
Soups have always been popular in the winter months. The trend may have started because people were trying to make use of the aging crops, harvested before the frigid weather arrived. Hardly anyone is a farmer anymore, yet the trend persists. Having grown a fair amount of carrots in the garden this year, I have been trying to use as much as possible before they go bad. I knew I wanted to make soup, but did not want it to be like the carrot soups I’ve had before. Half way through making dinner, it was still unclear what the finished bowl would be. Carrots? Yep. Bacon? No way can that be left out. Arugula? Well I bought it, better try to use it up. Noodles? Never have I made a soup with noodles and that’s not changing now… Let the carrots be the noodles? Yes, a good choice. The lima beans were an after thought. They were actually being prepared for another dish, which didn’t happen. But, they add a lot and I’m not sure this soup would be as good without that extra element. This can be made as a vegetarian soup pretty easily as well.
Serves 4 to 6.
Supplies Needed: An 8 quart soup pot, a strainer and a second pot(4+ quarts). Potato peeler. Knife and cutting board. Fry pan.
Ingredients:
For the Stock/Broth:
4-8 large carrots, ends removed and chopped in half.(Enough carrots to fill the soup pot a bit more than half way, after everything else is in it already.)
A chicken carcas(like the picked over remnants of a rotisserie chicken), or a large breast, or thigh without removing any meat.
1 large onion, halved
2-4 fresh garlic cloves
2 long sprigs of fresh thyme
2 bay leaves
For the Finished Soup:
6 medium sized carrots(figure one per person), shredded with a potato peeler, so as to make thin, noodle-like strips
half a pound of bacon
1 cups worth of arugula
1.5 cups of lima beans
half tsp of chili powder blend, or cajun spice blend
salt and pepper to taste
thyme leaves for garnish
To Cook:
Put the halved carrots, chicken, onion, garlic, bay leaves and thyme sprigs into Your pot. Adding enough water to submerge everything, plus a bit more. If Your pot is half full of ingredients, You’ll want to fill it three quarters full of water. You don’t want anything sticking out above the water… Bring this to a simmer and let it gently bubble for 4 or 5 hours, stirring occasionally. You’re done with this step when You can make mashed carrots with nothing more than a gentle touch. Let it cool a bit and strain the solids from the liquid. A 4 quart pot should be about the perfect size for the amount of liquid You have. Now is a good time to start frying the bacon in another pan. As You do that, bring the soup to a light boil and begin reducing it. Add the spices, salt and pepper and continue to boil until a third of the liquid has boiled off. Then, add the lima beans and continue to boil until they are cooked. Place the arugula and shredded carrots into bowls. Ladle in the soup and lima beans, the hot soup should be just enough to soften the thinly shredded carrots. Add the bacon and garnish with some thyme leaves. Time to eat!
Notes:
This can easily be made as a vegetarian soup. Simply replace the chicken bones with another veggie, or add more carrots. Then, skip adding bacon at the end…
If You’re using baby lima beans, You’ll want to add them a bit later. Because they are more tender and cook in less than half the time.
When reducing soup stock, the general rule of thumb is that You want to end up with half the amount of liquid You had after straining.
Roasting the bones in the oven/broiler before starting Your soup will help bring out the oils and flavor. Making for a slightly more robust end product. If You make this with a chicken breast, or thigh, a quick searing, at high heat in a fry pan will help accomplish the same thing. You don’t want to cook the meat, the intent is to help mature the final flavor.
Those who don’t like a bit of fattiness to their soup will want to make the stock a day before serving. Place it in the fridge over night and the fat will all solidify on top. Simply remove the fat layer and then proceed to reduce and finish the soup…
If You don’t think You’ll use all of it right away, remove some to freeze for later, before adding the lima beans and spices. Obviously, if doing so, You won’t need as much of the ingredients for the ‘finished soup.’
I served this with Port Chicken(recipe can be found on this blog) and peppercorn rice, the recipe for which is on this blog under one of My ‘cooking in the twilight hours’ posts. The meal was quite lovely! Except that I neglected to salt the soup, which My guests didn’t appreciate. Adding salt to the soup made all the difference…

December 15, 2014 | Categories: Recipes, Soup, Vegetarian | Tags: arugula, bacon, bean, beans, blend, bones, bowl, broth, carcas, carrot, carrots, chicken bones, chili, delicious, easy, eat, eats, food, foods, good, greens, herbs, hot, how to, lima, make, meal, onion, photo, photograph, photography, photos, pics, picture, pictures, pot, recipe, recipes, salt, satisfying, see, shredded, simple, soup, soups, spice, spiced, spices, stock, tasty, texture, thin, thinly, thyme, veg, vegetable, vegetables, vegetarian friendly, veggie, veggies, warm, what to do, yummy | Leave a comment

October 5, 2014 | Categories: Photography | Tags: asparagus, autumn, back.head, backyard, bread, brother, bun, burd, cheese, colorful, cooked, dinner, eats, evening, fall, family, fire, fire pit, fire ring, food, foodformybelly, garnish, girl, gorganzola, hair, halo, knit, meal, midway felix, minnesota, mushroom, pasta, photo, picture, plate, plated, plating, sauce, slice, sliced, slices, small, steak, supper, sweater, white, yard | Leave a comment

August 3, 2014 | Categories: Photography | Tags: 2014, andor, andorblogs, black, blogs?, bowl, browned, canon, caramel, carmel, chicken, contrast, cook, cooked, cookinginthetwilighthours, digital, dinner, eat, eats, food, fry, glass, green, hot, images, img, imges, late, meal, meat, night, noodles, pea, photo, photograph, photography, photos, pic, pics, picture, pictures, ramen, salty, sauce, savory, seasoned salt, shot, shots, snap.peas, spicey, stir, stirfry, sugar, supper, sweet, t41, tamron 17-50mm f2.8, view | Leave a comment
I guess this place opened about 3 months ago. Located in east Saint Paul, ‘Cook’ looks to be a place that I shall be going to again soon. I opted to get a Monte Cristo sandwich, which was very yummy. Next time I shall get the Short Ribs Eggs Benedict, which one of My friends ordered. The bite of it that I got was quite delicious. Also pictured is their Brunch Burger and homemade Apple Pie.
June 29, 2014 | Categories: Photography, Random Thoughts | Tags: american, apple, benedict, breakfast, burger, chips, cook, cooks, cozy, cream, cream cheese, crispy, delicious, dip, east, east side, eastside, eat, eatery, eats, egg, eggs, food, fresh, fried, friendly staff, fries, good, ham, hash browns, hashbrowns, hollandaise, juicy, just right, lunch, middle america, midwest, minnesota, mn, monte cristo, montecristo, new, nice, on top, paul, payne, pie, place, pleasant, poached, recent, restaurant, saint, saintpaul, sandwich, sauce, short rib, short ribs, small, spot, st, tender, topped, turkey, yummy | Leave a comment
Gallery
June 15, 2014 | Categories: Photography | Tags: 2014, baste, basting, bite, bread, bun, char, chicken, cooked, cooking, delicious, eats, eting, felix, filled, filling, flavor, food, foodporn, friends, full, gathering, get together, grate, grill, grilled, grilling, ground, half, hand, hands, herbs, holding, in, inside, japanese, juicy, meal, meat, minnesota, mop, open, outside, pork, poultry, preparing, puff, raw, roll, rolled, smoke, smokey, soft, spices, spicy, steamed, stuff, stuffed, summer, tender, yo hasegawa, yummy | Leave a comment
Tonkatsu Ramen has suddenly become a bit of a saturday ritual. So filling, so delicious. This time one of us ordered it without chili oil, exposing the hearty white stock. I always tell Myself, ‘next time I will order something else from the expanding menu,’ but it has yet to happen..
February 9, 2014 | Categories: Photography, Random Thoughts | Tags: asian, ate, bak choi, base, bone, bowl, bowls, broth, chili, cloudy, covered, delicious, eat, eats, egg, filling, food, foodformybelly, foodporn, full, gimmemore, ginger, greens, hearty, heavy, japanese, meat, milky, noodle, noodles, oil, photo, picked, picture, pictures, pork, ramen, ritual, roasted, satisfying, saturday, seeds, sesame, simplythebest, slurp, soup, stock, thick, tonkatsu, uni deli, unideli, united noodles, unitednoodles, weekly, white, yummy | Leave a comment
One of humanity’s most varied edibles. After a decade or more of experimenting and constantly trying different things, I have settled on a flavor arrangement closer to americanized asian restaurant versions of this classic home-style favorite. The sweet soy sauce, or alternately kecap manis, combined with rice vinegar and soy sauce is the winning formula at a great many asian restaurants here in North America. For Me, Simply add eggs, sweet peas and bacon, everything else is optional. The following recipe is my dressed up version which is very much a stand alone meal. Adding chili powder for increased depth to the rice it’s self, while also including carrots and onions, along with savory marinated pork. By cooking these things separately and mixing them together only at the end, You get a wonderful burst of the different ingredient’s flavors in every bite. Serves 4 as a main dish or 6+ as a side dish.
Supplies Needed: Large Wok or Fry Pan, Knife and Cutting Board
Ingredients:
2 cups of White Rice, steamed or boiled(slightly undercooked, or day old rice is best)
1 pound or so of Pork, Your choice of cut, chopped into half inch pieces(or smaller)
4 Eggs
One third of a pound of Bacon, sliced into pieces a quarter inch wide
3 medium sized Carrots, sliced thinly
1 large Onion, chopped as well..
Half of a bag of Frozen Sweet Peas
4 tbsp of Soy Sauce
4 tbsp of Sweet Soy Sauce or Honey, or 1+ tbsp of Sugar)
3 tbsp of Rice Vinegar
1 or 2 fresh Garlic cloves, minced
1 tsp of Chili Powder Blend
1 packet of Chinese Barbeque(Char Siu, Red Pork) Seasoning
Cooking Oil as needed
Prep and Cooking:
You will need to marinate the pork in the chinese seasoning for 30 minutes or more before cooking, over night in the fridge is best. Once it has soaked in the flavors, remove from the marinade and stir fry on high heat until fully cooked. I preffer a bit of charring on My red pork. Remove from the pan and set it aside for now. Rinse out the pan before continuing.
Over medium heat, scramble the eggs. Once cooked, remove, wipe any extra residue from the pan, then stir fry the bacon to Your liking and remove from the pan. There should be plenty of bacon grease now. You can poor off the excess, or just leave it all in. Stir fry the carrots until they start to soften, then add the onion and cook until the desired texture is reached. Remove from pan. Next, put the cooked rice into the pan, adding all of the remaining seasonings. Stir until everything is evenly mixed in, add the frozen peas and stir until they have thawed. Turn off the burner mix everything You have cooked together in the pan and serve.
Notes:
Things go much faster using a skillet and a wok at the same time. Cooking the bacon, then veggies, followed by the rice in the wok and the eggs and then meat in another pan. Mixing it all into the wok at the end.
February 2, 2014 | Categories: Noodles & Rice, Recipes | Tags: american, andor, andors, asian, bacon, best, carrot, carrots, chicken, chili, chopped, classic, cook, cooking, cooks, delicious, deluxe, double, easy, eats, egg, eggs, favorite, food, fried, fry, garlic, home, how to, made, meal, meat, minced, onions, pea, peas, picture, pictures, pork, recipe, red, restaurant, rice, sauce, scramble, scrambled, seasoning, simple, soy, special, stir, stirfry, style, sweet, time, two, vinegar, yummy | Leave a comment
Gallery
July 21, 2013 | Categories: Photography | Tags: asian, burd, clam, eating, eats, food, girl, grill, grilled, hot, metal, oyster, plate, sauce, seafood, shell, spicy, spork, table | Leave a comment