Soup is one of those things, easy to make but also easy to screw up. Obviously for anyone truly serious in becoming a Chef, along with stocks and sauces, soups is an essential element. And the beauty of soups is that the basic elements of a soup being made 100 litres at a time is the same as one being made at home.
Due to my overwhelming love for C, I started making soups and sauces. I had always been a sauce maker but had never really made sauces. Of course at Reservation I started making big batches of soups for weddings and other celebrations as well as for daily service.
Soup is something that seems really easy. You add you main feature to some water or cream and boil. However, there are, as I learned at Reservation lots of things that can go wrong with soups.
Now that I am at Without Reservation I took soups from Chef as I outlined in a previous post. Though I have witnessed a growth in the way that I am making them and what types of soups I am choosing to make. For instance, this week I have made a Roasted Red Pepper and Tomato Puree, an Asian Inspired Black Bean and Ham Hock and today started a Cauliflower Veloute (one of my favorites). The roasted red pepper went over like gangbusters. The Black Bean was only half used yesterday so I bumped it up today with some orange juice, water and another ham hock. I will finish the Cauliflower Veloute when I get into work tomorrow morning.
I can almost hear you all asking; “But how do you make the actual soup?”
Well let’s answer that to demystify some of the steps in the process by using the Black Bean soup as the example.
First I started with 4 large onions which I diced and sweated down in a little oil with some garlic. This takes about five to seven minutes but be patient. The point of the sweat is to draw out the natural sugars in the onions. About four minutes into the sweat I add the carrots and celery and allow them to sweat as well. After about three minutes from that point I deglazed it with about a third to a half a bottle of white wine. The night before I had soaked some chilies in a little sweet rice wine vinegar and water. I allow the wine to reduce and then add the black beans and ham hocks stirring them in completely. Cover with water and let simmer. After about an hour and a half (and filling the water back up a little lets just say two more litres and about seven hundred and fifty milliliters of Orange Juice) I turn the heat off and let it sit for a couple of minutes. As a result of the flavours that I was after in this particular soup I juiced four limes and added the juice and a little of the pulp to the soup. I then removed the ham hocks and put them under running cold water to allow them to cool so I could handle them. While this is happening I used an immersion blender to combine all the flavours fully. Once the ham hocks were cool I then took the fat off and deposit it in the bottom of the soup terrine. I then take the meat of the ham hocks of the bone and shredded it coarsely and deposited it in the soup.
You see, there really isn’t much to it. I really enjoyed this soup because Toronto has been hit by an Artic blast that has the city beyond cold, especially when you factor in the wind chill. The heat was just enough to hit you on the back of your palate and to warm you up and it was really well balanced. Today I thought it was even better as the flavours had all come together even more. To bump it up today I added a bit more water, some more orange juice and another ham hock.
DELCICIOUS.
Abraham Maslow once said; “A first rate soup is better than a second rate painting” I couldn’t agree more.
Are you living your dream? Are you dreaming big and inspired?
A la prochaine
SDM
Thursday, January 15, 2009
Soup, Soup, Soup (file under I’m getting good, like REAL good)
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