It has been a beautiful fall and as such I’ve been inspired
to cook with tons of root and other traditional fall veggies. From cranberries
to cabbage, I’ve been enjoying them all, and over the weekend I made a soup
that knocked my socks off! Literally!
There are few things that say autumn better than butternut
squash soup. While traditionally these soups are completely pureed, I’m not a
big fan of fully pureed soups - if I want a smoothie, I’ll make one. This soup
however starts out as a traditional butternut squash soup but then gets
transformed into something completely new and unique and the taste is out of
this word! I look forward to sharing this great recipe with my family this
holiday season!
Curried Miso Butternut Squash Soup
Serves 2-4
2-3lbs peeled and cubed Butternut squash – separate into two equal sized piles
3
potatoes – cubed (I prebaked these for 15 minutes on 350 while preparing the other
ingredients)
1 cup
red lentils – washed
1 red
onion – chopped
3
carrots – cut into large cubed pieces
3
stalks celery – chopped
1/3
cup purple cabbaged – chopped
2 cups
kale – chopped
1 tbsp
sweet miso paste
1 tbsp
curry powder
2
cloves garlic
1
small chunk ginger
In a blender or food processor, add 5 cups of the veggie
broth, half of the butternut squash, the miso, curry, garlic, and ginger. Blend
until smooth.
Now pour the butternut squash-broth into a large soup pan.
Add the red lentils, potato, the remaining cubed squash, and rice and bring to
a boil. Once it begins to boil lower heat to a medium flame and stir
frequently. As the soup cooks, it will begin thicken. Slowly add the remaining
broth and stir it into the soup to keep it from becoming too thick. After 15 minutes
or so, the harder root vegetables will start to soften and the lentils will
plump up. As this happens add the chopped onion and carrots to the mix and
continue cooking. At this point you can lower the heat even more to a low
simmer and cover, but still stirring every few minutes. After another 10
minutes or so, the root vegetables should be soft but not over cooked. Add the
celery and the purple cabbage and cook for another 5 minutes or until the
celery becomes translucent.
Serve your soup hot on top of your favorite greens. I used
kale.
As always the information presented in this blog is for educational purposes only. It should not be considered as specific medical, nutritional, lifestyle, or other health-related advice.