Dug up by Mr G yesterday |
We like to eat thick soups in the colder months as they somehow seem more substantial and warming. All that means is that I don't add as much stock as I would if I wanted a thinner soup.
The original recipe for this bakes the flour and Parmesan coated parsnips in the oven first, but as the cooker wasn't fired up I skipped this part. I'm sure they would have tasted even more gorgeous prepared in this way.
Ingredients
Not sure how to tackle this one! |
Four or five parsnips, peeled and chopped
1 litre chicken stock
Onion, chopped
Garlic, chopped
15g butter
Salt and pepper to taste
Parmesan (or similar) cheese
Method
Melt the butter and soften the onion and garlic without colouring. Add the parsnips, stock and seasoning and cook until the parsnips are soft which takes about 10 minutes.
Remove from heat and liquidize. Pour into the bowls and grate some cheese on top.
Thick Parsnip Soup |
Maybe next time I'll try roasting the parsnips first and if I can stop myself from eating them at that stage, have a go at cooking the yummy sounding Roasted Parsnip and Parmesan Soup, in the meantime this was quicker than heating up a packet soup.
I too love parsnips- soup is perfect for this weather! Fair play to he kids as parsnips have such a strong flavour!
ReplyDeleteI was surprised they tried it, especially the fussier one. I've warned them not to judge all parsnip soup on this one though as I'm sure the roasted version has quite a different flavour.
ReplyDeleteWe have never made parsnip soup and really must give it a try sometime soon. It sounds quite good.
ReplyDeleteIt was so quick it was worth the try Mr H. I suspect the difference between roasting the parsnips first or not might be the difference between carrot soup and carrot and corriander. Someone on Twitter recommended adding some curry powder to the (otherwise plain) soup.
ReplyDelete