Carrot Soup
A vibrant, sweet, and velvety soup from the Victorian era. This recipe emphasizes preserving the bright red-orange colour of the carrots by blanching them before sweating in butter. Finished with a touch of sugar to enhance the natural sweetness, and served with fried bread croutons and dried mint as suggested by the referenced pea soup style.
Ingredients
- 1 kg Large carrots (Approx. 8-10 carrots. For best color, use the outer red part and discard the woody yellow core if desired.)
- 3 stalks Celery stalks (Or a small head/heart of celery)
- 1 whole Onion, medium
- 60 grams Butter (for sweating) (Approx. 2 oz)
- 1.5 liters Vegetable or Chicken Stock (Original calls for water or stock; stock is recommended for flavor.)
- 1 tsp Sugar (Pounded/powdered sugar)
- 1 tsp Salt (Adjust to taste)
- 0.5 tsp White Pepper (Adjust to taste)
- 15 grams Butter (for finishing) (Approx. 1 tbsp)
- 3 slices Bread slices (For croutons (referenced from Pea Soup))
- 2 tbsp Oil or Butter (for frying bread)
- 1 tsp Dried Mint (Optional garnish (referenced from Pea Soup))
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Instructions
- 1Wash, peel, and roughly chop the carrots, celery, and onion. If strictly following the original method for color, cut the red outer layer off the carrots and discard the yellow woody cores.
- 2Bring a large pot of water to a boil. Throw the chopped vegetables into the boiling water for a few minutes to set and preserve their color. Drain them thoroughly.
- 3Place the drained vegetables in a saucepan with the sweating butter (60g). Cover and place on a very low fire (low heat). Let them stew gently so the steam can escape, taking great care that they do not burn or brown.
- 4Add the stock (or water) to the saucepan. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat and simmer until the carrots are completely tender.
- 5Rub the mixture through a wire sieve or use a blender to puree until smooth. Return to the pot. Add the finishing butter, sugar, pepper, and salt. Adjust consistency with more stock if needed; it should resemble the thickness of pea soup, not watery.
- 6Cut the bread into small cubes. Heat oil or butter in a frying pan and fry the bread cubes until golden and crisp (or toast them).
- 7Ladle the soup into bowls. Serve with the fried bread croutons and a sprinkle of dried mint.
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