Showing posts with label fennel seeds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fennel seeds. Show all posts

Monday, July 16, 2018

Week 29 -- Italian Festival Soup

I"m getting ready to move, so I'm using up the weird odds and ends in my freezer.  This week in my freezer I found two gluten-free vegan Italian sausage patties my mom made for me.  You can see my mom's sausage making method in this demo we did for a local tv show:  https://accesschautauquacountytv.org/episode/9dIYrYrLlpg

I grew up attending Italian festivals at churches every summer, and the signature scent at these festivals was always the peppers and onions served on sausage. Forget the sausage, the peppers and onions were the good part!

To make the broth richer I added a cup of tomato sauce I also found the freezer, the remnant of some past pizza-making expedition.

This soup brings back the atmosphere of those festivals.  Sing along to Volare while you eat for the real experience!

I feel like I'm sitting in a wooden folding chair under a tent.

Mmm...can you smell the onions and peppers?

Italian Festival Soup

1 large sweet onion, sliced
2 sweet bell peppers, sliced
4 cloves of garlic, sliced
2 vegan Italian sausages (optional -- replace with one can of beans and some red pepper flakes)
1 tsp fennel seeds (increase to 1 1/2 if using beans instead of sausage
1 cup tomato sauce

water to cover

1. Saute onion in water until soft.  Add garlic and then bell peppers.  
2. Add tomato sauce and water to thin to desired consistency.  Add fennel seeds.
3. Crumble or slice sausages and add.  Simmer about 10 minutes to let flavors meld.

Makes about 3 servings. 

Monday, April 2, 2018

Week 14 -- Caldo Verde

Once again, I have to admit that I have only tried this soup from my own cooking.  I have no idea if this tastes like real Caldo Verde or not.

The cookbook where I read about Caldo Verde originally says this is a Portuguese soup.  It may taste like this, and it might not.  One trick I read in the cookbook is to use tempeh crumbles in place of sausage. 

If you're a fan of Zuppa Toscana, this is similar.  When I make that soup, I add some cashew cream.  In this soup, the creaminess comes from blending the veggies, and the greens get a little softer.

I usually make tempeh sausage crumbles (as for use on pizza, for example) by putting all the seasonings right on the tempeh.  That could work here, but, to make it easier, I just through the sausage seasonings right into the soup.

I like to make this with chard or collard greens (I'm not a huge chard fan, but this is one place it works).  However, my local grocery store didn't have any good greens this week except for kale (the other choices were bok choi, which I think of as the lazy cousin of good greens as it really doesn't do much for you nutritionally speaking, and broccoli rabe, which I have never had cooked well, and I wasn't going to spend a fortune just to fail at it).  If your store is as poorly stocked as mine, don't worry.  Kale works just fine here.


How can you go wrong with onions, garlic, potatoes, and kale?


There's my crumbled tempeh, steaming itself.  If you aren't sure about tempeh, don't skip this step,
as it mellows the flavor quite a bit.


Time to blend!


Look at all those tempeh sausage crumbles -- it's hard not to eat them before they get to the pot.


There's a beautiful bowl of green soup (with some extra tempeh crumbles saved for garnish).

Caldo Verde

1 onion, chopped
3-4 cloves of garlic, chopped
4-5 small gold potatoes or 3 medium, chopped
4 cups water
1 Tbsp fennel seeds
1 tsp each sage, savory, and thyme
1/2 tsp - 1 tsp red pepper flakes
1 Tbsp miso paste
6 cups shredded greens
1 package tempeh
1 Tbsp lemon juice
sprinkle of paprika (optional)

1. In a soup pot or saucepan, saute the onion in some water.  When it's soft, add the garlic.
2. In a frying pan, crumble tempeh into a thin layer of water (about 1/2 cup).  Cover and let simmer about 10 minutes.
3. To the soup pot, add the potatoes and 4 cups water.  I like to add half the water now and half after blending, but it should work if you add it all now.  Also add the fennel, sage, savory, and thyme.  Let simmer until potatoes are tender.
3. Uncover tempeh.  Add the lemon juice and cook until dry and a little crispy.  I sometimes add some paprika just for color.
4. Turn off the heat on the potato soup.  Add the miso paste.  Use an immersion blender to puree the soup.  Some chunks are fine.  You can also carefully puree using a regular blender, but beware of steam and hot liquids.
5. Add the shredded greens (and the rest of the water, if you divided it).  Turn on the heat just to let the additional water come up to soup temperature.  Do not boil.  The greens should get nice and soft.
6. Mix the tempeh crumbles into the soup.  If you're eating it right away, save a few crumbles to put on top.

Makes about 4 servings.