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Jack’s Potato Soup

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Dairy 1 Servings

INGREDIENTS

4 md Idaho potatoes
1 tb Whole wheat flour
5 c Skim milk
1 c Water
1 md Onion
4 Cloves garlic, chopped
3 Shallots
2 Roma tomatoes
1 pn Rosemary
1 pn Saffron
1 c Red vermouth (ideally red vermouth, though white will do if absolutely necessary; do not substitute red wine for the vermouth, however.)
1/4 c White vermouth
2 tb Olive oil (use extra virgin, it smells so much better)

INSTRUCTIONS

Peel potatoes and dice into cubes the size you want in your soup. Peel and
dice onion and shallots; peel and chop garlic.
In a large stockpot, pour the olive oil and heat over medium to low heat
(around 4 on an electric range, unless you have copper pots and pans, in
which case make it more like 3 or even between 2 and 3). When you smell the
aroma that indicates the olive oil has heated, toss in the garlic, onions,
shallots, and rosemary. Stir a little bit, enough to cook reasonably
evenly, but no need to go nuts. Keep an eye on things untill the onion
turns translucent, but don't wait for things to turn brown.
Pour in the skim milk, the water, and the diced potatoes. Cover; increase
heat on range in order to bring to a boil. Once it's boiling, reduce heat
to low, so that the soup can simmer.
Heat the cup of red vermouth for 10 seconds in the microwave--enough to
warm it a little, but not really beyond that. Throw the pinch of saffron
into the cup of heated red vermouth. This will soften the strands of
saffron. Let stand for 10 minutes or so while the soup simmers. Pour the
saffron/vermouth mixture into the soup, making sure you get every last
precious saffron strand in. (Be compulsive about this--the stuff is
pricey.) Let the soup simmer for another 40 minutes to an hour.
While the soup is simmering, wash the roma tomatoes, cut them in half, and
scrape out the seeds with your fingers. Take a cheese grater and place it
over a bowl. Run the tomato halves over the largest holes in the grater,
with the sliced side facing the holes. This will take the pulp off the
tomato skin, but the skin won't go through the holes, so your fingers will
be safe, and you'll be left with a skin (which you may eat) and a bowl of
just tomato pulp (which is what you'll use in the rest of this recipe).
Once the tomato pulp has been extracted, heat a teflon skillet over low
heat, dry, or a small skillet with just enough olive oil or cooking spray
on it to keep the dry heat from damaging your pan. Pour in the tomato pulp
and the quarter cup white vermouth. Let the pulp cook down a little bit, so
that it's no longer a runny liquid, but don't let the pulp burn. What
you'll have is a nice tomato puree, with a little vermouth taste giving it
a slight kick. Remove from heat.
When the soup is ready, pour it into a bowl, of course. Then take a
teaspoon, scoop up some of the tomato puree, and put a dallop in the center
of the soup. It will float, and the red puree against the backdrop of the
off-white soup (with some reddish hues from the red vermouth, but mostly
still white) makes a wonderful presentation. Serve immediately. If you want
to really impress people, put a salad plate under the bowl in which you
intend to serve the soup. Chop some fresh chives, and sprinkle the pieces
around the plate before you set the bowl on it (aiming for the edges, since
the bowl will of course cover the center).
Variation,top with diced fresh avocado. Differs from traditional potato
soup in that it aims for a thinner, lighter taste, both through the skim
milk, lack of butter, and red vermouth.-- Jack Stecher's recipe,
stecher@walleye.econ.umn.edu
Posted to MC-Recipe Digest V1 #365
From: Brenda Adams <adamsfmle@sprintmail.com>
Date: Sat, 04 Jan 1997 08:49:26 -0800

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