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Roasted Yellow Tomato Soup with Goat Cheese Toasts

March 29, 2010




Roasted vegetables are a passion of mine. Soup is another. And none more so than tomato. I got bored with the usual traffic-stop red of regular tomatoes and thought a bright, sunny yellow would be a slightly unexpected and fun change. Hubby thought it was pumpkin soup and was slightly aghast at the ribbon of balsamic vinegar in his glass, until he took a sip. Then he was all smiles, and having drained his dry, asked for another shot.

Normally, when roasting just about any vegetable,  I would throw in enough garlic to make a vampire blanch beyond pale, and shower the tray of olive oil bathed veggies with either fresh or dried oregano. That's the way to go if you want rich, robust, in-your-face flavour.

This time however, I wanted something fresher, lighter, where the delicate, sweet taste of yellow tomatoes would ring through, clear as a bell, with just a back note of subtly woodsy thyme. Hence the short list of ingredients, minus the usual trio of garlic, robust olive oil and almost floral oregano. I would definitely recommend fresh thyme here, if you can get it, as dried thyme is stronger and tends to taste slightly resinous - not the note I'm after for a delicate and easily unbalanced soup, such as this one.

Use any neutral flavoured oil and don't go overboard with the thyme. Balsamic vinegar I feel, is a must as yellow tomatoes, while very pretty, tend to lack the bite of their rosier cousins. The goat cheese toasts were a complete delight in themselves, but still subtle enough not to overshadow the soup. You may need more than just two per person, if hubby's and the boys' reactions were anything to go by.

I served this warm but you could have it chilled, in which case season generously with salt as the cold will blunt the already subtle flavours of this mild and lovely soup.

Prep 10 mins      Cook 15 mins      Serves 3 - 4

 

350 g (1 punnet) yellow cherry tomatoes, rinsed and thoroughly drained
2 small sprigs fresh thyme, discard stalks or 1/3 level tsp dried thyme
1/2 Tbsp light vegetable oil(sunflower, soy, grapeseed etc)
1/2 tsp sea salt or to taste
2/3 - 1 cup hot, light chicken or vegetable stock (adjust according to preference)
Feta or your favourite goat cheese, desired amount
2 rounds baguette per person
A slug balsamic vinegar per serving
A sprig fresh sweet basil per serving
A twist of black pepper per serving



Preheat oven at 210 C (400 F).

Combine tomatoes, thyme, oil and salt and mix thoroughly and transfer to a small baking tray. Roast for 15 minutes, by which time tomato skins would have split and tomatoes are just beginning to char in places.

Remove from oven and cool slightly. Liquidise tomatoes and any roasting juices and herbs using an immersion blender. Add the stock for a thinner soup, if desired. Strain soup through a sieve if you object to the fine bits of tomato skin. Set soup aside, keeping it warm, and prepare toast.

Cut rounds of baguette (2 per person or more if you like) and top with as much crumbled feta or goat cheese as you like. Toast until edges of baguette are browned and crisp and cheese begins to colour. Remove from toaster oven.

Divide soup evenly amongst bowls, plates or glasses. Garnish each serving with a drizzle of balsamic vinegar, a sprig of basil and a twist of black pepper. Serve with the cheese topped toast.

 

Note : For the stock, I used stock granules dissolved in boiling water. Use home made if you have it or canned or boxed, ready-to-use commercial stock. This soup is also delicious served chilled, in which case I would omit the goat cheese toasts.

 

Pretty in Pink Potato Salad

March 24, 2010




Eversince I made this cake, I've had pink on the brain. Truth is, I've never thought much of the taste of beetroot -  each time I've eaten it, I just haven't been able to get away from the association with sugar and earth. Beetroot is often described as "earthy" but the first time I tried it, I was quite surprised to find that it was an almost literal description of the luridly bright tuber.

Now the colour, oh, the colour, is something else altogether! I've always adored the vivid, almost vi...


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Quick Mustard and Beer Bread

March 22, 2010




I've been a tortured soul since I saw this at Apple Crumbles. Beautiful isn't it? Home made bread issues from my oven on a regular basis but I'm nothing if not impatient. Make that pathologically impatient. Now, I know greatness takes time and great bread can't  be rushed. I love the results of a slow rise and often leave my dough overnight in the fridge for spectacularly flavoured loaves the next day. But when I saw that mustard, beer and caraway loaf (have you clicked on that link yet?) I k...


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White Wine, Lemongrass and Chilli Poached Pears with Sweet Basil

March 18, 2010




I hate talking about the weather -  the final destination for any conversation on its last legs, drawing it's last, choking, rasping... breath. I can hardly believe though, how crazed the weather here has been. In the last 3 weeks, I've felt like a jetsetter, going through 2 or even 3 countries in the space of a day. Scorching afternoons have given way to blustery evenings, followed by torrential 30-second downpours that have finally settled into muggy, sweat-soaked restless nights. Would y...


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My First Award - Yay!!

March 16, 2010


I know this is the recipes section and this post is not a recipe, but Quickies on The Dinner Table has been given the Sunshine Award by Kitchen Masochist, and it's a pretty big deal to me. Thank you Kitchen Masochist - I am flattered and knew those difficult questions you keep asking me on my blog would not be in vain ;)  - naaaah they were easy. Btw, if you like snappy, sassy recipes and eye popping food photography, check out her blog. Go!!
As part of the deal, I have to pass this award on...


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Pandan and Red Bean Scones

March 15, 2010



I'm not Irish, though every year around this time, I can't help wishing I were. If you're a member of any foood site or community, you will very likely see a torrent of recipes and pictures of food of every guise and name, coloured green and shaped into shamrocks or doused in Guinness, ale, or, numberless permutations of corned beef and cabbage, all in the name of St Patrick, most beloved immortal of the Irish, in and out of Ireland.

The Irish, real and honorary, go all out to mark the day,...


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Warm Roasted Vegetable and Pasta Salad

March 11, 2010



I was planning to make roast chicken and this salad a while ago when I chanced upon an article (an extract from "Eating Animals" a book by Jonathan Safran Foer) posted by a fellow foodie Sara, about the present state of commercial farming and it's supposed dirty secrets. Just a few short years ago,  I thought that well known claim about battery reared chickens having barely the space taken up by a sheet of copier paper, in which to spend their short miserable lives, was just urban legend. I'd...


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Serendipity Sundae

March 8, 2010



I hadn't intended to post this today, but as is usually the case with these things, there's a story here. I've lately become quite obsessed with low fat, healthy cakes because mum loves cake but has to watch her cholesterol intake, so every time I see a  healthy or vegan cake recipe, I perk up like a Doberman getting a whiff of burglar.

This time it was banana bread by a bewitching cook named Stella, who has a clutch of alluring but healthy cake recipes in her repertoire (I don't use those t...


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Steamed Razor Clams with Chili, Ginger and Vermouth

March 4, 2010




After the satisfying stodginess of the pot pie, I wanted something fresh and light. I'd been following and enjoying the fish related posts of a foodie friend, Biren, who does amazing Asian food, and my thoughts were turning to all the briny delights of the sea.

Providence was smiling down on me when I saw these plump, daisy fresh razor clams on a morning jaunt to the market. They were larger than the ones I'd eaten before and looked too tempting to pass by.

My mother, who is not as much a s...


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Tuna and Mushroom Pot Pie

March 1, 2010



You'd never induce me to buy a jar of ready made pasta sauce, or a box of cake mix but there are two commercially prepared foods I love, and am hardly ever without; canned tuna and canned condensed soup. They're fabulously versatile ingredients and just looking at them standing proudly full frontal, on supermarket shelves, almost fries my circuitry because of the lunch or dinner ideas that start to flood my mind.

In our house, there's no such thing as "tuna surprise" or "captain's casserole"...


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