And I am always looking for ways to add people to the former. Food is usually a pretty good way.
I love cooking (who starts a food blog without that element?) but I'll let you in on a dirty secret: I hate cooking for myself. When I have to cook for one, the thought of all those dishes usually leads me to default to my juicer (to get my veggies in) and a bowl of cereal. I grocery shop maybe every 10 days (although I ran out of food at day six) and contemplate take-out nightly, although I can't afford it. I'm super awesome!
But really, even for those of us who like to cook, love it even, at the end of the day a large portion of the enjoyment comes from all the people making the yummy noises. In part that's why I started this blog; to share my cooking adventures with invisible internet friends (who I can pretend are making yummy noises, even if they aren't for real).
I have a truly lovely friend, Kate, who loves soup. Really loves it. Contemplated joining the Navy when she found out they break every morning at 10 for soup (seriously). Recently Kate suggested to a group of her friends the idea of a "soup exchange" - think cookie exchange, but better for your waistline. And for all the reasons above, not least of all the increase in people I can call friends, I thought it was a fantastic idea.
All the women in our group made enough soup to give away one litre per person. That's a lot of soup! I thought it would be a great way to share some of my cooking, and get a huge amount of food to eat until Hubby comes home so I don't have to do any more chopping!! (And I write this while enjoying a delicious bowl of Jamaican spinach soup)
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| You're looking at 81 litres of soup. No joke. |
The soup I brought along to our exchange was a Thai coconut shrimp. This recipe is really versatile, because you can sub in pretty much any veggies that tickle your particular fancy. I used butternut squash for the fall, but it's equally good with red bell pepper (although I'd only use about 1/2 cup so the pepper flavour doesn't overpower). You can garnish with cilantro, if you like that kind of thing (I don't), or chives, or nothing. The shrimp can easily be exchanged for chicken with a little more cooking time, or left out completely for an equally hearty vegetarian dish.
Thai Coconut Shrimp Soup
Yield: 2L
(at least 4-5 servings, depending who you're feeding)
Ingredients:
2 tbsp red
curry paste
3 cloves
garlic, chopped
1” piece of
ginger, finely chopped or grated
1 can
coconut milk
3 ¼ cups
vegetable/chicken broth
8 oz baby
bella mushrooms, chopped roughly
1 cup chopped
butternut squash
1 cup
chopped sugar snap peas
1 cup corn
(frozen or fresh)
½ cup
uncooked quinoa, rinsed
12 oz
uncooked shrimp
1 tbsp lime
juice (about 1/2 lime)
1 tbsp fish
sauce
Salt and
pepper to taste
Chopped
cilantro or chives (optional, for serving)
Directions:
1.
Heat a soup pot or dutch oven over med-high
heat; sear curry paste for about one minute.
2.
Add garlic and ginger with just enough of the
coconut milk to loosen everything, and cook for
another minute, until fragrant.
3.
Add remaining coconut milk and broth; stir and
bring to a boil.
4.
Once boiling, reduce heat to simmer and add
quinoa and butternut squash; cover and cook 10
minutes.
5.
Add remaining veggies and simmer another 5 minutes.
6.
Add shrimp (and cilantro/chives, if using) and simmer
until they are just opaque, 2-3 minutes.
7.
Remove from heat and stir in fish sauce and lime
juice. Taste and adjust seasonings as needed. If
too tart for your taste, add about 1 tbsp honey and taste again.
8.
Serve with additional lime wedges and and cilantro/chives to garnish.


3 comments:
I think after reading your recipe I'll be trying this soup next!!
I'm Kate's cousin - I'm happy that she led me to your blog. The soup exchange is the best idea I've heard in a while! I must try to wrangle some of my friends/family to participate. Bre
The soup is delicious! I am enjoying every bite of it...just logged on here to view the recipe. What type of broth did you use of a base and app how much? Thanks!
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