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Filling Soups

(50 Posts)
TriciaF Wed 27-Sept-17 17:04:38

I saw these mentioned on another thread, and thought I'd start one here.
Mine is similar to the lentil/bean and tomato one mentioned:
Soak some dried beans overnight, or buy tins of butter beans. Red lentils don't need soaking.
Cook a sliced onion in olive oil until soft.
Add some tinned tomatoes. I use chopped red peppers because husband won't eat tomatoes.
Then add a veg. stock cube dissolved in half pint boiling water. Add the beans.
If you're using pre-soaked beans you need to cook them separately first, for an hour or so.
Simmer all until thickened then blend with a hand blender.
If you're adding spices best to add at the onion/oil stage.
With grated cheese and some nice bread, a filling meal.

ginny Fri 03-Nov-17 23:36:00

I make soup often, all sorts of flavours but the quickest and easiest is this very tasty tomato soup.
2 tins chopped tomatoes
1 tin baked beans
1 tin carrots
1/2 pt veg. Stock
1 pickled onion.

Tip all into a saucepan, blend and heat. Serve.

grannyticktock Fri 03-Nov-17 18:33:49

Sounds good, pesto is a great way to add interest and richness to plain ingredients that might otherwise be a bit bland.

Baggs Fri 03-Nov-17 12:16:42

That looks nice, auntieflo. I think I'll try it. I've made butter bean and mushroom soup a few times. that's good too.

Auntieflo Fri 03-Nov-17 12:08:37

If you like Butter Beans, this is one of my favourites.

Butter Bean and Pesto soup

1tblsp oil
1 onion, chopped
2x cans butter beans
300 gm potato, peeled and chopped
1 litre stock. ( chicken or vegetable)
1 tblsp pesto, plus extra for garnish

Heat the oil over a medium heat; add the onion and fry until soft. Add the beans, potato and stock, and bring to the boil. Then reduce the heat and simmer gently, uncovered, for 20 minutes, or until the potato is tender. Add the pesto, stir well, then liquidise the soup.
This can be made in a pressure cooker. Bring to pressure and cook for 8-10 mins.
Season to taste, then re- heat gently.
To garnish, thin a little pesto down with olive oil and drizzzle onto the soup.

Smithy Fri 03-Nov-17 09:51:40

Some great soup recipes, although I don't eat meat a lot of recipes can be adapted.
I've just taken some butternut squash and sweet potato out of the freezer ( should have done it last night). Hope it's as nice as the last time as I'm feeding my friend lunch. Good winter fuel (I know its still Autumn but feels chilly today)

Marydoll Fri 03-Nov-17 09:16:18

Yes, f77ms, in Scotland we call it " hough". I'm just finishing cooking it just now. The smell reminds me of my childhood. it was a cheap meal then, not now! smile

f77ms Fri 03-Nov-17 09:08:02

marydoll do you mean Ham hock ? I used to make it as a student , you could buy the hocks for a few pence then .

f77ms Fri 03-Nov-17 09:05:35

The easiest and most delicious soup I have made is broccoli soup . 1 pint of stock ( I have used water at a pinch) 2 whole heads of broccoli . Simmer broccoli until tender then blend . The soup is very thick as you use so much veg to liquid so doesn`t need thickening . Add salt and pepper to taste and a swirl of cream . I have done this with watercress and my guests said it was the best soup ever . Again you need a LOT of veg to stock S&P and cream stirred in on this occasion .

grannyticktock Fri 03-Nov-17 08:29:57

I recently made a soup of parsnips and leeks, with a little potato. It was a little bit bland and sweet, so I chopped some blue cheese into the bowl and poured the soup over that. Yum!

Marydoll Thu 02-Nov-17 20:30:19

My mother's ham hough soup on the go at the moment. A smoked ham hough or smoked ham ribs, carrot, onion, leek and yellow split peas which have been soaked overnight. Sometimes I put a couple of potatoes in for DH. Bung it all in and simmer away. Don't put any seasoning until the end, as ham can be really salty. It's my favourite.

nonnasusie Thu 02-Nov-17 19:28:56

Butternut squash soup is one of our favourites! Onion, squash, potato, garlic and carrot if I have any, seasoned with chilli and cumin!

Thirdinline Thu 02-Nov-17 19:13:29

I make soup for a luncheon club for the elderly twice a month and have learnt to sweat vegetables in oil for 5 - 10 minutes, then add stock and any herbs and seasonings, bring pan to the boil, then simmer for 25 minutes.

I use the beaker provided with my hand held blender, ladling the soup into it in batches until it's no more than half full and push the blender down to the bottom, switching it on in short bursts.

Have to go out now, will post my favourite recipe when I get back.

MiniMouse Sun 08-Oct-17 16:14:52

Triciaf You can buy splash/splatter guards for hand blenders - try Amazon.

Norah Sun 08-Oct-17 16:06:26

I hold the stick blender deep in the pot, the pot in the sink. No splatters.

Stansgran Sun 08-Oct-17 10:48:19

I've just made a pasta I fagioli from the Waitrose booklet which came this week. I made it exactly to the recipe. Looks nothing like the picture. Tastes fine.

TriciaF Sun 08-Oct-17 10:18:30

Some lovely ideas.
Can anyone tell me how to use an immersion blender without spattering soup everywhere?

Norah Sat 07-Oct-17 18:16:54

gillybob, I use spice salamella, the whole lengths and chop, saute my own bits (for smoked summer sausage in lentils or cheese beer soup). I never saw the cans of cheese soup either, I just make it to normal recipe.

MissAdventure Sat 07-Oct-17 16:47:43

I've bought what I need to make the baked bean soup next week. smile

GillT57 Sat 07-Oct-17 16:44:53

Just finished a bowl of soup!

Fry chopped bacon, then add chopped carrots, sliced leeks and sweat for a few minutes.

Add stock and lentils, simmer until ready, blend if you wish.

Note: I always cook my lentils in a separate pan, skim off the scum, then rinse before adding to the rest of the pan. This saves scum/foam on top of soup.

Lunch for three from 2/3 rashers of bacon, 1 large leek, mug of lentils, 2 carrots, stock.

Have dug out my soup books as the weather gets cooler.

BBbevan Sat 07-Oct-17 16:44:36

I make 'End of the Week' soup. Any vegetables left in the fridge go in with lentils and a good stock. Surprisingly every week it tastes much the same ????

tessagee Sat 07-Oct-17 15:40:54

I've been trying to find some simple new soup recipes so this thread really fits the bill. I'll be trying these over the next weeks and months as I keep soup going throughout autumn and winter.

May I just say that I always use my pressure cooker for soups and stews. It really brings out the flavour of even the most mediocre vegetables and meat.

whitewave Sat 07-Oct-17 15:01:20

Our lunch time soup was 1 cauliflower, 1 leek, stick celery and potato. Simmered in a vegetable stock about 2pints with seasoning and nutmeg. Whizzed smooth then added about 5ozs grated cheddar -the recipe said bung on some bacon snippets but we had bacon for breakfast so didn’t bother.

Not bad at all

Garry Rhodes.

spottysocks Sat 07-Oct-17 14:45:20

Oh and I forgot to say that I fried the onions in a little oil first before adding the other veggies and added a handful of peas too. smile

spottysocks Sat 07-Oct-17 14:40:09

I made some vegetable soup for lunch today, on a previous attempt it was just ok but I thought I would give it another go and it was nice. I just chopped an onion, a couple of carrots and a potatoe, added a small tin of chopped tomatos and a handful of red lentils in a saucepan with some chicken oxo stock made up to about a pint or so of water, let it cook away until it was soft then blitzed with a blender to get it nice and smooth. This made enough for two plus some for work on Monday. A result!

paddyann Fri 29-Sept-17 14:38:54

todays soup is Scotch Broth made with lamb shank and the meat chopped up and added to it.Mother in law called last night and asked if I had any in the freezer and would I drop it off,so a selection from this week is on its way to her.At least I know she has a decent hot lunch that way