Ingredients
[serves 4]
·
1 large onion finely chopped
·
olive oil
·
4 cloves garlic thinly sliced
·
100 gr bacon/ pancetta diced
·
small bunch parsley roughly
chopped
·
250 gr lentils [I used green ones]
·
1 litre stock vegetable or chicken,
water also works
·
Large bunch of chard
·
Salt & pepper
·
1 lemon
·
small bunch fresh mint
Instructions
– use a large pot
1.
Soften the onion in the oil over a low heat, add
the garlic and chopped bacon. Stir in the parsley
2.
Wash the chard thoroughly, set aside 4 beautiful
stalks and leaves. Chop stalks thoroughly, set leaves aside. Add stalks to
onions and bacon, continue cooking
3.
Wash the lentils and stir them into the onions.
Pour over the stock, bring to the boil. Add a bay leaf or two if you like. Turn
the heat down, so the lentils simmer merrily, and almost cover with a lid. Leave
till they are tender but far from collapse- about 30 mins depending on your
lentils
4.
Tear the reserved leave up a bit, tip them into
the soup. Steam the whole leaves till tender.
5.
Season with salt and pepper, lemon juice and
mint leaves – tasting as you go. Serve in warmed bowls, add the steamed chard,
and serve with more lemon and mint for those who want it.
Notes
I had no mint or fresh lemon – I added a teaspoon of mint sauce from the jar in the fridge, and a small finely chopped preserved lemon.It worked ok!
Bob
suggested that when we eat the second half [it keeps up to 3 days in the
fridge] I should add some smoked paprika to give it an extra flavour.
I don't remember eating Swiss Chard until this summer when our neighbours, who have a smallholding, gave us some. I was totally hooked on this vegetable. I made a cream soup with stems, onion, garlic powder and I forget what else. I like the idea of the hearty soup now that we are approaching colder weather.
ReplyDeleteNS adds juniper berries to his cream sauce
DeleteNS cookery books look good enough to eat!
ReplyDeleteThis one is lovely. Thank you so much
DeleteThis one is lovely. Thank you so much
DeleteDefinitely time for soup and well done for adapting the NS recipe. I have a bag of frozen cauliflower in the freezer which would make some lovely soup with potatoes and seasoning added. Catriona
ReplyDeleteSoup is a brilliant way to use up leftover "lurking" veg - from the fridge, freezer or garden
ReplyDeleteThe NS recipe sounds good. We love spicy butternut squash soup and curried parsnip soup. Both hearty and comforting but any veg soup is good 👍. Regards Sue H
ReplyDeleteSquash soup yes. Parsnip soup no [Bob doesn't like parsnip. I had a Bad Experience with parsnip soup in my youth which has put me off for life!]
DeleteI LOVE Chard!!! When I was first home from Bali and working, I lived on Tesco Value spaghetti with tinned tomatoes and home grown chard with grated cheese. Mine has self seeded for the past 2-3 years after having planted some and I'm grateful as we have eaten so much- it's quite expensive in supermarkets! The school raised bed has lots and no one else eats it so I've been eating it since July! The soup sounds a nice idea. I've used it in Anna Jones' "Full of greens courgette fritters' too. These are a lovely recipe! Can send you a copy if you want? It does have feta and parmesan in it though- I know you have cheese issues! Kx
ReplyDeleteOoh, I have just found her recipe on the internet. Thank you for the recommendation. I can manage feta cheese. These may appear on the menu very soon!
DeleteThat sounds tasty, and very healthy. :-)
ReplyDeleteYes, on both counts
DeleteI've had a couple of NS books, I like his cooking and presenting style, he's very thoughtful and quietly passionate.
ReplyDeleteI like 'quietly passionate'!
DeleteThat soup sounds good! I grew chard one year and the rainbow chard didn't grow too well, but, there was one other kind of chard that practically refused to die until the summer heat finally killed it. I am thinking of growing chard again, this year, too - it's a winter crop for us.
ReplyDelete