Soup Is On!
I often get asked about my recipes since I love to cook in bulk, from scratch, with very little processed ingredients. The problem with sharing my recipe is often there isn’t a hard core recipe and I just grab stuff and throw it in a pot. So today I will show you what I do to make my fabulous bean soup. Keep in mind I am working with a 7-8 quart crock or pot when I am doing my soups. It may or may not work for you, but hopefully you will find something you can use in the chaos.
First thing I do is melt one stick of butter while chopping onions. I usually dice four good size onions. More if they are small. Throw them in the butter, then salt and pepper them and let them start cooking.
I then add 6 cloves of garlic minced. Then I grab about 3 celery hearts and use only what looks good. If those outer ones are marred up and bruised, they go to the worm bin. I think I ended up with around 14 stalks of varying sizes. I dice my celery for soups. I do that because I like to get several tastes in each spoonful as well as making it more graceful to eat. This is how I dice my celery.
I cut it the length either two or three times depending on the width and then come back and cross cut it. As I finish it goes in the pot with the onions and garlic. I usually add more salt and pepper when I am done dicing the celery.
By this time the onions have cooked down significantly and it should look something like this.
At this point I throw some water, any leftover red wine in the house and some coffee into the crock. How much wine and coffee? Well, we all know how much I like my wine and coffee so there probably isn’t high volumes of leftovers hanging out here. I am looking to add flavor not overwhelm. I also add three bay leaves, pint of tomatoes (organic garden stash), splash of worcestershire sauce, and a splash of soy sauce. Do NOT turn the crock on yet. Extreme heat or cold will crack your crock insert. Turning it on not full will crack your crock. Extreme fluctuations in temp will crack your crock. Don’t ask me how I know all this. Really. Don’t ask.
Next while the onions, garlic and celery are cooking down more I dice up a couple of handfuls of baby carrots and throw them in the crock. Then I dice two large Costco sized potatoes and throw them in the crock. Then I grab dried beans. This is the selection I am using today.
Any type of beans would probably work, but I love a good heirloom bean. I order mine from Rancho Gordo. Today we are using Yellow Indian Woman, Borlotti, Rebosero, Vaquero, Yellow Eye, and Alubia Criollo. I only use 1/2 cup of each measured while they are completely dry. I throw them all in a strainer, rinse them really well and make sure there are no surprises in there.
Then I go completely off the beaten path and throw them in the crock. That’s right. I do not soak my beans. I throw them in the crock or pot as is.
By this time the onions, celery and garlic should be cooked well and ready to throw in the crock. Make sure you get all that butter in the crock too!! That is your only fat content to this entire meal. I then usually add a little more salt and pepper, stir it well, add water to fill it on up, stick the lid on and cook it for the rest of the day.
You want at least 4-6 hours on high or 8 hours low cooking time. Check it after the first hour to make sure you still have enough liquid after the beans start absorbing it. This freezes really well. You get around 7-8 quarts of soup. I usually freeze some in family size and individual size containers so that we have easy lunches and dinner. Prep time to get it in the crock is usually about an hour for me.
Thanks for stopping by! Hope you enjoyed the kitchen time!
Jan








January 11th, 2010 at 2:08 pm
Looks yummy Jan. Thanks for sharing it.
January 11th, 2010 at 2:12 pm
January 11th, 2010 at 2:26 pm
since i am the exact opposite of a “natural” type cooker, i’m wondering what type of ‘surprises” you might find in a bag of dried beans. just in case i decide to color outside my standard lines with your soup recipe……….no committment here…….just wondering.
January 11th, 2010 at 2:46 pm
LOL Well on rare occasions you may find little rocks or I have found a piece of plastic or two in my life time. Nothing horrid, but it isn’t unusual. Just about every bag and cookbook I have ever seen says rinse and inspect your beans. I keep hoping they will start putting prizes in there like the old cracker jack boxes…..
January 13th, 2010 at 10:04 am
Your soup looks wonderful…..I’m going to try it this weekend!!!
January 13th, 2010 at 10:17 am
Thanks Karen!! I hope yours comes out great!! I’ve been eating this for lunch and supper all week.