Monday, May 23, 2011

SOOUUUUUP!!!!

Share tonight's soup experience? Why of course.

It was inspired by sukiyaki and shabu shabu style foods I ate in Busan a few weeks back - not in the presentation mode so much as general thought - cook up a broth for a while, then add some nice fresh ingredients just a few minutes before eating. Actually cooking it on the table seemed a little overkill. Apart from a vegetable stock I spent an arduous half a day making once, this is certainly the tastiest soup base I've ever done - great basic flavor from the mushroom/onion saute, but a lot of depth is added by the deglazing mixture. But really I haven't made many soups, so there wasn't much competition.

This should make 3-4 modest servings.

the base
Saute half a chopped onion in a little olive oil (1 or 2 T is plenty). Get it well on its way to being caramelized. In fact, if you're not as hungry as I was, go ahead and caramelize it. A little before the onion's done, add a handful or two of thickly sliced mushrooms (any kind but white mushrooms), and throw in a couple teaspoons of salt for good measure.

the rest
Let it continue cooking. Stir frequently but not continuously, and when it's ready (you'll really smell the mushrooms nicely), deglaze with a couple liberal tablespoons of some vinegar. I used garlic-flavored wine vinegar. Balsamic and other wine vinegars - including rice - would work, too. Throw in a couple teaspoons soy sauce and a couple t. fish sauce if you're up to it. Let this simmer for a few more minutes over medium heat, then turn the heat up to high and add 2-ish quarts of water and a bay leaf. I also added a splash of a mushroom broth base gel concentrate thing I found at some grocery store and a few ounces of leftover ground beef (already cooked. with taco seasoning...).

Bring the water to a light boil and throw in a package of uncooked lo mein noodles. When it starts boiling again turn the heat back to medium/medium-high. After the noodles have cooked, throw in some sliced veggies'n'stuff. I put in bok choy, green onions, and fresh cilantro. Let it simmer on medium heat for a couple minutes and you're good to go.

the verdict
lo mein noodles are much easier to eat with chopsticks than udon noodles. also, remember to take the bay leaf out before you spoon yourself a bowl.