Search This Blog

Pages

Friday, September 23, 2011

Curried Pumpkin Soup with Coconut Milk


This recipe comes from my friend, Carla. I have tried it with pumpkin and with butternut squash, and today I am trying it with banana squash (a huge winter squash that I got from my son who works on a farm.) I'm worried about the stringy-ness of the banana squash, so I'll let you know how it turns out.

This is one of those vague "add as much as you want" type recipes. Soups are pretty forgiving and you can adjust texture and flavor as you go. Taste often until you get it just how you like it.

Here's What You'll Need
  • Cooked pumpkin, butternut squash, or other winter squash
  • 2 cans coconut milk
  • 1 onion
  • celery
  • kafir lime leaves (can be found at your local Asian market)
  • curry paste (thai works best here)
  • veggie broth or water to thin the soup
  • 1 pkg tofu
  • soy sauce
  • lemongrass (optional, also found at the Asian market)
  • 1-2 limes
  • chili-lime cashews (found at Trader Joes) or plain cashews

Here's What You Do
  • Saute one chopped onion and 1/2 cup chopped celery in some olive oil.
  • Mix 1/3 can coconut milk with 1 T. thai curry paste. (You could certainly use other kinds of curry paste, but this one goes particularly well with the lemongrass and kafir lime leaves in the recipe.) Add this to the onion & celery after it has softened.
  • Add the rest of your can of coconut milk to the pan.
  • Pulverize 3-4 kafir lime leaves in a blender, food processor, or spice grinder. Add this to the pan as well.
  • Open a second can of coconut milk. Put cooked pumpkin (or other winter squash) in your food processor with about half the can. Process until smooth. Add to soup. Repeat with any remaining pumpkin. If you have any coconut milk left in the can, add it to the soup.
  • You can add some veggie broth if you want to thin the soup out to a more "soupy" consistency.
  • Cut up one or two stalks of lemongrass (the tender, pale inner parts only) and add to the soup.
  • Cut one brick of firm tofu into cubes and marinate it in soy sauce.
  • Let the soup cook for awhile.
  • Toward the end of the cooking time, add the marinated tofu, the juice of one lime, 3/4 cup of peas, and some chili-lime cashews (found at Trader Joe's, or you can use plain cashews).
  • Taste for salt and flavor balance. You can add more lime juice, more soy sauce, more curry paste, or anything else you think will help balance the flavors. (I added a little caramel syrup last time which provided the perfect sweetness to complement the winter squash.)
Extra lemongrass or cilantro would make nice garnishes for this soup.

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Pasta with Fresh Tomatoes


This dish is so fast and easy that I had everything ready before the water boiled and the pasta cooked. It features cherry tomatoes and is the essence of summer. If you use cherry tomatoes from your garden, it costs less than $1 per person. Add a salad and you've got a tasty weeknight meal.

Here's what you do
Put water on to boil for your pasta. Small compact shapes are nice with this, but anything will do. I used half a pound for two of us and we had about 1/3 of it left over. We also didn't have salad or bread, so we ate more pasta than we otherwise would have. The recipe says 1/2 pound feeds 4 people.
In a large bowl combine the following:
  • 3 cups cherry tomatoes, cut in half
  • 1 garlic clove, minced
  • 1 shallot, minced
  • 2 T. capers, rinsed
  • 1/3 cup pitted olives (the recipe called for Nicoise, but I used kalamata)
  • 6 basil leaves, slivered or torn (I used lemon basil which has much smaller leaves, so I just grabbed a small handful)
  • 3 T. of your best olive oil
  • salt & pepper to taste
When the pasta is cooked to your liking, drain it and add it to the bowl. Stir quickly to coat with the olive oil. Breathe deeply because this smells FABULOUS. You can add a few drops of balsamic vinegar if you like. I forgot to do this and it was wonderful without it (and you KNOW how much I love vinegar.) Serve immediately.

For some of you, it may be strange to have pasta with no cheese. If you're tempted to add cheese, at least try several bites without it. The flavors of the tomatoes and olives really get to shine if you keep this dish simple.

Things I'd Do Differently Next Time
I'd like to try this dish with Smoked Olive Oil next time. If you haven't tried smoked olive oil, you should look it up at www.thesmokedolive.com. It is pricey, but worth every penny. You can find it at the Santa Rosa farmers market (Sonoma County) where you can try before you buy.

Cost to Prepare
Pasta - $.75
Cherry tomatoes - from the garden
Shallot -
Garlic - $.05
Olive oil - $.40
Basil - from the garden
Capers - $.50
Olives - $.75
S&P - negligible
TOTAL COST - $2.45 (serves 3-4 people)