A Small Taste of Summer

“…on the table, in the belt of summer, the tomato, luminary of earth, repeated and fertile star, shows us its convolutions, its canals, the illustrious plenitude and the abundance…” – Pablo Neruda.

The fellow is right.

Orbs of joy.

Orbs of joy.

Wow, I had to post again so soon because the cherry tomatoes growing in the veggie patch were too good to pass up. The hot summer sun intensifies the rich flavour of these little orbs of joy. They have a richness of flavour not found in supermarket varieties. They positively explode in your mouth when you bite into them, and as we had a glut of them, I decided to make soup. Simple and unadulterated fresh tomato soup.

Take one large finely diced onion and sweat it off in a big pan with some robust extra virgin olive oil for a good hour. Yes, you read correctly, one hour. This intensifies the sweetness of the onion and develops those lovely caramel flavours and colour that will give a great  base note to the soup. Because you are sweating them on such a low heat you are free to potter in the kitchen doing other things and stir the pot once in a while. Trust me, the aroma will have you back often enough.

Very slowly heated onion.

Very slowly heated onion.

When the onions are soft and nicely golden you can add the uncut tomatoes (if they are big cut them up) and give them a gentle warming with the onion to soften them and free up some juices. It is better to skin them first but these where too small and fiddly so when the soup was cooked I passed the liquid through a fine sieve. You could use skinned tinned tomatoes if you don’t have fresh ones by the way.

Glistening succulence

Glistening succulence.

At this point a little water facilitates the juices flowing out of the tomatoes. Simmer gently for about 45 minutes. If you’ve already removed the skins you can stick blend or puree the soup at this point and add some salt. That is all that it needs. A simple and tasty showcase for fresh, sunny summer tomatoes. Yummo…

Ready to go.

Ready to go.

You could, if you were so inclined, add some shaved parmesan and a wee bit of black pepper, but honestly, it was delightful just as it was.

Needless to say, fresh crusty bread served with lashings of good butter goes down a treat!

Kind regards,

J

Hot Stuff Baby

Funny how you fancy hot food when the temperature is hovering around 35’c plus…

Long time between drinks.

Spicy dahl with some lime pickle and marinated lamb rump, cooked on the barbie for dinner. Yummo.

Dahl starts with a spice blend. This one was cumin, black mustard, fennel and fennugreek seeds dry roasted and then ground. Oh, and a tablespoon of ground turmeric for good measure.

Dry roasted spices and turmeric.

Dry roasted spices and turmeric.

Mashed garlic with ghee and some minced ginger.

Mashed garlic and ginger with some diced onions.

Mashed garlic and ginger with some diced onions.

Fry off an onion until transparent in some nice ghee. add the dry spices and fry until fragrant. Add the garlic/ginger mix and sweat for a couple of minutes till it smells good. Chuck in a cup of pre-soaked lentils and add 3 cups of water and a couple of chillies (I used a red and green one this time)

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Pre-soaked lentils.

Pressure cook for 15 mins on low and then let it naturally release. Add seasoning to taste, like maybe 3 tablespoons of fish sauce and 2 tablespoons of lime juice and viola!

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BBQ lamb to the left, Dahl to the right and marinade sauce with lime pickle above. Doesn’t photograph as well as it tastes. But it was Delicious .

Small portion, but it was so tasty. Well worth the effort to cook. And it’s lamb. And it’s Australia day! Yay!

I hope you liked it too.

Kind regards,

J.