Sopa do dia: 4X Tomato Soup (Vegan)

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AI-generated image of what I made. Hilarious, and a little creepy.

2024 seems to have been the big year so far for AI, including my WordPress account, which now allows me to generate hilarious (and a little creepy) photos to go along with my posts. Suffice it to say that the picture above is NOT the tomato soup I made (or anyone made, for that matter). But I will give you a shot of the real thing later in the post.

The inspiration for this soup came from an article in the Washington Post that my bride sent me, and while I originally planned to be fairly faithful to it, I wanted to make a larger batch than the author intended, and I wanted to play with the concept (fennel seeds just weren’t what my palate was craving in terms of spice). But chef Becky Krystal‘s basic idea remained in place: Build the soup from tomato paste, sun-dried tomatoes, and canned tomatoes, each of which would bring its own element of zing to the finished soup.

A mug of this would make an ideal partner for a grilled cheese sandwich, but that’s another post for another day.

4X Tomato Soup
Makes about 12 cups (about 3 liters)

INGREDIENTS
100 g sun-dried tomatoes, chopped and covered in olive oil overnight; OR
2 jars (200 ml / 7 oz) oil-packed sun-dried tomatoes (chopped, but reserve the oil!)
2 medium onions (16 oz / 450 g), diced (I used both yellow and red)
8 garlic cloves, thinly sliced
5 tbsp / 70 g tomato paste
3 tsp / 3 g dried oregano
2 tsp / 12 g sea salt, plus a little extra for taste, if needed
1.5 liter / 6⅓ cups low-sodium or no-salt-added vegetable broth
1 liter / 4¼ cups tomato juice (low sodium if available)
2 large (780 g / 28 oz) can whole peeled (or diced) tomatoes with their juices, preferably low- or no-salt
1 small (390 g / 14 oz) can whole peeled (or diced) tomatoes with their juices, preferably low- or no-salt
Freshly ground black pepper
1 tbsp / 5 g crushed red pepper flakes (optional)
Fresh basil leaves or fresh thyme leaves for garnish (optional)

DIRECTIONS

Separate the olive oil from the sun-dried tomatoes, add it to a soup pot on medium heat, and let it warm. Dice onions and add them to the oil, stirring to coat, and let them turn golden. Add sliced garlic, chopped sun-dried tomatoes, oregano, red pepper flakes (if you’re using them), and tomato paste, stirring continuously; allow them to cook for about a minute, until the tomato paste browns somewhat. Add the broth, tomato juice, and canned tomatoes (which you can break up a bit with your spoon). Be sure to scrape the bottom of the pot to dislodge any browned bits.

Warm over medium heat until just boiling, then back the heat off and allow to simmer for 30 minutes.

Process soup with immersion blender or in batches in a blender/food processor. [If you’re using either of the latter, fill the container no more than half full, and drape a towel over the input tube or lid to allow the steam to vent, or you will wind up with an unwelcome geyser of hot soup.] Adjust salt and pepper as necessary and simmer for five more minutes.

Ladle soup into bowls or mugs and garnish with basil or thyme leaves. I left mine a little rustic; for those of you who want a smoother soup, you could give it a pass through a food mill or sieve. If you desire something creamier, a dollop of crème fraîche or sour cream would be a tasty addition (substitute cashew cream or aquafaba if keeping it vegan or dairy-free is a priority). Should you want to add a little kick, some Tabasco® or piri-piri sauce will accomplish that nicely (especially if you left out the red pepper flakes in consideration of your Scoville scale-challenged partners, guests, or friends).

The pic above is the real deal, as served for dinnner earlier tonight. As you can see, it’s not completely puréed and strained, as the opening photo would suggest, though it could easily be done. When I make this again — and I will — I may substitute either basil or dill for the oregano. Kinda like moving it from B♭ to C; same melody, different key.

You can call me Al. Albóndigas.

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Believe it or not, the red colour comes mostly from the chorizo, not the tomatoes.

Believe it or not, the red colour comes mostly from the chorizo, not the tomatoes.

One inevitable responsibility after Thanksgiving dinner is the disposal of the turkey carcass. Picked clean for sandwiches and goodness knows what all else — tamales? sliders? pot pie? — there’s still a significant heap of bones and attached bits that deserve a better resting place than the rubbish bin.

Around our house, we generally made turkey and vegetable soup, but it just seemed too… turkey-ish. By the time we’d gotten down to the carcass, believe me, most of the members of our household were all done with turkey. This year, I decided to make some simple turkey stock (something on the order of four liters, as it turned out, because I wasn’t patient enough to let it condense into what Julia Child called a “semi-demi-glace”). But not for turkey soup. No. I figured it would make an excellent base for one of my favourite Mexican dishes, sopa de albóndigas (meatball soup).

While this soup is decidedly Mexican, its roots go back to the times that Arabs ruled Spain. The word “albóndigas” is derived from the Arabic word for hazelnut, “al-bunduq,” because the meatballs of the era were about the size and shape of said nuts. Their preparation was described in one of the great cookbooks of its day (its day being the 13th century), Kitab al- tabikh fi Maghrib wa al-Andalus (An Anonymous Andalusian Cookbook). Not too surprisingly, the meatballs emigrated to the New World with the conquistadores (along with smallpox and syphilis, albeit with a happier outcome for the locals). The use of mint in this recipe is almost certainly a descendant from a Middle Eastern predecessor, given the region’s historic proclivity for employing the herb as a seasoning for meats.

Far as I’ve been able to discover, there are two general schools of thought on sopa de albóndigas. One holds that it’s primarily a tomato-based soup, and the broth ought to be more or less jam-packed with tomato-y goodness and coloured fire engine red (PMS 199); the other is that tomatoes play a role, but not the lead. I opted for the latter. After all, I’d gone to some trouble to make the turkey stock, and I didn’t want it completely buried in the mix. The soup ultimately turned out a rich red colour, but that was thanks to the chorizo, not the tomatoes (as you can see in the picture below, when it was just the veggies and stock).

ALBÓNDIGAS SOUP

Carrots, planed on the mini-mandoline. I then cut the "coins" in half.

Carrots, planed on the mini-mandoline. I then cut the “coins” in half.


Ingredients
Broth
12 cups/3 liters turkey stock (or chicken, or vegetable, or beef)
2 carrots, sliced
1 large onion, chopped
4 stalks celery, diced
1 (14 ounce/411 g) can diced tomatoes (these were fire roasted)
1 (7 ounce/198 g) can diced green chiles, drained
1 cup/150 g cooked rice
2 teaspoons/2 g dried oregano
2 teaspoons/2 g ground cumin
1 clove garlic, minced
1 to 3 tablespoons/15-45 ml sauce from a can of Chipotle chiles in adobo sauce, to taste
1 seeded Chipotle chile in adobo sauce, optional
Sea salt and pepper to taste (smoked salt works well in this)

Here’s a trick for the rice; just cook 1 cup/180 g of dried rice (I used Brown Jasmine), put 2/3 of it in the soup and reserve 1/3 for the meatballs.

[A NOTE ABOUT CHILES: If you’re seeding Chipotle chiles in adobo sauce, wear gloves. Even the sauce is pretty hot, and if you touch your face… well, you won’t do it a second time. For the uninitiated, add the adobo sauce a tablespoon at a time, stir the broth, taste, and decide if you want to add more. If you dump it all in at once, good on you, you brave soul, but remember that this is a bell that can’t be unrung. Also, if you don’t have Chipotles in adobo sauce handy, you can get Chipotle pepper powder; use 1-3 teaspoons/1-3 g, tasting as you go.]

Broth and veggies. Mmmm.

Broth and veggies. Mmmm.

Making the broth is super easy; basically, you just dump it all into a big pot, bring it to a boil, and then back it off to a simmer. I let mine simmer for a couple of hours, because I started making it one evening after dinner. [In fact, I put the broth in the refrigerator overnight and finished the soup the following day.] If, however, you are doing a same-day soup, allow it to simmer for about an hour, so you can soften up the celery and onions and carrots, and give the flavours a chance to blend.

Meatballs (makes about 50 small meatballs)
1 lb/.5 kg lean ground beef
1 lb/.5 kg chorizo sausage, casing removed (not the fully cooked kind)
2 eggs, beaten
1/2 cup/70 g cooked rice
2 garlic cloves, minced
5-10 mint leaves, chopped
1/2 cup/25 g cilantro leaf, chopped
1/2 teaspoon/3 g salt
1/4 teaspoon/.5 g freshly ground black pepper

Full disclosure: I had about 100 g of turkey bits that I ran through a food processor and added to the meatballs. It’s not part of the “official” recipe, but it did taste good.

Mint and garlic get all muddled up.

Mint and garlic get all muddled up.

Some people say to make the meatballs first, but there’s really no need; getting the broth together and letting it simmer will afford you more than enough time to make them. The only trick to assembling the meatballs is that you should mash the garlic and the chopped mint into a sort of paste; otherwise, it’s just a matter of mixing it all up and rolling little meatballs (albóndigas) to about 1″/2.5 cm each. Heat up the broth to a low boil and lower the albóndigas — gently — into the broth. Let the meatballs cook at that temp for 5 minutes, then back the heat off, and simmer a further 20 minutes. Remember, at this point, your chief aim is to cook the meatballs through. That’s why smaller is better.

Tiny little soldiers of meat, preparing to parachute into -- quite literally -- the soup.

Tiny little soldiers of meat, preparing to parachute into — quite literally — the soup.

You can serve it straight, or if you want to get extra fancy, you can make corn tortilla ribbons for garnish. Just quarter small corn tortillas, stack the quarters, then slice the edges into ribbons. Heat 2 tablespoons of oil in a frying pan, dump the ribbons inthe pan and stir until slightly browned. Remove them to a paper towel to drain and crisp up. Sprinkle over soup.

With the fried corn tortilla strips; these were spinach corn tortillas, for colour primarily.

With the fried corn tortilla strips; these were spinach corn tortillas, for colour primarily.