Showing posts with label sausage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sausage. Show all posts

Friday, November 7, 2008

Sweet Potato and Sausage Soup

What It Is: A very good soup, probably unlike most things you have ever had. Broth bursting with flavor to compete with the best Thai and Vietnamese soups, although this hails from Spain. There is one ingredient that makes this dish work, so it should not be done without it. Make something else if you don't have:

1 string Palacios Spanish Hot Chorizo sausage

Authentic Spanish chorizo is made from the same acorn fed (up to 30 pounds per day) Iberian pork that becomes jamón Ibérico. Ground pork is seasoned with paprika, garlic, salt and sherry and the sausage smoked over a period of months. The result is a sausage unlike you have tasted before, and an incredible improvement on the fresh chorizo available in the supermarket. Slice the sausage into thin rounds, and maybe eat one or two slices. Meanwhile, in a soup pot, saute

2 chopped onions
3 chopped garlic cloves

with a little olive oil. Add

1-2 peeled, cubed yams
1-2 small, peeled, cubed potatoes

And cook until starting to brown, about 10 minutes. Add

6 cups of decent chicken broth

And let simmer until potatoes are soft, about 20 minutes. At this point, taste the soup. It will be boring. Not to worry. In a small amount of olive oil, saute the sliced sausage until they brown, about 8 minutes. This will produce a good amount of seasoned oil, which you can use later, or save for some fried eggs in the morning. When the soup is ready, add the sausage and let that simmer for a little bit. We let the soup sit for a half hour, which helped to spread the sausage flavor around. At the last moment, add

Several large handfuls of fresh spinach

to the pot, and stir until wilted. Serve with crusty bread.

Tuesday, August 7, 2007

Quick Garden Sausage Medley


Olive Oil
2 Italian Sausages
Garlic, smashed and finely chopped
1/2 Onion, julienned
1 Yellow Sweet Pepper, julienned
Can o’ Tomatoes, diced ideally
1 cube chicken bullion, crushed
2 smallish zucchinis
4 T Pesto
Fennel Seed
S&P
Red Pepper flakes

Pasta of your choice, cooking simultaneously

Cook the Italian sausages using the method of your choice, as long as you choice is pan frying with a little olive oil. Remove, and keep warm. In the same skillet, sauté several cloves of garlic and the onion. Add the sweet pepper and cook until slightly soft over medium high heat. Stir in a can of tomatoes and the chicken bullion. When well mixed add the zucchini and pesto, and season with fennel seed to make everything more sausage-y, salt and pepper to make it taste like food, and red pepper flakes for a kick. Serve over pasta – we used homemade spinach linguini, dried from a separate pasta-making excursion. The spinach and zucchini were from the garden, the sweet pepper from Costco. . Let’s hear it for Costco produce. Three weeks in the fridge and not a single blemish. How do you like them [overpackaged and unorganic] apples?