Thursday, October 15, 2009

Carrot Soup with Herbs de Provence (leftover carrots)


It never ceases to surprise us how you can make great food by using a small amount of the least interesting ingredients. Though this couldn't sound more boring, the texture and flavor of this soup—a version of which can be found in a thousand cookbooks—are great. Herbed foccacia helps too.

Carrot Soup with Herbs de Provence

1-2 lbs carrots (whatever is left over in your bag), peeled, chopped roughly
2 potatoes, peeled and diced, and placed in a bowl of water. Type does not matter, though russet is preferable.
1 medium onion, roughly chopped
1 tbsp butter
1-2 tbsp olive oil
1 tbsp herbs de Provence
Parsley, chopped (optional)
Salt to taste

1. Heat a large saucepan and add the olive oil and butter.
2. Add carrots, and cook over medium high heat for about 15 minutes, or until slightly browned. If you burn them, order pizza.
3. Add the onions, lower the heat, and stir until onions are slightly yellowed.
4. Add potatoes and the water they came in. Fill the rest of the pot with water until the vegetables are covered.
5. Cook for about 1 hour, until everything is happily mushy. Add water if necessary.
6. Using an immersion blender, turn everything into a smooth, silky texture (add water if it's too thick). Add some salt and continue until well seasoned.
7. Add some of the herbs de provence, cook for a minute or so, and taste.
8. Continue adding herbs de provence until the flavor is perfect. (Since we don't know how many carrots you had, or how big your potatoes were, we'll have to trust your judgment).
9. Add water or salt as necessary to adjust seasoning.
10. Serve garnished with parsley and sea salt.

Sliced Apples and Satay Sauce


A handy little appetizer that makes the most of fall apples and pantry items.

One apple, cored, halved and then sliced into "chips"
1½ tbsp peanut butter
Soy sauce
Lemon juice
Sugar
Water
Sriracha sauce (optional)

1. Add the peanut butter to a bowl.
2. Add about 2 tsp of soy sauce, 1 of lemon juice, 1 of water, and a pinch of sugar.
3. Using a fork, mash the liquid into the peanut butter. This takes time, and it's tedious.
4. Depending on your texture, continue adding water and soy sauce until you mash into a smooth sauce.
5. Taste and adjust, adding either lemon juice, sugar, Sriracha, or water.
6. Serve as a dipping sauce for sliced apples.