Peasant-Style Potato
and Kale Soup
Adapted from The Daily Green recipe, now housed on Goodhouskeeping.com.
Ingredients
6 ounces chorizo (about 2 medium-size links)
1 to 2 tablespoons olive oil
1 medium onion, chopped
6 garlic cloves, peeled
8 medium potatoes, peeled and cut into 1-inch chunks (Yukon
golds give a nice flavor)
8 cups chicken broth (or substitute leftover potato cooking
water for up to 3 cups worth)
1½ cup well-chopped kale
Method
Slice chorizo links lengthwise, then cross-wise into ½-inch
pieces. Drizzle large sauce pan or stockpot with a bit of olive oil. Brown
chorizo on both sides, then remove from pan and set aside.
Saute onion in chorizo drippings; you may well need to add
more olive oil at this point, depending on how fatty your sausage is.
When onion is tender, add a splash of the broth to deglaze
the brown bits on the bottom of the pan. Then add remaining broth, garlic and
potatoes. Bring to a boil. Reduce heat, cover and simmer until potatoes are
tender, 15 to 20 minutes.
Remove potatoes and garlic from the pan to a large bowl.
Smash until nearly mashed potatoes. You’re going for the consistency that’s
sort of badly mashed potatoes that you wouldn’t want to serve your Thanksgiving
guests. It will give the soup creaminess, but still have some substantial consistency
to it. (If you prefer to have some potato chunks still in your soup, just
remove about 2/3 of the potatoes to mash; it works well both ways.)
Return potatoes to the pan along with kale. Return to a boil
and cook covered for another 30 minutes to fully cook kale. Return chorizo to
pan and heat through. Claims to serve 8, and it might come close, because it’s
hearty.
Rating: This is
the soup I haul out from the freezer in the depths of the Minnesota
unpleasantness, when winter is totally kicking my ass. It’s rib-sticking
comfort food, and freezing and reheating the soup gives the chorizo a chance to
permeate the soup with its flavor.
Note: OK, what’s
up with that bit about the potato cooking water? Flavor and substance, that’s
what. Whenever I cook a mega batch of potatoes for a family gathering, I save
the thickest part of the cooking water and store it in the freezer for later
use in soups, particularly those that involve potatoes.
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