Thursday, October 30, 2008

Kitchen Musings by Ophelia

curried mushroom soup with a grilled vegetable sandwhich by you.
Curried Mushroom with a grilled vegetable sandwhich
(a pizza dough baguette fresh from the oven in the background)
This soup is tangy in its mildest rendition, and just gets hotter, depending on the strength of the curry used. You can also dust with cayenne pepper for added tastebud tingling. Nowadays we can always find a variety of marvelous wild mushrooms, even int he supermarket. Use what is available. For the dried mushrooms, I like the mix of oyster, morel, and porcini, but a cup of any single variety can be substituted. Garnish with chopped parsley if you can't find chervil.

Ingredients
2 cups boiling water1 cup assorted dried oyster, morel and porcini mushrooms
(1 ounce dried mushrooms)Light vegetable oil cooking spray
1 1/2 cups chopped leek, white part only (2-3 leeks)
2 tablespoons all-purpose flour
1 tablespoon curry powder
4 cups skim milk
1 chicken bouillon cube
2 cups chopped fresh portobello mushrooms (3 smallish mushrooms)
4 cups chopped fresh shiitake mushrooms (10-12 mushrooms)
1 tablespoon dry sherry
1 tablespoon chooped chervil

Preparations:
Pour the boiling water over the dried mushrooms in a bowl and set aside to soak.
Preheat a heavy stockpot over medium heat for about 1 minute, then spray it twice with the vegetable oil. Add the leeks and saute' for about 3 minutes, stirring constantly, until translucent. Add the flour and curry powder. Stir with a wooden spoon until the leeks are well coated. Add the milk and bouillon cube. Raise the heat to high and cook just until bubbles begin to form around the edge.
Reduce the heat to low and whisk until all ingredients are thoroughly combined. Stir in the fresh mushrooms and cook for 5 minutes.
Meanwhile, remove the reconstituted mushrooms from their soaking liquid, strain, squeeze out excess moisture,a nd roughly chop. (Save the soaking liquid for another soup or sauce; here it would thin the soup too much and curdle the skim milk.) Add to the stockpot and cook for 1 minute more. Stir in the cherry.
Garnish with the chopped chervil.
There you go, I took this recipe from the cookbook of one of my favorite lady chefs, Rosie Daley. I've had cooked this several times and each time I asked for more. Try it and you'll surely like it.
I wish all my friends and visitors great days ahead. Take care Bloggers! and Blog on!
Sincerely,
Ophelia
ophelia(pink frame) by you.