily substituted)
2 onions, chopped
some garlic cloves (separated but unpeeled)

Heat oven to 350°. Cut squash in half lengthwise and scoop seeds and squash-guts out of the cavity. Rub olive oil on the inside of the squash, put 1 or 2 cloves of garlic inside the cavity and put the squash face-down on a baking sheet. Bake for 45min – 1 hr until squash is soft enough to easily poke thickest part with a fork. Cool to almost room-temp. It’s much easier to scoop out the squash flesh if you aren’t burning your hands doing it!

Meanwhile…

Sauté onion until it’s soft. Add diced potato and about half a cup of the stock and cook the potato until it’s soft as well. Add scooped out squash (discard skins!) and squeeze roasted garlic into pot as well. Add the rest of the stock. Bring to a simmer for a few minutes. Turn off heat and purée. This is where I love my stick-blender. Otherwise you have to pour it into a blender and try not to scald yourself doing it!

The soup on its own is lovely. The toppings make it rockin’.

We top ours with marjoram-parsley-pecan pesto: made like regular basil-pinenut pesto (herbs, lemon juice – a lot, garlic, nuts, olive oil, salt, pepper) but with different herbs and nuts. And walnut butter: throw butter and walnuts into a food processor until blended and then put a dollup on the soup.

Oh, and fried sage. Melt butter in a pan until it’s *almost* browning, toss in some sage leaves. Fry until they’re curled up and crisping, drain on a paper towel.

This isn’t the most organized recipe but I hope you can follow it anyway! It’s worth it!