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Cream Of Asparagus Soup (Photos)

Posted on 7/9/16 at 9:24 pm
Posted by MeridianDog
Home on the range
Member since Nov 2010
14158 posts
Posted on 7/9/16 at 9:24 pm
Here is our way of making this soup.

To make three servings you will need:

Asparagus - maybe 16 stalks here
1/3 to 1/2 of a large onion
1 Tablespoon celery
3 Tablespoons unsalted butter
6 ounces heavy cream
2 cups good chicken stock
1/8 teaspoon cayenne pepper
1 teaspoon salt (to taste)
1 cup water
Lemon juice



Trim the asparagus leaving 2 inches in tops and remove the tough bottom part.



Blanch tops in lightly salted water for maybe 3 minutes.



Then quench in ice water and set aside.



Cut asparagus into 1/4 to 1/2 inch pieces, dice onion and celery.



Sauté onions and celery in 2 Tablespoons butter in a heavy boiler until tender then add asparagus and cook until the asparagus begins to soften.



Add 1/8 teaspoon cayenne pepper (to taste)



I like to harvest the flavor from the tough pieces of asparagus, so in a separate pan I slowly simmer them in 1 cup water until 1/2 - 3/4 reduced.



Then add the 2 cups of chicken broth and 1/4 cup of reduced water harvested from the tough asparagus ends.



Cover and cook at a low boil for 15-20 minutes. The asparagus needs to be tender at end of cooking.



Process the hot soup through a blender. If you have never blended hot liquid, I need to warn you to be very careful. Start the machine on the slowest speed with a cloth on top of the lid and guard against blender explosions.



I blended my soup for maybe 5 minutes.

Return the soup to the heavy boiler, add the heavy cream, bring to a simmer and whisk in 1 Tablespoon of butter. Add a splash of lemon juice to brighten the flavor and taste for salt and pepper.



Plate the soup in a shallow bowl and add the tops you have blanched earlier.



Spoon view:



This is a nice creamy soup with good asparagus flavor.

All my stuff
This post was edited on 8/3/16 at 10:11 am
Posted by OTIS2
NoLA
Member since Jul 2008
50092 posts
Posted on 7/9/16 at 9:27 pm to
Posted by emboslice
Member since Dec 2012
4519 posts
Posted on 7/9/16 at 9:40 pm to
Looks good
Posted by Layabout
Baton Rouge
Member since Jul 2011
11082 posts
Posted on 7/9/16 at 9:42 pm to
Sounds delicious. I'd make one suggestion: use an immersion blender so you don't have to transfer the hot soup.
Posted by steakbombLSU
H-Town
Member since Feb 2005
5423 posts
Posted on 7/10/16 at 12:04 am to
How does your pee smell?
Posted by Walt OReilly
Poplarville, MS
Member since Oct 2005
124258 posts
Posted on 7/10/16 at 1:50 am to
Looks good

Not too hot for a soup?
Posted by TheRoarRestoredInBR
Member since Dec 2004
30279 posts
Posted on 7/10/16 at 2:09 am to
Good work. Try Shallots next time instead of White Onion..the lite sweetness makes a difference..a lil White Pepper instead of Cayenne.
This post was edited on 7/10/16 at 2:14 am
Posted by Gris Gris
OTIS!NO RULES FOR SAUCES ON STEAK!!
Member since Feb 2008
47360 posts
Posted on 7/10/16 at 4:02 am to
Looks great and I love soups, anytime, as you know! Great basic soup.

I'm also a fan of shallots. Also thought of leeks.

Love my immersion blender. Do you have one, MD?
Posted by MeridianDog
Home on the range
Member since Nov 2010
14158 posts
Posted on 7/10/16 at 8:43 am to
quote:

Love my immersion blender. Do you have one, MD?


Had a nice one and got rid of it when we moved. Got rid of lots of stuff in our move to a smaller house. Funny how many tools are functionally duplicated in a kitchen.

Happy to have first world problems. The blender works very well and gives a very nice creamy base for the soup.

quote:

Too hot for soup?


Never too hot for soup. That is what those lower numbers are for on the AC thermostat.
This post was edited on 7/10/16 at 8:48 am
Posted by MeridianDog
Home on the range
Member since Nov 2010
14158 posts
Posted on 7/10/16 at 8:46 am to
Shallots, leaks, white pepper.

All would work fine. I used available resources and they worked just fine also.

Posted by Darla Hood
Near that place by that other place
Member since Aug 2012
13904 posts
Posted on 7/10/16 at 9:02 am to
Never too hot for soup for me, also! Looks good.

And those quartz counters are smokin'!
Posted by HoustonGumbeauxGuy
Member since Jul 2011
29472 posts
Posted on 7/10/16 at 1:44 pm to
Would fap to that

Posted by Sir Drinksalot
Member since Aug 2005
16740 posts
Posted on 7/19/16 at 5:38 am to
MD, I made this yesterday. It was so good! I didn't have celery but added garlic. Am thinking shrimp might be a nice addition. Also I might roast the ends next times for some crunch. I used my immersion blender and it was quite effective with zero mess.
Thx!
Posted by Midget Death Squad
Meme Magic
Member since Oct 2008
24494 posts
Posted on 7/19/16 at 11:05 am to
I will make it this week. Looks great



Spice suggestion: I have come to love coriander in my veggie cream soups. I use it in my cauliflower and broccoli soups, and it adds a great flavor. Give it a shot next time you do a soup.
Posted by Twenty 49
Shreveport
Member since Jun 2014
18729 posts
Posted on 7/19/16 at 1:51 pm to
quote:

Not too hot for a soup?


We sat outside last weekend and ate hot tomato soup. Sometimes you have a craving.
Posted by Midget Death Squad
Meme Magic
Member since Oct 2008
24494 posts
Posted on 8/6/16 at 8:42 am to
MD, I followed your recipe last night and you knocked this out the park! I doubled the amount but still used half of a large onion and one celery stalk. I also added some coriander (I love this in cream soups).

The main difference was I used a homemade veggie stock I had in freezer. Other than that I followed this as you instructed.

Good job bub
Posted by Stadium Rat
Metairie
Member since Jul 2004
9534 posts
Posted on 8/6/16 at 5:28 pm to
MD, you really know how to cook. Simmering the tough ends would, I'm sure put this dish over the top. great presentation, too.
Posted by CP3LSU25
Louisiana
Member since Feb 2009
51150 posts
Posted on 12/11/18 at 8:10 pm to
Just cooked this masterpiece
Posted by ruzil
Baton Rouge
Member since Feb 2012
16873 posts
Posted on 12/11/18 at 9:59 pm to
quote:

How does your pee smell?


Science tells us that everyone's pee smell pungent after eating asparagus, but not everyone has the ability to smell asparagus pee.
Posted by Gris Gris
OTIS!NO RULES FOR SAUCES ON STEAK!!
Member since Feb 2008
47360 posts
Posted on 12/12/18 at 12:07 am to
Using the tough ends for broth is what I do. It’s such a good tip. Soup looks terrific!
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