Is this the best pumpkin soup recipe ever?

There’s no doubt Autumn is here – it’s been raining and leaves are turning yellow and orange. Today as I listened to the wind chimes jangling I started to think of comfort food, and since I have one of the seasons first home grown pumpkins waiting to be used this recipe was a natural choice. I don’t like to brag but my pumpkin soup recipe, refined through the years, is getting pretty good. It helped win my fiancées heart when I cooked it on our first date and if you choose to use it as a love potion too I can nearly guarantee your success.

Use the ripest pumpkin you can find – the flesh should be a deep yellow to orange when cut, depending on variety and the stem should appear dry. I used a butternut (also called a squash in some parts). Some recipes call for the pumpkin to be roasted to deepen the flavour before it is boiled but if you start with a ripe pumpkin, I don’t think it is necessary – although by all means give it a go if the pumpkin isn’t as ripe as you’d like. I suggest about 1kg of pumpkin but more or less is fine, depending on how much pumpkin you have. I used about 2/3 of the monster below.

pumpkin soup (1 of 1)

Ingredients

  • 1 large carrot
  • 1 large potato
  • 1 brown onion
  • 1 ripe pumpkin (about 1kg / 2lb)
  • 1 liter of stock – chicken or vegetable. Or water if you don’t have stock.
  • 1 rasher of good smoky bacon or pancetta
  • 2 cloves garlic
  • 1/2 tsp nutmeg, freshly grated if possible
  • 1/2 tsp turmeric
  • 1 tsp paprika
  • 1 tbsp olive oil
  • 1 tbsp butter
  • salt and pepper

To Serve

  • 1 small bunch of coriander (cilantro)
  • sour cream

1. Remove the bacon rind. Finely dice the bacon, onion, carrot and garlic. Add to a large saucepan over medium heat with the butter and olive oil.

2. While you’re stirring the onion etc, roughly dice the potato and peel and dice the pumpkin. It’s easy to peel the pumpkin by cutting thick slices first, then cutting the skin off each slice.

3. Once the onions are starting to look transparent, add the potato and pumpkin and stock. If there isn’t enough stock to cover the pumpkin top up the pan with water. Bring to a boil, then reduce the heat and simmer until the pumpkin is soft and falling apart – about 1 hour.

4. Stir in the paprika, nutmeg and turmeric and simmer for another few minutes.

pumpkin soup (1 of 1)-2

5. Remove from the heat and allow to cool slightly. Use a hand blender to puree the soup in the pan until it’s smooth and creamy.

6. Taste and season with salt and freshly cracked black pepper to your taste.

7. Ladle into bowls and add a spoonful of sour cream to the middle of each one. Use a fork to twirl the sour cream in a little whirlpool pattern, but not so much that it is mixed in – just leave a few trails. Scatter each bowl with a little chopped coriander. Serve with a nice crusty white bread and butter.

pumpkin soup (1 of 1)-3
Mmmmmmm

More:

A good hand blender is the easiest way to get the soup nice and creamy – this Cuisinart one comes in every colour you could want.

Pumpkins are easy to grow if you have a little space, and very rewarding. Here is a pretty good guide.

My recipe is ‘straight’ pumpkin but I love a curried pumpkin soup too – here’s a take on that (and they make it look so good…)

Leek, Tomato and Mushroom with Stracchino

I cooked a bit of an unusual pizza recently on a whim, and it turned out pretty well! I was inspired by a new (to me) cheese that I found at the markets. It’s called Stracchino, and is a soft cows milk cheese. It has a lovely delicate flavour with a hint of sweetness combined with a  little tangy-ness. It melts amazingly, turning into a soft, sticky and creamy puddle.

I wanted to match this up with some ingredients that would complement the sweet cheese as well as something to contrast with the sweet flavours. This is what I came up with. The sweetness of cooked leeks is nice with this cheese and the contrasting texture of slightly crunchy/slippery leek with the smooth melted Stracchino worked well. Pieces of tomato and mushroom are little bursts of intense flavour to contrast with the smooth sweetness of the cheese and leek.

Ingredients

  • Pizza dough (I made one massive pizza with a 500g dough ball, you could also make 2 smaller ones with these quantities of toppings)
  • Pizza sauce
  • 2 Leeks
  • Good handful of button Swiss brown mushrooms
  • 2 Ripe tomatoes, diced
  • Paprika
  • 300g or so Stracchino. You could use mozzarella if you absolutely can’t find this, it will still work well with these toppings

Method

  1. Cut the green tops off the leeks and discard. Wash the leeks well. Dice and saute in olive oil with one crushed clove of garlic until translucent.
  2. Tip the mushrooms into a hot pan, and leave them to cook until starting to brown, shaking to stop them burning.
  3. Shape your pizza base and spread with a thin layer of sauce.
  4. Scatter a few pinches of paprika over the tomato sauce. It’s amazing how much of a difference there is between a good quality paprika versus the ones I have tried from supermarkets!
  5. Scatter the leek mixture evenly over the base.
  6. Slice the cheese and tear each slice into chunks.  Scatter evenly over the pizza. Make sure to leave some gaps so that the crust doesn’t get too moist.
  7. Now scatter over the mushrooms and diced tomatoes. Don’t overdo it – a good guide is to end up with around 2 pieces of each per slice, on average.
  8. Cook on a preheated pizza stone or any other cooking method of your choice.

Fig, Walnut & Mascarpone Pizza with Pear

This pizza recipe is a bit of a different combination. You wouldn’t quite call it a dessert pizza, but is quite light and sweet and can definitely finish off a meal. I make my own plum sauce from our trees, and my sauce is quite light and tangy. If you can’t make your own, try an asian style plum sauce.

Ingredients

  • Plum Sauce
  • A small handful of Walnuts (freshly shelled makes a difference)
  • Mascarpone
  • Dried Figs
  • Honey (optional)
  • Thin slices of fresh Pear
  • Sugar
  • Lime juice

Method

  1. Drizzle plum sauce over your prepared pizza base. You don’t want the base totally covered.
  2. Drizzle some honey if using – just some thin swirls.
  3. Scatter the pizza with halved figs and halved walnut pieces.
  4. Finish with chunks of mascarpone – I use teaspoon sized pieces.
  5. Carefully slide into the preheated oven using your peel and bake until the crust is golden. Be careful with this one as the nuts can burn easily.
  6. While the pizza is cooking, slice your pear thinly and put the pieces in a bowl with the juice of one lime, and a teaspoon of sugar. Toss together to coat. When the pizza is cooked, finish by dressing with the slices of fresh pear and serve!

Onion, rosemary & blue cheese

The strength of this pizza is it’s simplicity and the combination of a small amount of powerful ingredients. The subtle sweetness and texture of the onions is lovely against the bitey blue cheese and the rosemary.

Use your favourite blue cheese here but don’t be afraid to experiment. A nice gorgonzola would be wonderful.

This is a good introduction to the pizza bianca, or white pizza, for those who have always used tomato sauce before!

Ingredients

  • 1 Small brown onion, sliced finely into rings
  • Mozzarella, finely sliced
  • Blue cheese
  • Pecorino (or Parmesan if preferred)
  • 2-3 tsp of fresh Rosemary leaves, chopped but not too finely.
  • Olive oil
  • Pizza dough

Method

  1. Prepare your pizza bases.
  2. Tear up two  slices of mozzarella and scatter over the base.
  3. Scatter rings of onion over the base.
  4. Cut or crumble the blue cheese into small pieces and spread evenly over the base.
  5. Tear up one or two slices of mozzarella and scatter these as well.
  6. Finish by scattering over with a few pinches of rosemary and some grated fresh pecorino or parmesan.
  7. Drizzle with olive oil and cook.

And here how it looks straight out of a wood fired oven!

Rosemary, onion and blue cheese pizza
Rosemary, onion and blue cheese pizza