It was our cookery club Autumn menu, this time the venue was at our good friend and goumet Kalle. As normal the host provides the "Raumlichkeit" and does the main course, this time it was to be an Autumn Risotto. Alas Martin could not be with us as he was partying on the Havel or the Spree or may be both, I do hope it was on and not in as it is a little cool this time of the year. But I digress (as usual), the rest of the menu is described in my following blog.
Saturday morning was a quick visit to Kiels wonderful "Wochenmarkt" at Exerzierplatz, alas on reaching Exerzierplatz I found not the market but a tented enclosure with much winnying and naying going on, it was the stabling for the Baltic horse show that was taking place in the adjacent arena. So I then knew that the market would be taking place on the other large platz, The Wilhelmplatz, so a quick leg up to Willi (as it is known in Kiel). I bought my shrimps and visited out favorite vegetable stall, run by Anka and her husband. I then left Linda and Kalle to head for home as I had bread proving and I wanted to get the soup on the go.
Ankas big pumpkins
The Soup
To make 6 large servings.
1kg ripe tomatoes
4 large red peppers
To make the stock
1 small onion halved and each half studded with bay leaf held
in place with a clove
2 cloves of garlic crushed
White of a leek (about 10 cm long x 3 cm in dia) sliced
1 piece of celeriac (or a stalk of celery) diced
A sprig each of thyme, rosemary and parsley
A sprig each of thyme, rosemary and parsley
Shells from the shrimps
2 L water (or a good stock for a stronger soup)
The remainder of the ingredients
The remainder of the ingredients
2L of vegetable/fish stock (made with the shells and veg)
125g of sour cream
1 good pinch of smoked Spanish paprika powder
1 twig of rosemary
2 tablespoons of olive oil
Salt and pepper to taste
For the decoration
The flesh from the brown shrimps
1 yellow pepper diced quite small (5mmx5mm)
Flesh of 2 tomatoes (or better sun dried in oil) also diced
small
6 sprigs of rosemary
Method
1) Roast
the peppers and the tomatoes, remove the skin (this is easiest done by removing
them from the oven when the skins start to blacken, put them in a freezer bag
and allow to sweat, after about 30 minutes the skins will just come away from
the flesh, cut open and remove the seeds, pith and stalks
2) Shell
the brown shrimps (keeping the meat to one side)
Making the stock
3) Put the shells in a pan with a table spoon of oil and fry over a high heat, put the soup vegetables in another pan and add the garlic, fry the lot in the rest of the oil until the veg starts to soften, transfer the shells and top up with 2 litre of water (or better still a good vegetable of fish stock stock), add spiked onion and bring to the boil, skim and simmer for 15-20 minutes.
4) Strain
through a sieve lined with muslin into a clean pan, squeezing as much of the
goodness out as possible (you can of course buy ready made shrimp paste, but
this is much more fun).
5) Chop
the paprika and tomato flesh (remove the seeds, when you remove the skins) add
this to the stock.
6) Remove
the rosemary leaves from the stem and chop quite fine (reserve 6 sprigs to
decorate) add this to the soup bring to the boil and simmer for 5minutes.
7) Add
the smoked paprika powder and blend the whole lot either in a blender of use a
magic wand (this is a gumbo so it doesn’t have to be really smooth, you’re
going to put some more bits in anyway.
10) Here you
can either pour into a terrine and add the diced yellow pepper, and tomatoes,
or as I prefer to do, ladle into individual soup bowls and crown with a cream foam
topping dusted with smoked paprika and a sprig of rosemary resting on the foam. Or roast a crouton spread with shrimp butter (or potted shrimps) and topped with a solitary unpeeled shrimp. (looks very good, but the shell is a bit of a fumble so most just leave it). Or snip some chive over the top and serve potted shrimp toast as a side accompaniment.
11) I served with the fougasse bread, a shrimp butter, my soup was topped with wasabi foam and rosemary
11) I served with the fougasse bread, a shrimp butter, my soup was topped with wasabi foam and rosemary
The fougasse the dough made to Remond Blanc's recipe, great, but he should have said how much dough this makes. Linda has now enough fougasse dough frozen away to make another two loafs.
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