homemade staple: tomato soup

One cold and rainy afternoon, Lucy and I were on the hunt for a hot lunch to warm us up. For our bellies, there is no lunch more comforting than the classic tomato soup. Cruising the grocery store aisles for fresh supplies, I was dismayed to find our favorite box variety no longer on sale. And at $5.00 per box (roughly $1 per serving), I pushed my cart away in a huff. Damn organic hippie food companies, charging an arm and a leg for soup, I mused. It’s soup! Peasant food! Who do they think they are?

Then, like a beacon at the end of the aisle, the shiny aluminum cans with red wrappers and pop-tops beckoned me. I’ll just buy a few cans until the good stuff goes back on sale, I thought. We’d go home, stir in a little milk, warm our tummies, and no one would ever know the difference between a $0.99 can and a $5.00 box. But upon perusing the ingredients list, I hesitated: high fructose corn syrup. I don’t even know quite what that is. But I know that it doesn’t belong in tomato soup. Nor does flour, oil, ascorbic acid (is Campbell’s trying to prevent scurvy in the youth of America?), and preservatives like citric acid.

Now if you’ve ever met me, or read this blog for even the shortest of moments, you know that I am not a health Nazi. I make things like buffalo chicken mac n cheese and New York cheesecake without the slightest hesitation. But the thing about those dishes is, I know and can pronounce everything that is in them. When you take a thing like tomato soup which should be fairly basic (tomatoes, water or milk, spices) and start lacing it with chemicals, that’s where I draw the line. That’s why I decided at that moment on aisle 7 that I would replicate the canned variety (which is, by the way, delicious, if chemical-laden), flavor for flavor, but without all the junk.

It took a few tries. A few marred batches. And a lot of taste tests. But when I was done I was left with a steaming pot of homemade tomato soup that tasted better than the original. Much, much better. And, might I add, better than the $5.00 box. You could actually taste the tomatoes, the creaminess of the milk, the hint of salt. When I tasted the two soups back to back I could hardly put my finger on any of the flavors in the canned variety—they all blended together in one sort of sweet, sort of salty, sort of bland taste.

Ironically my journey to this soup began on the canned aisle as well, as I used canned tomato paste and tomato sauce as my base. Fortunately, the ingredients in tomato paste are tomatoes and water, and tomato sauce is the same plus a few spices. A couple of varieties of tomato sauce surprised me with their ingredients as well, but the plain store brand was simply made and worked well in this recipe. You could use fresh tomatoes, but you won’t get quite the same flavor. We are replicating canned tomato soup, after all.

This was our lunch for three days following my final successful experiment. It kept well in the refrigerator, but when reheating I would use the stove and not the microwave because of the milk in the soup. Microwaves tend to overheat food quickly, and when dairy is involved no good can come of it.

I’m also going to pat myself on the back since my (quite delicious) soup worked out to cost roughly $0.63 per serving, while the Campbell’s rang it at about $0.78 per serving.

Does anyone else find it ironic that I took the time to make this soup from scratch with simple ingredients, and then dotted it with Goldfish crackers? I guess that’s just me. Heck, maybe next I’ll try to make Goldfish crackers without all the junk. But for now I have this soup. And my daughter and I will eat it on a rainy day in the kitchen, warm our tummies, and laugh at those crazy soup companies.

-RDG

Homemade Creamy Tomato Soup

The type of milk you use will determine the creaminess of the soup (whole=very creamy, nonfat=not very creamy). When you’re shopping for the tomato sauce and paste, make sure you select varieties with the simplest ingredients possible. The soup will keep for up to 4 days in the refrigerator and freezes well. Yield: approximately 5 cups, or 4-5 one cup servings.

  • 1 15-oz can tomato sauce
  • 1 6-oz can tomato paste
  • 1 cup water
  • 2 cups milk
  • 1/2 tsp garlic salt
  • 2 1/2 tbsp sugar
  • 1/4 tsp salt plus more to taste

Stir together the first 6 ingredients in a pot over medium heat. Add the salt, taste, and adjust the salt and spices as needed. Bring just to a simmer (or just to your desired serving temperature) and remove from heat. Slurp and enjoy.

peach-o-rama! peach cobbler

I know you’ve been inundated with peach recipes as of late. Jams, cobblers, crisps, pies, Geldofs. I wasn’t going to join in the blogosphere’s latest summer obsession since I’ve already seen so many amazing recipes, but when my local grocer came up with a new way to pitch me peaches, I just couldn’t resist.

I am of the school that thinks peaches are perfect on their own. They are one summer fruit that, in my book, is best eaten only with a napkin and gusto. But then Peach-o-rama! came into my world and everything has gone peach-shaped. Peach-o-rama! peaches are special. They want to party. They want to get dressed up, hit the town and knock back a few. How could I not oblige them?

Peach-o-rama is just a silly way of selling the sweetest, juiciest organic peaches around. I chose a variety from Frog Hollow Farm (California), but they also offer local fruits from Pence Orchards (just over the mountains in the Yakima Valley). These puppies kicked the fuzzy peach butts of every farmer’s market peach I’ve had this summer.

And my daughter, the picky peach eater that she is, gobbled them up with gusto. That is, when she wasn’t wiping out on the cement. Just don’t mention it to her. She’s becoming a little self-conscious.

Onto the cobbler itself. There are, according to my exact tabulations, 1,574,485 recipes for fruit cobblers on the web. I have another 5-10 stashed throughout the house in cookbooks and scraps of paper, but a total of 0 up my sleeve. I wanted an easy recipe that I could memorize and that would adapt well to the use of other fruits. Eventually I settled on this one from Gourmet via Epicurious. Simple, not too sweet, with a biscuit-like crust and very short prep time.

It’s as easy as slicing your fruit and tossing with a bit of sugar, lemon juice and cornstarch. Most folks skin their peaches before baking, but I like the color and texture that those fuzzy casings lend to the finished product. This particular recipe requires a short pre-bake of the peaches to get them nice and soft and you can assemble the biscuit crust in that time.

Top with a simple biscuit mixture, bake, and that’s all. This recipe is so simple and quick that it would be a perfect last-minute dessert, but it looks and tastes fancy enough to serve to company.

Serve warm with a scoop of vanilla bean ice cream.

My favorite part of cobbler is when the ice cream melts just slightly, coating the fruit and warm crust it’s creamy cold drippings.

Peach-o-rama peaches, I hope that I did you justice. You certainly made this cobbler one for the recipe books. Until we meet again next summer,

-RDG

Peach Cobbler from Gourmet via Epicurious

I ended up using about 5 peaches (blame my peach-inhaling scratch-nosed Lucy, and used a pretty pie plate to bake the cobbler in. I found that the crust needed only about 20 minutes to bake.

  • 6 large peaches, cut into thin wedges
  • 1/4 cup sugar
  • 1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice
  • 1 teaspoon cornstarch

For biscuit topping:

  • 1 cup all-purpose flour
  • 1/2 cup sugar
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 3/4 stick (6 tablespoons) cold unsalted butter, cut into small pieces
  • 1/4 cup boiling water

Cook peaches:
Preheat oven to 425°F.

Toss peaches with sugar, lemon juice, and cornstarch in a 2-qt. nonreactive baking dish and bake in middle of oven 10 minutes.

Make topping while peaches bake:
Stir together flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt. Blend in butter with your fingertips or until mixture resembles coarse meal (it helps to do this quickly with very cold butter). Stir in water until just combined.

Remove peaches from oven and drop spoonfuls of topping over them. Bake in middle of oven until topping is golden, about 25 minutes. (Topping will spread as it bakes.)