Our goal with this soup, as with other recipes here, is to prepare a meal from scratch, using mostly fresh ingredients, in an appliance permitted by campus housing in most dorms. In this instance we want a vegetarian soup, and really, vegan stock is a challenge in any circumstance because the broth tends to seem thin and unsatifying. We've been reading and experimenting, and we've learned that taking care to add ingredients high in glutamates ("umami") as well as those high in flavor helps greatly.
4-5 cups cut-up seasoning veggies to be microwaved |
Ingredients:
1 large onion, diced
3 carrots, diced
1/2 bell pepper, diced
2 stalks celery, diced
Several fresh mushrooms, cut up
2 cloves garlic, crushed
1/4 c. vegetable oil
Put all this (loosely) into a 2-quart pyrex container with lid. It should be 4-5 cups; if much less than that, either add more veggies or reduce cooking time. Mix to coat all ingredients with oil. Place lid loosely on the container, to capture spatters but allowing steam to escape.
Microwave 15 minutes in a small (700 watt) oven; adjust time downward if your oven is full-size. Pause occasionally to check and to stir. The objective here is to wilt the vegetables, and then to lightly saute them.
Then add:
1 small can tomato paste
1 cup frozen green peas
Water to the 6-cup level
Microwave with lid on for 15 minutes.
Now remove 3 cups of the mixture (half of it) for use in another meal. Freeze it, perhaps.
To the 3 cups remaining in the container, add some fresh ingredients:
Fresh chopped parsley
Chopped green onion
1 regular tomato or a few small ripe tomatoes, cut up
Microwave 5 more minutes.
The soup now is ready to eat!
Basic soup, ready for addition of some fresh ingredients. |
To make minestrone, add a few spoonsful of beans and some chopped greens, such as cabbage, and microwave a few more minutes.
We haven't mentioned seasoning! With an herb or two you can give this basic soup the character of your favorite ethnic cuisine.
Salt and pepper to taste. Common soup seasonings are bay leaf, and any combination of fragrant herbs. If you want Italian flavors, basil and oregano are the usual. For a more northern experience, try dillweed, or go south with cumin.
To see a full set of photographs showing how this dish was made, go to this set on flickr. (It will open in a new tab or window; to return to this page, just close it.) The small pictures are thumbnails; click on each one to see it full-size, and to read the comments under it. If you prefer to use the slideshow feature, you won't see the captions unless you click on "show info" (top right).
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