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| Creative Cookery |
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LIMA BEAN SOUP
Kind of a nice new cookbook came in the mail today from the Quality Paperback
Book Club. The concept's a little strange -- "Twelve Months of Monastery
Soups," by Brother Victor-Antoine d'Avila-Latourrette -- but the contents are
mighty appetizing, featuring quite a range of soups from light to hearty,
mostly made with country fare but not entirely vegetarian.
We had a bag of dried lima beans around, so I tried one and stuck
fairly faithfully to the instructions ...
Place 16 ounces of dried lima beans in a large cast-iron dutch oven with
eight cups of water. Bring to the boil, let simmer at a rolling boil for two
minutes, then cover, turn off heat, and let sit for 60 minutes. Drain,
rinse, and set the beans aside.
Wipe the dutch oven clean, put in 2 tablespoons olive oil, and sautee 1 large
onion, chopped coarsely, with 2 or 3 large minced garlic cloves. When the
onions and garlic are translucent and aromatic, add the beans and 2 cups beef
broth (I used Minor's Beef Base) and 5 cups water (or to go strict
vegetarian, skip the broth and use all water). Slice a large carrot into
thin rounds, and add them to the soup. Peel a large baking potato and cut
it into smallish (1/2-inch) cubes, and add them to the soup. Salt and
pepper to taste, set heat to a low-medium fast simmer, and cook, partly
covered with a lid set askew, for about 1 hour or until the beans are fully
cooked. Correct seasoning and serve.
This makes a very hearty soup, even without any significant meat content,
and it stood up very nicely to Col d'Orcia Rosso di Montalcino, a dry Italian
red.
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