This weekend I had lots of cooking time on my hands since E and I were laying around pretty depressed about the impending doom that was creeping up on the Red Sox (not a word Bobbins! I'll come over there!). The only thing to do once fate was clinched and the series was not was to eat lots of comfort food. To me that can mean lots of things: spaghetti and meat balls, homemade mac and cheese, chicken and dumplings, tuna noodle casserole. This week it meant my version of onion soup for lunch and my mom's banana bread with huge cups of tea all late afternoon. Nothing better to soothe the slow ache of a season gone down the tubes.
How to make my Potato Onion Soup:
Ingredients:
4 cups yellow onion, sliced thin
2 medium red potatoes, sliced in half then sliced very thin (use a mandoline or a food processor for this!)
4 cloves of garlic, minced
1/3 cup red wine
3 Tbls. tomato paste
6 cups chicken stock
2 tsp. kosher salt
1 tsp. freshly ground black pepper
1 bay leaf
1 Tbls. olive oil
If you have a dutch oven for this soup, you're money. I don't have one, and it is the bane of my existence. (Maybe one day a fairy godmother, or my husband, will get one for me? Hint hint!) If you are sadly devoid of a dutch oven, use a big pot; it'll be ok.
We ate ours with little Blue Cheese Crescent Rolls and lots of sorrow. It was delicious and did make me feel a little better. The entire house smelled of onions, which I love, but E doesn't, so I baked a banana bread to cut the odor. I don't like most banana breads, and I will never buy it in a bakery or coffee shop because it is always too dry. I know everyone says it, but my mother's recipe is the best!
Suzy's Banana Bread:
Ingredients:
3 very ripe bananas (ultra ripe, brown skinned, and soft)
1 egg
1/2 cup vegetable oil
1 cup sugar
1 1/2 cups flour
1 tsp. salt
1 tsp. baking soda
1/2 cup chopped walnuts
Preheat your oven to 350 degrees. Blend banana, egg, oil, and sugar with a hand mixer until well combined. Beat in flour, salt, and baking soda. Fold in nuts and pour into a greased loaf pan. Bake for 45 minutes or until a knife inserted in the center comes out clean. Cool in pan for 5 minutes, then transfer to a wire rack. Eat it 'til it's gone!
Although this is one of my favorite comfort foods, we have to be real here. Is it good for you? No, but neither is binge drinking and how many of us did that this past month (err, weekend? yesterday?)? If you really want to lighten it up a little you can use 1/2 a cup of white flour mixed with 1 cup of whole wheat flour, and replace 1/3 of the cup of sugar with Splenda. It won't hurt your final product, but I haven't gone further than that. I don't want to mess too much with perfection! Off to eat my second slice of the day; maybe I should fit in a workout!
6 comments:
YUM!! that soup looks heavenly. sure could use a bowl for lunch on this fine rainy day :)
Thanks for the recipes! I'm totally a sloth in winter too. I love sitting with a hot cup of cocoa and reading in the evenings :)
That soup would kill my allergic-to-onions fiance, but it looks super yum.
I will definitely try your mom's banana bread recipe - I love spreading some Philly Cream Cheese on banana bread. Mmm.
I love that you have so many recipes up for grabs. These both looked awesome and I would almost rather SMELL THEM. I am now hungry and it's 9:18 pm. Fat lotta good it does me now, Jo Jo!! :)
Thanks all!
Jessica - I was thinking of Nick as I posted this. I have got to put up some onion free stuff!
Sheri- I'm working on a way to post printable recipe cards for everything, but it may be a while! I have lots of recipes to convert. I just hate jotting things down from blogs; I always mess something up!
Wow, I loved your cozy post and I am drooling over the banana bread. But as a shudder-when-I-see-them onion hater, I have to tell you that your photos will be giving me nightmares for years to come.
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