An Exaltation of Soups (62 page)

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Authors: Patricia Solley

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T
O
S
ERVE

Serve the soup very cold. When you’re ready to take it to the table, mix it one last time, then pour it into cups and garnish each portion with your choice of fruit, such as sliced and seeded grapes, apple slices, or melon balls, or small shrimps or slivered toasted almonds.

S
ANCHO
P
ANZA ON
S
OUP AND
L
IFE

Ajoblanco
was, of course, the original
gazpacho
, long before the days when tomatoes and peppers made it to Spain from the New World. The original gazpacho/ajoblanco was introduced into Andalusian Spain by the Moors sometime after
A.D.
800—made with bread, garlic, olive oil, vinegar, salt, and water, all packed into unglazed earthenware pots to keep it cool. On a good day, it might include almonds and almond milk. Anyway, it was white, it was thick, it filled the belly and cooled the brow of laborers during the heat of the day. It was this “gazpacho” that Miguel Cervantes’s beloved Sancho Panza knew and loved, saying in
Don Quixote
, at the end of his days as governor, “A Spade does better in my Hand than a Governor’s Truncheon; and I had rather fill my Belly with Gazpacho, than lie at the Mercy of a Coxcombly Physick-monger that starves me to Death.”

U
NITED
S
TATES
NEW ORLEANS SEAFOOD GUMBO
C
REOLE
/C
AJUN
G
UMBO

C
AJUN
N
IGHT
B
EFORE
C
HRISTMAS

Twas de night before Christmas
An’all t’ru de house
Dey don’t a t’ingpass
Not even a mouse.
De chirren been nezzle
Good snug on de flo’
An’ Mama pass de pepper
T’ru de crack on de do’.
Den Mama in de fireplace
Done roas’ up de ham
Stir up de gumbo
An’ make bake de yam

—T
ROSCLAIR

Serves 6 to 8

A
LTHOUGH GUMBO TRADITIONS
in New Orleans are most strongly and longly associated with Lent’s
gumbo z’herbes
, rich seafood gumbo is extraordinarily popular at Christmas along the Cajun Louisiana coast. It’s said that the original French settlers from Acadia—they were driven out of that Canadian colony by British troops in the 1750s during the so-called French and Indian War—were adapting their native French fish stews to local ingredients that often had come by way of Africa. The word
gumbo?
Bantu for “okra.”

This recipe is literally groaning with seafood—a richness appropriate for such a high holiday. It’s a heavenly combination of textures and flavors. And it’s a beautiful dish, earthy colored like the bayous but punctuated with the traditional red and green colors of Christmas.

F
OR THE BROTH

½ cup peanut oil

½ cup all-purpose flour

1 large onion, chopped

1 large red bell pepper, seeded and chopped

4 celery stalks with leaves, chopped

4 garlic cloves, chopped

8 cups (2 quarts) Fish Stock, heated

1 teaspoon dried thyme, rubbed between your palms

Salt and pepper to taste

¼ teaspoon cayenne pepper, or more to taste

F
OR THE RICE

4 cups water

2 cups raw white rice

F
OR THE SOUP

1 pound fresh or frozen okra, trimmed and sliced (about 5 cups)

2 pounds raw shrimp, peeled and deveined

1 pound lump crabmeat, with any shells picked out

2 pints (4 cups) shucked oysters, with their liquor

Minced fresh parsley, for garnish

T
O
P
REPARE

Prep the ingredients as directed in the recipe list.

T
O
C
OOK

1. Heat the oil over medium-high heat in a heavy pot (ideally iron), then sprinkle the flour on it, whisking like crazy as it cooks to a dark milk-chocolate color.

2. As the roux approaches this color, reduce the heat to medium and start adding the vegetables, stirring hard with a wooden spoon. Let cook, stirring, for about 10 minutes, until the vegetables are tender, then pour in the stock, season with the thyme, salt, pepper, and cayenne, and stir until the roux is dissolved. Reduce the heat to low, cover, and let simmer for 1 hour.

3. In a separate saucepan, bring the water to a boil over high heat, stir in the rice, reduce the heat to low, and simmer, covered, for 20 minutes. Remove from the heat and set the rice aside. It will hold until the final assembly.

4. Stir the okra into the broth. Re-cover the pot and let cook for about 10 minutes. Then add the shrimp and cook for a few minutes, until they turn pink, then toss in the crab by handfuls. When the crab is warmed through, pour in the oysters with their liquor and cook just until their edges curl. Remove from the heat immediately.

T
O
S
ERVE

Spoon ½ cup of the cooked rice into each bowl and ladle the gumbo on top. Garnish each portion with a little parsley. Serve immediately.

M
AKING THE
R
OUX

Cooks tear their hair to get the Cajun version right without burning it. In older, slower days, you might not mind standing and stirring the flour in hot fat over a low heat for some 30 minutes, greatly reducing the chances of burning it. In today’s world, that’s a little
too
slow. One technique is to add a smidge of sugar with the flour—its caramelizing action darkens and sweetens the mix. And if you’re a lover of gumbo and make lots of roux, chef Art Meyer suggests baking just the flour in an iron skillet in a 350°F. oven until it’s evenly brown, then storing it, ready-made, in a jar for future use. At that point, you just toss the dark flour into hot fat and go to the next step. The flour is already cooked
au point.

20
K
WANZAA

O
NCE UPON A TIME
, Professor Maulana Karenga, then chairman of California State University’s black studies program, had a dream. It was 1966 and Karenga wanted to find a way to unite African Americans in a powerful way—to connect this diverse group with a common identity, common values, and common culture.

This was not an easy thing to do. African Americans came to America as slaves and, later, by choice—from Africa, from the Caribbean, from places all over the globe. Very specific and diverse cultural traditions were brought into the mix or lost altogether. New traditions have been created, totally unconnected to the past, mostly on regional levels. Old tribal religions have been largely replaced with Christianity and Islam. How on earth to reconcile all the differences? How to find a common culture that all would embrace?

Dr. Karenga reached into the heart of humanity to bring forth Kwanzaa, all the way back to the earliest rhythms of civilization, when all peoples set their clocks to nature’s cycles and the harvest.

Kwanzaa
means “first fruits of the harvest” in the East African dialect Kiswahili. There is no festival by that name in any African country, but the features of Kwanzaa would be very familiar to people who celebrate harvest festivals across that continent.

Celebrated from December 26 through January 1, the seven days of Kwanzaa are a time of feasting and gift giving, but they are
most especially a time to reflect on family and community values—seven of them, one for each day of celebration.

On the first day of Kwanzaa, families put the
kinara
, or seven-branched wooden candleholder, in an honored spot. Seven candles
—mishumaa saba—
are placed in it: three red candles on the left, in memory of the blood shed by so many over so many years; three green candles on the right, in hopes for the future; and one black candle in the center, symbolizing unity and pride. Each night, families gather to light the candles and discuss the meaning of the day, and then begins a feast of traditional dishes, often beginning with an African soup.

T
HE
S
EVEN
P
RINCIPLES OF
K
WANZAA

  1. Umoja
    , or unity

  2. Kujichagulia
    , or self determination

  3. Ujima
    , or working together for the happiness of all

  4. Ujamaa
    , or working together for the prosperity of all

  5. Nia
    , or working together for the glory of all

  6. Kuumba
    , or creating beauty in the world

  7. Imani
    , or faith in the future of our community

C
AMEROON
BITTER-LEAF SOUP
N
DOLÉ

H
OSPITALITY

Okonkwo’s first wife soon finished her cooking and set before their guests a big meal of pounded yams and bitter-leaf soup. Okonkwo’s son, Nwoye, brought in a pot of sweet wine tapped from the raffia palm.

—C
HINUA
A
CHEBE
,
twentieth-century Nigerian novelist, in T
HINGS
F
ALL
A
PART
, 1958

Serves 6 to 8

T
HIS NATIONAL DISH
of Cameroon originated with the Douala people along the Atlantic coast and spread throughout the region. It started out as a simple soup with the bitter leaf known as
ndolé (Vernonia amygdalina)
, which was used medicinally both to stimulate the digestive system and to reduce fevers. Then, as a taste for the leaf developed, it became the soup of choice for marriages and baptisms, but a soup also stuffed with the most precious meats and fish in honor of the occasion. The simple recipe below, popular for everyday meals, is common to Nigeria and Cameroon, and still serves to stimulate the appetite, though it substitutes other greens for the nearly unobtainable
ndolé
leaf. It’s a rich and pretty soup with its generous garnish of crushed peanuts contrasting with the dark green leaf and bright red tomato bits.

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