The Reluctant Chef
It’s New Year’s Eve? So tomorrow you start on your diet, right? OK, that’s probably a bit presumptive. It’s New Year’s Eve, so tomorrow I start on my diet. Today, I get rid of all the party food in the house, and one of the ways I do this is through soup.
You need to understand that I learned to cook as a student, when my ingredients were ‘whatever is being thrown away at the market’ and water. Despite now being many decades older, I’ve never seen any need to learn to cook any other way. You probably also need to understand that I hate cooking, and only do it in preference to starving.
There’s a reason why my characters live off supernoodles and pizza, and the most complicated cookery they ever attempt is throwing some mixed herbs, olive oil and parmesan on top of spaghetti (Finn from Trowchester Blues.) They all enjoy their food, but they enjoy it best when it’s cooked by someone else.
Have I lowered your expectations enough? Probably not. You probably still won’t believe I had the cheek to offer this as a recipe. But I did! Behold and boggle:
New Year’s Eve soup
Fry a chopped onion in a massive pan.
Take all your savoury leftovers (which you have been storing in the freezer for just this occasion) and roughly chop them. Throw them in the pan with the onions and fry the whole lot.
Add two pints of water. If you have any left over gravy, fling that in too. Otherwise, add a stock cube. Bring to the boil and then allow to simmer for about an hour.
Blend to smoothness with a hand blender.
Taste.
Add things to make it taste better. Eg, soy sauce or cumin or paprika if it needs more depth, left over cranberry jelly and Christmas pudding if it needs more sweetness. Etc – whatever you have on hand.
If it’s too thin, add a couple of handfuls of lentils.
If it’s too thick, add water.
~
Tell yourself thank God that’s over. Now I can get back to something interesting, and have your last glass of wine for the year while contemplating what you’re going to write next.
Happy New Year! May it be full of good dinners you didn’t have to cook for yourself 🙂
ZAM mentioned that I probably share this method of cookery with the Saxons, who famously dismissed the entire art of the chef by declaring “I can boil what I need to boil by myself.” So I’m going to use that tenuous hook to tie this post in to The Reluctant Berserker, in which cookery also fails to play a prominent part in everyone’s lives.
Yeah! I found your recipe. My kind of cooking. Throw leftovers in a pot. Thanks for the recipe.
Dejamew@centurylink.net
Hi Alex, I like your ‘recipe’ for soup using savory leftovers, have you ever had any fails using this recipe? Wishing you a Happy 2015! ardent(dot)ereader(at)gmail(dot)com
I have never of anything like that before. Thanks for sharing! Happy New Year!
This was the most amazing recipe yet. It had me laughing within seconds. And at least you chopped an onion, right? 🙂 thanks for sharing.
Waxapplelover (at) gmail (dot) com
You cook like my sister. That is one recipe I don’t need to duplicate.
I forgot to add, you do get major points for honesty and for trying. Bravo!!
Your soup sounds like a great idea, though I’m not sure I’m adventurous enough to try it in my kitchen. 😀 I try to use leftovers in other ways, though. Not good to throw away edible food…
Thanks for the recipe. I am not sure if the comment I left using my Ipad will show up.
It doesn’t seem to have yet. You were wise to do it twice 🙂
I am a big fan of soups….a few ingredients can feed a lot of people. I too have shopped the “managers specials and reduced” veggies.
cmucha319 AT yahoo DOT com
I’m surprised more people don’t, tbh. But then I do have a fairly robust digestion and don’t care much about the taste, so I’m probably their ideal customer 😉
Can’t get any easier than that! Thank you for the recipe!
juliesmall2016(at)gmail(dot)com
I’m all for easy when it comes to anything that takes me away from the fun stuff. Now I just need a robot vacuum and I’m all set.
I can get behind that kind of cooking. I can burn water so I’m not allowed to cook much. True story. ANyway, hope you have a Happy New Year.
I tried that angle for years with my family but they still haven’t got the hint yet. They have learned to love burnt food though 🙂 Happy New Year to you too!
LOL, thank you for the fun post! I’m not really one for cooking either.
humhumbum AT yahoo DOT com
These recipe exchanges sometimes leave you feeling a bit intimidated, don’t they? (Or perhaps that’s just me too.) Happy New Year!
LOL. Sometimes the best dishes came from leftovers according to food historians, such as Caesar salad, cioppino etc.
Happy New Year!
strive4bst(AT) yahoo (Dot)com
This is true! But I think most of them were combined with more imagination than I typically use. I’ll never win a prize, but at least I eat relatively healthily. Happy New Year to you too!
a cook after my own heart! lol
leetee2007(at)hotmail(dot)com
Hi five to a fellow reluctant chef 🙂
What a great way to get rid of leftovers 😉
Thanks! I use it all the time, and never get quite the same soup twice 😉
I’m not a great cook either. I just eat when I get hungry and follow the directions on the back of the box^-^
I yearn for the days when I used to be able to eat processed food. Now I’m on a permanent diet that involves cooking everything from scratch. It’s very annoying, so I tend to make big batches and then ration them out over several days.
Some like a great way to take care of leftovers.
debby236 at gmail dot com and hotmail
I have to admit I use it all the time. It’s just that normal week’s soup tends to be a lot more vegetarian 🙂
Amber A. is also kissedbymidnigh on the other blogs. I signed in with my livejournal, but here it didn’t allow that and I just thought you wouldn’t realize it was the same person.
Hi Amber! I’m sorry my software is being difficult for you, but it’s great to see you. Happy New Year!
The Saxons – cooks after my own heart!!
Happy new year, dear Alex. I hope 2015 is good to you. xxx
Thanks Elin! I hope so for you too. We’re about due a good year, I think (though the universe may not agree with me.) Happy New Year to you too!
Sounds good, but my sister always gets mad at me when I give her recipes like that. She wants everything measured and exact. Oh well. Happy New Year! 🙂
I don’t really have the patience for recipes like that. It seems like a lot of trouble for something you’re just going to eat afterwards. Happy New Year to you too!
[…] Harper Alex Beecroft Lou Silvre Posy Roberts […]
What a great idea for using up leftovers!
Thank you! I use it a lot, not just at Christmas. It just tends to be more turkeyish on the new year 😉
I love it. It’s simple and a great way to empty out the leftovers.
Happy New Year!
Thanks! It’s unpredictable too – you never get it tasting quite the same way any two times running 🙂
Happy New Year to you too!
Now I know what I should do with my overstuffed freezer. Happy New Year.
Soup solves all kinds of food-related problems 🙂 Happy New Year to you too!
this sounds like something my mom does periodically — she makes a pot of soup using all the leftovers she can find, then freezes the soup in individual portions for lunches to take to work. 😀
tracykitn AT yahoo DOT com
She sounds like a lady after my own heart 🙂 It does make a good soup for lunches, with a bread roll or an omelet on the side.
Ha! My mother used to call that Refrigerator Soup (although she didn’t purée it). saruby213ATgmailDOTcom
I swear by my hand-blender! It’s a fantastic little machine. With a bowl and a different attachment I can also use it to make chocolate mousse out of cocoa powder and soy bean curd 🙂
I do this on a regular basis. It’s called ‘ let’s see what veggies are looking tired in the fridge today’ soup. It’s normally made on a Sunday evening so I can have it for work, can free up room in the fridge for the fresh stuff once bought, and if I’m lucky they’ll be a bit of roast dinner left to add some meat. If I’m really lucky I’ll have an open packet of sage and onion stuffing and I’ll sprinkle in a handful; it does a great job of thickening the soup.
Happy 2015, hope you have a great one.
Yes, I regularly do this with the vegetables that are starting to look too old to eat in any other way. Add a bit of dried soup mix (dried barley, lentils, dried peas) and a can of tomatoes and it makes a decent soup for lunches.
Happy 2015 to you too!
Argh, my stupid comments section where nobody can tell who I’m talking too! Let’s try that again:
@Ardent Ereader I haven’t had many fails with this, as I just keep adding ingredients until I can stomach it. I have had some soups which were so heavily curried I couldn’t taste any of the original ingredients though. They were OK – I could still eat them while reading something interesting.
@Waxapplelover Thank you! I’m glad you approve 🙂 Though you may be dismayed to find that I have recently discovered you can buy pre-chopped frozen onion, and I suspect my chopping days are over 🙂
@Kaytee Thanks! I think if it mattered to me I would probably try to do it better, but it’s just not my thing. My husband seems to enjoy it more than me. I’d rather be cleaning the bathrooms, tbh.
Hee! My kind of recipe! Thanks! anamaribelcardens@yahoo.com
Ugh, sorry, my e-mail is anamaribelcardenas@yahoo.com. 🙁
Thanks Mari! Got it! 🙂
I do this every now and again with leftover veggies I have in the fridge. 🙂 Thanks for it!
love2read28@gmail.com
Thanks Dawn! Yes, I just ate the first serving of mine tonight and it was good 🙂
I actually made soup this past weekend after christmas with veggies and roasted turkey!
tamikamclaurin(at)hotmail(dot)com
Thanks Tamika! It sounds like it would be good soup too 🙂
Great idea for those pesky leftovers that I get sick of eating in their original form. Thanks for the post and Happy 2015!
jen.f {at} mac {dot} com
Thanks Jen! And Happy New Year to you too 🙂
So many recipes call for fresh new ingredients, love that this is able to put those leftover ones to good use.
Thanks Melora! And yes, things go past their best so fast it’s good to have something to do with them that isn’t just throwing them out.
Thank goodness for Food Network or I would still only have this level of skill.
alishead1@yahoo.com
*g* Oh, I watch the cooking programmes with great interest, but I think the only thing I learned from them was that you could chop your onions in a food processor rather than by hand. That did make a great improvement 🙂
I’ve used this method to make any leftover vegetable into cream of vegetable soup! Simply sauté a chopped onion with whatever leftover veggie you want to soupify, then add stock to cover & simmer til it’s tender, then purée it with the immersion blender (which is an awesome kitchen tool, btw!) and add a bit of cream or milk. Add salt & pepper to taste and you have a lovely soup!
I quite agree, Mandy 🙂 As – for me – it’s diet soup, I don’t add the cream, but I find that a dollop of 0 fat yoghurt is almost as good.
I love recipes that change up leftovers.
Thanks Jillian! It’s less a recipe and more a suggestion, but I’m glad you approve 🙂
Haha, your recipe measurements seem like what my mother would say!
OceanAkers @ aol.com
Thanks Juliana! Yes, when you don’t like to cook but you nevertheless have to cook, it pays to develop a fairly casual attitude towards food. No point stressing out any more than necessary about it 🙂