CATEGORY |
CUISINE |
TAG |
YIELD |
|
French |
Family, Guest, Soups, Winter |
6 |
Servings |
INGREDIENTS
1 |
lb |
Split peas |
1/2 |
lb |
Bacon |
1 |
|
Onion, chopped |
2 |
|
Stalks celery |
3 |
T |
Parsley, chopped |
1 |
|
Loaf sourdough French bread |
1/4 |
c |
Butter, or more if needed |
1 |
|
Garlic clove, minced opt. |
INSTRUCTIONS
This is NOT low-fat, low-calorie, or low anything for that matter, but
absolutely delicious and an all-time family favorite! Rinse peas in
cold water and bring to a boil in 3 quarts of water. Cut bacon small
and brown with onion. Add with drippings to peas. Cook until peas are
soft and just starting to disintegrate, about one hour, stirring
occasionally to prevent the solids from settling out and sticking to
the bottom of the pot. Chop celery small and add with parsley to the
soup and cook until the celery is soft, about 15 minutes more. Thin
with water if necessary to the proper consistency; it should be like
light cream with little bits of pea still visible. If too thick, it is
more like 'pea porridge' and not as appetizing. Meanwhile, make the
croutons. Cut the bread (leave crust on) into 3/4" cubes. Melt the
butter in a frying pan (Grandma Sofie used a heavy cast iron one), and
when the foam is just through dying down but before the butter begins
to brown, add the bread cubes in batches sized according to the size
of your pan: The croutons should never be more than one layer deep.
Sometimes Grandma Sofie sauteed a little bit of garlic in the butter
before adding the bread and sometimes not -- the croutons are good
both ways. I think that living all of her life in California sometimes
overrode her German upbringing and that's how the garlic snuck in!
Fry the bread cubes over MEDIUM heat until dark golden, stirring and
tossing frequently to brown on all sides. Take your time about this,
as if you get the butter too hot it will burn and taste bitter. If the
croutons are done correctly, they will be crisp and fairly dry and
light enough to float on top of the soup. Ladle the hot soup into
bowls and pass the croutons in a basket for each person to add at the
table. Note that you could get by with a half a loaf of French bread
for the croutons, but only if you're alone while you're making the
soup. Otherwise, the croutons have a tendency to 'dissappear' when
you're not looking! From: My husbands maternal grandmother Sofie
Schmidt Murray, 1892-1980. She was one of those cooks who never used
recipes; I wrote this down one time while watching her make it. --
Linda Hurlbert Shogren (hurlbert@concentric.net) Recipe by: Sofie
Schmidt Murray Posted to MC-Recipe Digest V1 #737 by hurlbert
<hurlbert@concentric.net> on Aug 12, 1997
A Message from our Provider:
“Man’s way leads to a hopeless end — God’s way leads to an endless hope.”