Summer Soup


 

Delish

 

I’m not a huge fan of soup.  I feel like soup is a huge tease.  It tastes good, it fills you up for about ten minutes, but then you want more.

So when I say that this soup is good, and it’s filling, I totally mean it.  (BTW I hate cooked carrots!)

Much Onion

Start with an onion.  The whole shebang, please.  For an awesome tutorial on how to chop an onion, visit the Pioneer Woman.  (I always forget how to do it the right way, and I end up with varying sizes and shapes.  It doesn’t matter much in this recipe, but if you’re going for presentation, Ree won’t steer you wrong.)

Then you’ll need some summer squash and carrots.  Summer squash are small and yellow.  They’re a lot like zucchini in texture, and they give the soup a light flavor while providing lots of filling fiber.  I like to get my produce from the farmer’s market (do you know your farmer?) as often as possible.  Unfortunately, since we only get farmer’s markets on Saturdays during summer around here, I got these from Safeway.  The nice thing about Safeway is that they have a huge produce section, and for the most part, everything is pretty fresh.  Before you assume that farmer’s market produce is more expensive than supermarket produce, take some time to actually compare prices.  Then take some time to realize that by buying local produce, you are supporting the local economy, AND you’re getting the freshest produce possible.
The Stars!

Carrots
I don’t bother to peel my carrots for this recipe. I do make sure they’re washed well, but since we’re going to be pureeing everything later on, it doesn’t really matter that the carrots have the skin still on. It’s also why it doesn’t matter if your onion isn’t chopped perfectly.  It’s kind of nice to be lazy in the kitchen sometimes.

When all your vegetables are chopped:

All together now

heat some oil in a large pot.  It really does need to be a large pot, because before your vegetables cook down, they’ll take up a LOT of room.  Add your onion to the heated oil and saute for a few minutes.  “A few minutes” and “some oil” are the types of terms that would have scared me to death.  How many minutes? How much oil?  I need my timer!! If you need a specific measurement for the oil, how about one tablespoon–ish?  You want the onions to be slightly opaque (transparent), but you want them to stay slightly firm.  About five minutes will do.

Add the squash and carrots to the onions, and then add 1 1/2 cups water.  The next part is kind of fun.  I’m the type of cook that will find a recipe that calls for chicken/vegetable broth, buy a can, use half, and then let the other half mold while trying to find another recipe that calls for chicken/vegetable broth.  That’s where Better Than Bouillon comes in!  It has the convenience factor of bouillon cubes without the salty taste.  And it looks a little bit like all natural peanut butter:

Better than Bouillon

It definitely doesn’t taste like peanut butter though. You can ask my husband about that sometime (he tasted it once, just to say he did.  He’s pretty daring that way)

All you have to do is add about 1 1/2 tsp of BTB to 2 cups of warm water.  Or, in this case, add 2 extra cups of water to the squash/carrot/onion mix and put the BTB right in the pot!  Like I said, it’s nice to be lazy in the kitchen sometimes.

After that, bring your mixture to a boil, cover with a lid, reduce the heat to medium low and simmer for about 20 minutes, stirring occasionally.  It will end up looking like this:

Ready

And then you’ll need these:

The Tool

Waiting

A food processor and an empty pot.  Using a ladle, scoop the vegetables into your food processor and pulse a few times until chunky.  The original recipe says “pureed,” but I like to chew my food.  Pour your vegetables into the empty pot, and repeat the process until all your vegetables are gone.

Oh yeah

You won’t need all of the remaining liquid, but you can add as much as you want to get the desired thickness of soup.  Add some salt and pepper (amount depends on taste), and it should look like this:

Add some pepper

To add some creaminess:

Half and Half I love the bubbles!

Bring the full pot up to medium heat (just enough to warm the half and half and re-warm the soup).  Then add the best part:

 

Basil

Fresh basil! Nothing makes a dish complete quite like fresh basil. With all other herbs, I’d say that fresh and dried are pretty interchangeable. Not so with basil! You absolutely have to use fresh for this recipe, or all is lost. LOST I SAY!

The greatest part about this soup is that it’s equally good hot or cold.  We actually took this soup camping on the Smith River (I know, soup while camping?!?) and it was deliciously filling without requiring any fire or fuel to heat it up.  Pair this with a small sandwich or some spicy chickpeas (recipe coming soon), and you have an easy, filling meal.

So there you have it!  I hope you love it, but more importantly, I hope you make it your own recipe–with your own variations.  Let me know how you change it up in the comments section.

Delish

Yellow Squash and Basil Soup (adapted from Good Housekeeping)

  • 1 tbsp Olive Oil
  • 1 Onion, finely chopped (or not)
  • 8 small Yellow (Summer) squash, sliced
  • 3 medium Carrots, sliced
  • 3 1/2 cups warm water
  • 1 1/2 tsp Better than Bouillon
  • 1/2 cup Fat Free Half and Half
  • Salt and Pepper (to taste)
  • 1 cup loosely packed Basil leaves, shredded

Here are the original instructions

Disclaimer:  The folks at Cuisinart, Better Than Bouillon, Safeway and Pioneer Woman have no clue who I am.  I don’t get any royalties from recommending their products, I just happen to have them in my kitchen (except the Pioneer Woman. That would be sweet though!).