LENTIL-KALE ETC. SOUP by SOUTHFACIN’ COOK, PATSY BRUMFIELD

LENTIL-KALE ETC. SOUP

My neighborhood internet message board is full of requests for homemade soups, as we’ve suffered from bone-chilling temperatures lately. Here’s something new to try with plenty of vegetables and a base of chicken broth. If you’re all-veggie, use vegetable broth, although the outcome may be slightly different. Use your own tastebuds to decide if you want a little more of this-or-that spice.

EQUIPMENT: 10-quart stock pot with lid, microplane, long-handled wooden spoon, peeler, chopping board, chef’s knife, collander, juicer, measuring equipment

Let’s get started.

LENTIL-KALE ETC. SOUP

INGREDIENTS

16-ounce package dried lentils

6 ounces organic kale, chopped roughly

2 cups dried pasta, Rigatoni

1 ½ cups baby carrots, halved

1 medium yellow onion, chopped roughly

1 ½ cups raw sweet potato, 1-inch dice

3 ½ 32-ounce containers chicken broth

1 lemon

l large red bell pepper

2 Tablespoons garlic powder

1 ½ teaspoons ground thyme

2 bay leaves

1 teaspoon grated nutmeg

2 Tablespoons grated ginger

1 Tablespoon sugar

2 Tablespoons dried oregano

1/3 cup apple cider vinegar

olive oil

salt and pepper

In collander, rinse lentils. Set aside.

Prep vegetables.

In stock pot on medium, heat 1 Tablespoon olive oil until shimmering. Add onions, lightly salt and sweat about 5 minutes until onions are translucent. Add bay leaves, oregano, nutmeg, thyme and garlic powder. Stir and heat about 2-3 minutes. Pour in chicken broth, lemon juice, 1 Tablespoon salt and lentils. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat and simmer covered 5 minutes.

Add kale, sweet potatoes, carrots and bell peppers, plus sugar and grated ginger. You may want more salt and pepper, so taste and add 1 teaspoon at a time. Bring to a boil and add pasta, turning heat to medium-high to maintain the boil without the soup juice popping all over your stovetop. Check on pasta’s tenderness at 8 minutes. If it’s al dente, turn off the heat, add the vinegar and cover while you get ready to serve. The pasta will be more tender by then, not overcooked.

Share

About Patsy Brumfield

Patsy R. Brumfield is a Mississippi native, who grew up in the hometown newspaper business. After decades of plowing that field and others, she's moved herself to the capital, Jackson, where she's working on a pro-education project and plans to retire to courtroom reporting and sexy political interviews, if you can call that retirement. Her grandmother, the beautiful and willful Rosalie Dial, gave Patsy her first cooking lessons. In recent years, the TV cuisinaries have supplied new information about cooking and a new confidence to help other folks know what makes great food great. We hope you'll enjoy Patsy's foray into cooking, especially Southern cooking. While she's made great strides into the "healthier" aspects of making old recipes new, sometimes there's no avoiding the butter and cream. Just eat smaller portions and ask your favorite doctor about cholesterol meds. We all take 'em, at one time or another. Bon appetite!
This entry was posted in Food Scene, Southfacin' Cook and tagged , , . Bookmark the permalink.