San Diego Union-Tribune

TEMPLATE YIELDS RICH CARROT SOUP IN SHORT ORDER

- BY FLORENCE FABRICANT Fabricant writes for The New York Times.

If a pot of homemade soup brings to mind a big kettle of many ingredient­s simmering for hours, think again. There’s an easy formula for preparing vegetable soups that requires only a few ingredient­s and minimal cooking time, yet yields the same rich comfort that soup is intended to provide.

You need about a pound of fresh vegetables, 3 cups of water and a blender or a food processor (though a potato masher can be pressed into service). The result will be two generous portions of velvety warmth or four more modest servings.

Adding personalit­y is up to you. The basic soup can be enriched by replacing the water with stock, adding heavy cream or coconut milk, or stirring in some olive oil, basil oil or a nut oil. Lightly sauteed ginger, chiles, onion, garlic or shallots can be pureed with the vegetables.

The soup can be dressed with a dollop of Greek yogurt, fresh goat cheese, pesto or chili crisp; you can add a scattering of croutons, capers, chives or other minced herbs, some grated cheese, diced avocado, scallions, toasted almonds or pine nuts, sieved hard-boiled egg yolk or crumbled bacon just before serving.

The following is the template for a basic soup, done with carrots and ginger, and suggestion­s for some other combinatio­ns. Though fresh vegetables are the backbone of most of these soups, some canned items, notably black or cannellini beans and San Marzano tomatoes, also work well (consider drafting leftover cooked vegetables).

For most of the soups, a splash of acid — lemon juice or a few drops of vinegar — is essential for brightenin­g the flavor.

 ?? JOEL GOLDBERG NYT PHOTOS ??
JOEL GOLDBERG NYT PHOTOS

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