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La Belle Cuisine - More Soup Recipes
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create. And to create well...
is an act of integrity, and faith."
The Major's
Two-in-the-Morning Soup
“It breathes reassurance, it offers consolation; after a weary day,
it promotes sociability… There is nothing like a bowl of hot soup…”
~ Louis DeGouy, 'The Soup Book'
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Two-in-the-Morning
Soup
Okay. The reason doesn't matter. It
is two in the morning, and you can't sleep. Not the first time in your life; won't be the last. This time, though,
you have it wired. You just happen to have a pot of soup in the refrigerator....
5-6
chicken thighs, skinned and excess fat trimmed
1 package smoked beef sausage, Andouille sausage,
or whatever,
cut 3/16"
thick
1/2 pound baby carrots, cut bite size
2 tablespoons oil (walnut oil is nice,
but olive oil works too)
Dash chili oil
2 sprigs rosemary
1 tablespoon sea salt
1 tablespoon coarse ground black pepper
1/2 teaspoon black peppercorns
1 cup dry white wine
1 Habanero (Scotch Bonnet) pepper,
seeded and sliced very fine
Splash vermouth
Rice, noodles, potatoes or
any other starch of your choice
First,
understand that we do not make this at two in the morning.
Insomnia
or a troubled mind or whatever, two in the morning is not time
to attempt
to function. Make this
up at a more reasonable hour, and just keep some
in the fridge for
contingencies. Worst case, you grab
a little for lunch until
it is gone, and then you can make some more. And, if you do the second
(and third and fourth) batches from
memory, it will be just enough different in each instance to remain
interesting....
Anyway. Drag out your soup pot.
I use an eight quart Calphalon that I brought back on the plane with me
from a trip to El Paso. Heat the
pan.
Add the oil(s). Brown up the chicken. There
are Communists out there
who will tell you that browning meat somehow generates
carcinogens.
Disregard these bozos.
What browning meat does is to liberate all kinds
of delicious
caramelization products. Same
applies to veggies.
So, brown up
your chicken. In batches.
Then, brown the sausage rounds.
In
batches. Then, brown the carrots.
Add
a couple cups of water [or
stock - you do have some the the fridge,
do you
not?] to the pan. Scrape
all the good stuff off the bottom. Return
all the chicken, sausage and carrots to the pan. Add the wine, salt, pepper
and the Habañero pepper. Use additional
liquid, as required, to cover
everything nicely.
Simmer for half an hour or so. Fish
out the chicken.
Put it in a bowl
and put the bowl in the freezer for about ten minutes. At
this point, you can pull all the meat off the bones without incurring
a trip
to the burn clinic. [Brilliant!] Toss the
chicken meat back into the pot
and
the bones into the garbage. They
have served their purpose in the great scheme of things by now.
Simmer
for a few more minutes, then turn off the heat and allow to cool
for an hour or
so. Transfer to the refrigerator.
Okay. Now it is two in the morning. Boil
up some wide egg noodles.
Or
resurrect some cooked rice. Ladle
out a reasonable bowl of the soup.
Add a splash of vermouth. Nuke this in the microwave (this is the true
purpose of a microwave,
after all) for a couple of minutes. Add
in the
noodles (or rice).
Eat. Then go back to bed.
Sweet dreams.
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