Double, double Toil and Trouble; Fire burn and Cauldron boil.
and the finished soup:

  • @CharlesMangione
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    English
    11 year ago

    Tomorrow… and tomorrow… creeps the… something something… told by an idiot.

    Can I get a recipe? looks delicious! I promise to channel the ghost of Shakespeare to read that monologue while it’s simmering.

    • FuglyDuckOP
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      English
      21 year ago

      Tomorrow… and tomorrow… creeps the… something something… told by an idiot.

      And now I want crepes…

      It’s pretty simple, in a pot (or slow cooker, if you prefer,) and simmer until its done:

      • a ham hock
      • 5-6 cups vegetable stock
      • 4 carrots chopped medium
      • 3-4 celery stalks chopped medium
      • small onion, chopped fine
      • potato chopped medium (this is kind of optional.)
      • marjoram to taste, if you don’t have any or you’d prefer, thyme and oregano.
      • ham, if you’re using a left-over ham bone from a smoked ham, there’s probably already some still on the base (especially for spiral cuts,) toss it all in, and pull/clean it off later. ( take care to trim off fat and connective tissue.) or you can add cubed ham as well.
      • add salt slowly while it’s cooking, the ham hock will likely release some.

      For the stock, I made my own using kitchen scraps (it was mostly carrots, celery, onion, with garlic ginger and mushrooms to round it out a bit. super easy to make if you store your veggie scraps in a freezer ziplock; just it all in a giant pot of water. until flavorful. season to taste.)

      it’s not a hard and fast recipe, though, especially on the vegetables. if you’re buying veggie stock, you can make up extra with water instead.

      as it’s cooking, especially in a pot, stir it occasionally because the peas will settle into a sort of sludge on the bottom and then scorch. It’s more forgiving in a slow cooker, mind. If you need to thicken it a bit more, some corn starch or dairy (or both) will do the trick. or… just boil it some more. it’s forgiving. I had mine on a fast simmer for about an hour, then another half on a slow simmer.