Originally posted by amateur51
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Soup Kitchen
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I just made a pan of runner bean soup, as a way of using up the tail-end of the crop, which had got too tough and stringy to use as a vegetable. As I am rather prone to do, I put it in the fridge and forgot about it for several days, but on spotting this thread I have just fished it out, warmed it up and served myself a bowl. Very tasty. The recipe I made up as I went along, but it was something like this.
Chop the beans into one inch lengths, put in a saucepan and cover with water to about an inch depth. Simmer for an hour or so, cool and force through a fine metal sieve. Add more hot water to the remains and repeat. Through away the stringy residue. Add salt, pepper and other herbs to taste. Cool again, then add some cornflower to thicken, and heat until the cornflower thickens. I think I then gave it a quick blast with my Kenwood electric blender, to smooth out any lumps. Voila, runner bean soup.
Not being vegetarian, I thought I enormously improved it by adding some finely chopped bacon rashers and heating up again for half an hour or so to cook the bacon. It would also be even better with a meat stock cube or two, and I may have used some, but I cant remember.
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Anna
Runner beans are my absolute favourite summer veg but - try as hard as I can - I just cannot imagine what a soup made from them tastes like! But, I do like the sound of BBM's butternut squash with turmeric but wonder if the squash is roasted first? Teamsaint's celery soup surprised me, I had somehow imagined more a creamy soup, but I'll give it a go (always having celery in the house!) I've never had beetroot soup, only having recently been converted to the joys of this root veg.
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Anna, I wish I could tell you, but since I knocked myself unconscious by falling off a steep bank a few years ago, my sense of taste has all but disappeared. Also, my soup tasted of bacon, because I added some to the mix. But I think its fair to say that there was an underlying flavour of runner bean, just like the taste of the vegetable when its on your dinner plate.
I love them as a veg. when they are tenderer, but these were the end of the crop and as tough as boots, soup was the only thing I could think of doing with them.
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Anna
Originally posted by umslopogaas View PostAnna, I wish I could tell you, but since I knocked myself unconscious by falling off a steep bank a few years ago, my sense of taste has all but disappeared.
I grew runners this year, wonderful crop, you can make chutney with them (although I haven't) which sounds as if it may be nice and crunchy.
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Thanks Anna, it could be a lot worse. I've recovered well and my appetite is not affected, I still enjoy food, its just that I cant taste much. Since I'm well past sixty its not surprising my sense of taste is fading, the same thing happened to my mum: she lived past eighty, but complained towards the end that she couldnt taste things ... shame, she was a very good cook. But dont waste expensive wine on me, the cheap stuff works just as well and I cant taste the difference.
I have long belonged to The Wine Society, and got a letter from them recently asking why I didnt buy much wine from them any longer. I wrote back and explained that since I could no longer tell good wine from supermarket half price plonk, I was sadly (for them) saving money by going for the latter. But should you be interested, I'd be happy to propose you for membership. If you are interested in food, they take the burden of selecting a nice accompanying bottle off your shoulders. I've never met anyone who argued with the choice of a Wine Society bottle.
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Originally posted by umslopogaas View PostI love them as a veg. when they are tenderer, but these were the end of the crop and as tough as boots, soup was the only thing I could think of doing with them.
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Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View Postturmeric and pepper, ah and onions.
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Originally posted by Caliban View PostIs 'ah' some sort of oriental vegetable, Bbm?
Parsnip and ginger, with a swirl of cream and some toasted flaked almonds to finish, as a change from croutons.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by Anna View PostRunner beans are my absolute favourite summer veg but - try as hard as I can - I just cannot imagine what a soup made from them tastes like! But, I do like the sound of BBM's butternut squash with turmeric but wonder if the squash is roasted first? Teamsaint's celery soup surprised me, I had somehow imagined more a creamy soup, but I'll give it a go (always having celery in the house!) I've never had beetroot soup, only having recently been converted to the joys of this root veg.
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