Naomi Bulger: messages in bottles

 
 
_(Except it's not actually made with pumpkin, but butternut squash to give it a lovely, sweet flavour. Meh. Potato potahto.)
It's autumn in Australia and, although Melbourne seems to be clinging to the mother of all Indian summers, the leaves are turning gold and brown and the nights are most definitely cooler. This puts me in the mood for soup.
_I have been searching and experimenting for ages to get just the right kind of pumpkin soup for my winter mood: hearty but not too thick; creamy but not too rich; scented with autumn spices but still classic. Comforting. Homelike. I adapted this recipe from one on Good Eatin' With Lynne and I do believe I've found my pumpkin/butternut squash soup holy grail at last.

Let me know if you end up making this. We ate it with thick slices of Vienna loaf, warmed in the oven and then buttered. It was delicious.
Ingredients:

1 butternut squash
1 tbsp olive oil
1 large onion, finely chopped
1 fat garlic clove, coarsely chopped
1 tsp minced fresh ginger
1/2 tbsp brown sugar
1/2 tsp nutmeg
1/2 tsp cinnamon
2-3 cups chicken stock
1/2 cup coconut milk
Freshly ground sea salt (to taste)

To garnish:

A little extra coconut milk
Freshly ground black pepper
Fresh herbs (eg sage leaves, parsley leaves, chopped chives)

Directions:

1. Preheat the oven to 180 C.

2. Halve the squash and scoop out the seeds. Place the halves in a baking tray and brush them with a little olive oil, then roast until the squash is very tender. This will probably take up to an hour, although I sped the process up to half an hour by cutting up the squash into smaller pieces.

3. While the squash is roasting, prepare your other ingredients: chop the onion and garlic, mince the ginger, and place the spices and brown sugar together into a small bowl.

4. When the squash is cooked, remove it from the oven. At the same time, heat the oil in a big pot over a medium-to-low flame, then stir in the onion, garlic, ginger, nutmeg, cinnamon and sugar. Cover and let it cook for about 10 minutes.

5. While the onion and spices are cooking, remove the peel from the squash and toss it out, then cut the squash into smallish chunks.

6. Add the squash and chicken stock to the pot then return the lid and bring it all to the boil. Reduce the heat, cover, and simmer for 10 minutes.

7. If you plan to serve warm bread, pop it in a low oven at the end of the simmer period.

8. Take your soup off the heat and puree it in a blender. Depending on your blender, you may need to let the soup cool off just a little first, to avoid cracking the plastic. (Better still, use an immersion blender. Ahem. I don't have one, Santa.)

9. Return the soup to the pan on the lowest heat. Stir in the coconut milk. Do a little taste-test at this stage. If you think it's needed, add in a little sea-salt, but not too much. 

10. When the soup is hot enough to serve, pour it into serving bowls. Swirl a teaspoon of coconut milk in the centre to decorate each serve, grind pepper over it, then garnish with herbs.

11. Quickly take the bread out of the oven and butter it so the butter melts right in. You're done!

_And here's what you might have missed last week:


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Comments

04/23/2012 02:37

Yuuuuum! I can't eat a couple of the ingredients but am going to have a crack at this. I'll let you know! This recipe looks amazing...

Reply
Naomi Bulger
04/23/2012 07:15

Oh do let me know how you go - and the ingredients you swap!

Reply
04/23/2012 10:22

I am printing this out. It looks heavenly!

Reply
Naomi Bulger
04/23/2012 18:09

Let me know your verdict Melissa. I hope you enjoy it.

Reply
04/23/2012 19:04

Oooh looks lovely! I haven't thought to add ginger... that's good. I have a tried and true pumpkin soup standard that we make nearly every week in winter... moroccan spices and a dash of coconut milk. Sounds very similar to yours. I'll invite you over for mine if you invite me over for yours. :)

Reply
Naomi Bulger
04/23/2012 20:54

It's a deal!

Reply
04/23/2012 20:44

I love winter and soup, especially pumpkin! Ooh with crusty bread. I'm literally salivating...

Reply
Naomi Bulger
04/23/2012 20:55

Come to Melbourne for a visit Katherine. I think I'll be making this again next week, it was so good.

Reply
sara
04/27/2012 09:49

Awesome recipe I really enjoyed this.
Here's another recipe you might like.
http://www.wascene.com/food-drink/healthy-butternut-pumpkin-soup/
Thanks for sharing.
Sara

Reply

I think you need to try my apple pear butternut squash soup. It's so freakin delicious and perfectly in season there right now. Honestly, I'm not sure how I'm going to survive the next few months without it...

Here's the recipe: http://www.pizzellesbakery.com/blog/2010/11/recipe-butternut-squash-soup-with-pear-and-apple/

Reply



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    NAOMI BULGER
    :: author & journalist ::

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    _I have so much to share! This blog is my well-worn scrapbook, bulging with ticket stubs from far-off places, photographs of the lovely and the absurd, letters from strangers, gifts in the mail, fables and dreams, cupcake-addictions, sweet tunes, and treasures uncovered.

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