Authors: Maggie Stuckey
Serves 6
A great way to use two summertime treasures: fresh zucchini and basil.
Note:
Acini di pepe is pasta shaped in tiny beads. If you can’t find it, orzo is a good substitute; it will need longer cooking, 10 minutes or so.
Make ahead?
Yes, through step 2. You can also cook the pasta ahead.
For large crowds:
A good one to make in large batches, double or triple.
Serves 6
When a soup has so few ingredients, a quality broth is critical, and that’s why I strongly recommend homemade chicken broth here. Lemon thyme is an amazing herb — both lemony and thymey, in equal measure. But if you can’t find it, regular thyme will do.
Make ahead?
Yes.
For large crowds:
Works just fine to increase proportions, but I would go easy with the thyme, and increase it only fractionally.
Oro Valley, Arizona
Through most of this book, you will meet people who love to cook soup and love to feed people in their homes. Mark’s story is a little different — he did it at work.
His job was stressful and too demanding and dangerously close to damaging family life, so he switched to a different role within the company, only to find he missed the satisfaction of meeting impossible deadlines. Maybe, he thought, I could find satisfaction some other way. So Mark turned to his main hobby — cooking — for the calm pleasure it had always brought to his life, and hit upon a brilliant idea: make a big pot of soup and bring it to work, anonymously.
The first Wednesday of 2010 was a test run. Mark made the soup the night before, brought it to the kitchen area in a slow cooker, set out bowls and spoons and a small sign describing the soup. By the third week, he added his name to the sign. And that’s when things began to change for him.
“I got e-mails, texts, and visits from people I had never met before,” he says. “Some people contacted me just to discuss cooking. It was great!” Keeping up with coworkers’ expectations meant many happy hours studying recipes and thinking about new soups to try. For someone who loves cooking, this is a very happy way to spend time.
But for Mark the real payoff was a change in his feelings about the job. “The soup has opened up new relationships with coworkers. I’ve interacted with many new people, and their positive feedback means a lot. The soup tradition has brought our whole team together. People call me the Soup Guy, and it’s a good feeling to know that they count on me to bring the soup.”
In fact, one of those new relationships that began with a chat about soup eventually led Mark to a new position within the company, one that gives him great satisfaction. He still takes soup to work once a week, and has no plans to stop. “I can’t believe how much my life has changed,” Mark says, “just from taking soup to work once a week.”
Recipe from Heather Vogel Frederick,
Soup and Solidarity
, Portland, Oregon
Serves 6
This richly flavored vegetarian chili takes advantage of eggplant’s propensity for soaking up flavors. Because eggplant is generally only available in summer, this is a summertime chili. And thus we have a chili for every season (see pages
page 50
,
page 148
, and
page 194
).
Make ahead?
Of course. See Heather’s comment in step 2. Besides, do you know any chili that isn’t better the second day?
For large crowds:
If you want chili for a crowd, this is an ideal choice since it does not contain any meat, the one ingredient that ups the cost when multiplied. I would double or triple the vegetables and beans, and gradually increase all the spices, tasting as you go.
Bellingham, Washington
Sometimes community-minded folks start a Soup Night; sometimes they inherit them. That’s what happened with Lewinna. She moved into a house in this city north of Seattle where a Soup Night was already happening.
The home was originally conceived as an intentional Christian community, and the Soup Night was part of that vision. It was a kind of ministry — anyone was welcome, including homeless people off the street. As far as Lewinna knows, none of them ever took advantage, but the idea did spread by word of mouth through ripples of acquaintanceship.
Once a month, Lewinna cooked a huge pot of soup (usually vegetarian); others often brought other food contributions, but that wasn’t expected. The soup, Lewinna says, “is my gift.”
All tech-savvy readers, take note. Lewinna gives us a good example of using technology to good advantage. She has created a social media group called A Moveable Feast, and uses that exclusively to contact her Soup Night list.
Boston, Massachusetts
What does a young man do when he arrives in a strange city in the middle of a very cold winter, knowing only a few people? If it’s a clever young man named Kawandeep, he initiates a Soup Night. “It helped me quickly grow my social circle,” he says. “I think it’s a very warm way to meet people. Whenever I run into someone I’d like to get to know better, I invite them to a Soup Night, and they always seem to like the sound of that. I have a much larger role in the creative community now, and to a large extent I owe it to having the Soup Nights, and encouraging them to be spaces to share ideas and connect with others through conversation. That’s the underlying intention of many social gatherings, of course, but I spelled it out on the invitation, and I believe that helped.”
Serves 6
Andouille sausage is a smoked, highly seasoned pork and beef sausage that is especially popular in the South. It adds a great spicy flavor to this soup. And here is another opportunity to use up some of your zucchini!
Make ahead?
Yes, up through end of step 1.
For large crowds:
This soup lends itself well to being expanded. For economy, you might want to keep the amount of sausage proportionally lower, but its flavor will still come through.