Sydney Harbour Bridge, 01/06/11
Category: Photos
Photo type posts were originally posted to Tumblr as this type so that the image would be prominent on the platform. These posts may or may not be primarily about that photo.
Cipher Prime’s new iPad game, Pulse, will be out soon. If Auditorium is anything to go by, I’m sure I’ll have more success with it than I did with Sword & Sworcery.
Pea & Potato Soup
Last week I made this soup on a rainy, grey Monday evening. It tasted even better reheated the next day at work with some dry toast for lunch.
This soup will keep well refrigerated for about a week – remember to let it cool completely before you refrigerate it, or the condensation in your container will water it down. I haven’t tried freezing it, but I might do that next time – in cupfuls suitable for work lunches.
Ingredients:
- 2 teaspoons olive oil
- 1 brown onion, diced
- 2 cloves of garlic… squashed (I couldn’t crush them, but that would be preferable!)
- 2 cups of peeled, diced potato (about 4 medium sized potatoes)
- 2 and a half cups of frozen peas (minted peas would be okay, but well, minty…)
- 2 cups boiling water
- 2 cups stock (I only had chicken stock, but vegetable would be ideal)
- Salt and pepper
- Sour cream (for serving)
Method:
Heat the oil in a large saucepan, add the onions and garlic and cook them until the onion is clear. Browned onion would be fine, but I’d advise against going too far in that direction because I burned mine a bit, and it made the soup kinda grey…
Add the potatoes, peas, water, and stock. Bring the mixture to the boil, then reduce to a medium heat, cover the pot and simmer for about ten minutes or until the potato is tender.
At this stage, I took the pot off the stove and roughly blended the soup with a hand-held “whizz stick”/bamix machine with blades. The idea is to blend it to the consistency you expect of soup – I left mine a little chunky (yum!).
If you don’t have a whizz stick, you can let the soup cool a bit and then put it through a blender in batches, then return it to the pot and reheat it on the stove.
Add salt to taste – about a teaspoon in my case. Better too little than too much!
I served mine with toast, salt and white pepper, and a teaspoon of sour cream.