Tomato Soup for the Soul
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My Grandma
came to live with us when I was four so that my Dad didn’t have to farm me and
my sister out to relatives. Grandma was a good cook and taught me the
learn-it-by-doing-it method. She told me that she had to bake bread every day
raising her own seven children and she didn’t intend to bake another loaf of
bread.
Funny, she
made bread rolls every Sunday and the pies, cakes, cinnamon rolls, cookies that
rolled out of her oven were bountiful and delicious.
There were
things Grandma did that I followed without thought. Remembering back, I can see
red and white cans of soup lined up in the cupboard. Grandma often made us soup
for lunch, straight from the iconic Campbell’s can. I know Grandma fed her own children
homemade soup. There wasn’t money to buy canned goods of any kind during the
Depression.
What could
be more simple? Open the can, dump into a sauce pan, add water for straight
tomato or milk for creamy tomato. Heat and eat.
I don’t even
like it much. But in a pinch, a quick meal of tomato soup with a grilled cheese
sandwich hits the spot.
In later
years, I looked forward to my Dad picking me up at the train station in Havre.
We always went straight to the 4-B’s for their homemade tomato soup and grilled
cheese sandwich.
Three large,
perfectly beautiful, perfectly ripe, red, red Roma tomatoes sat on my counter.
Some ideas drop out of the sky. This one did not come from my head. “I’ll make tomato
soup.”
Because I
can, because I don’t have to adhere to a schedule, I have the option to cut no
corners. First I gathered onion, garlic, and bell pepper to go with my three
lovely red globes.
I roasted
the bell pepper over flames to take off the waxy covering and enhance the
flavor. I chopped some onion and garlic and put them in a sauce pan with butter.
Poured boiling water over the tomatoes and slipped off the skins. Chopped
tomatoes and put them in a bowl. Cleaned, seeded and chopped part of the pepper
and put it with the onion and garlic to simmer.
Once the
onions were translucent I put the tomatoes in the pot, added water to cover, a
little chicken consume, one very small piloncillo, the equivalent of a
tablespoon of brown sugar, and continued simmering to blend flavors and reduce
the whole mess. Outside, I grabbed a handful of cilantro, a generous sprig of
oregano, three leaves of marjoram because a little fresh marjoram goes a long
way, and a clutch of basil and chopped those leaves and added to the simmering
pot. Oh, yes, salt and pepper to taste.
I want to
let you know, this takes a lot longer than opening a can. So I went outside to
read my book for twenty minutes, a nice little rest break while the flavors
blended and simmered. The smells were making me hungry.
Once the
liquid had reduced to about half, I let the whole potful cool, read a couple
more chapters. Dumped all that into the blender and whizzed it.
In the same
pot, now empty, I melted butter and stirred in flour, making a roux. I wanted
creamy tomato soup, so I poured in a couple cups of milk. (Water for plain
tomato soup.) Once it began to thicken, I added the tomato-veggie-herb mix,
added more milk, stirring constantly, until it was the consistency I wanted.
Like I said,
this takes longer than opening a can. By now I am drooling. As soon as the soup
was hot, I ate a bowlful. Then I ate another bowlful.
But I wasn’t
finished yet. No, not done. Next I went around to the neighbors and bragged, “I
will never open another can of tomato soup.”
I can’t
explain it, but that soup was begging to be made. Sometimes a simple meal is
the most satisfying. Mmm-umm. Homemade tomato soup. With bread fresh from the
oven.
Why did I
not make tomato soup until now? I simply never thought of it. Or was it that
tomatoes were so hard to come by in winter-dominated Montana? I remind myself
that my tomatoes are field-ripened and not shipped 2500 miles in a refrigerated
truck.
Sondra
Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door
First days
of February
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