Tumgik
#potato soup
daily-deliciousness · 6 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Simple potato soup
2K notes · View notes
vegan-yums · 2 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Soup season 🥣
Sweet vegan butternut squash soup
Classic lentil soup
Cream of mushroom soup
Cream of broccoli soup
Classic potato soup
Beer cheese soup
Broccoli cheddar soup
Creamy tomato bisque
Potato leek soup
9K notes · View notes
niftyrecipe · 6 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Simple potato soup
Follow for recipes
More Then 1000+ Recipes =>
281 notes · View notes
foodtiktoks · 8 months
Text
by timebucks on tiktok
291 notes · View notes
saltandlavenderblog · 3 months
Text
Tumblr media
Italian sausage vegetable soup recipe
98 notes · View notes
grandmawitch · 1 year
Text
✨My mom’s super simple secret potato soup recipe (only a secret from my dad who HATES gravy)✨
•One large sweet onion, diced
•3-4 carrots, thinly sliced
•3 celery ribs, thinly sliced
•3-4 potatoes, diced (or as many as you like, this soup can make a little or a lot. Follow your heart.)
•2 Tbsp butter
•1 Tbsp dried basil
•Knorr powdered broth (vegetable or chicken)
•salt & pepper
•1 package of pepper gravy mix, whisked up with 1.5 cups of water in a separate bowl (my mom’s secret thickener 🙏🤣)
Melt butter over medium heat in a large soup pot or Dutch oven and add the onion, carrots, celery, and potatoes.
Stir and get everything nice and coated in butter and let it cook for about 5 minutes.
Use a measuring cup to add water until the vegetables are covered by a good inch, keep track of about how much water you used so you can add the proportional amount of broth powder once it is boiling (one tsp powder to one cup water).
Turn soup up to medium high heat and when it starts to boil add your broth powder and dried basil. Place the lid on and return to medium/low heat and let it simmer/lightly boil for about 15-20 minutes. Until potatoes are getting soft.
Stir in your pepper gravy mix (I don’t follow package direction, I just slowly whisk in 1-1.5 cups of cold water in a separate bowl then add to soup pot). I like to crack in a ton more pepper too and quite a bit of salt.
Cover again and simmer for another 15 minutes.
Taste for saltiness and adjust seasoning if necessary, enjoy!
✨If it gets too thick (leftovers might be the next day) just add more water.
417 notes · View notes
cacartoon · 9 months
Text
Tumblr media
I made Loaded Baked Potato Soup
My first time actually making soup
Very creamy and comforting.
110 notes · View notes
llovelymoonn · 1 year
Text
favourite poems of april
daniel nyikos potato soup
mary oliver when death comes
walt whitman leaves of grass: “whoever you are holding me now in hand”
kazim ali refuge temple
d.a. powell republic
toi derricotte natural birth: “november”
cathy song the age of reptiles
dante émile sharing a cigarette with joan of arc
rigoberto gonzalez other fugitives and other strangers: “the strangers who find me in the woods”
mary oliver new and selected poems: “the summer day”
d.a. powell chronic: “continental divide”
kahlil gibran the seven selves
franz wright night walk
mary oliver the black snake
martha collins day unto day: “over time”
ada limón the bird knows he is going to die and wishes not to (recommended to me by @craigslistening <33)
aish (@sapientes) rubin’s vase
tom pickard nectarine
alicia ostriker song
d.a. powell the expiration date on the world is not quite the same as the expiration date on my prophylactic
james dickey the whole motion: collected poems 1945-1992: “the strength of fields”
everett owens strength from a mountain
denise levertov o taste and see: new poems: “the secret”
david st. john the place that inhabits us: “peach fires”
robinson jeffers their beauty has more meaning
thomas centolella almost human: “the hope i know”
elizabeth willis address: “in strength sweetness
amiri baraka s o s: poems 1961-2013: “tender arrivals”
mary oliver the black walnut tree
stephen spender new collected poems: “song”
support me
264 notes · View notes
invinciblerodent · 8 months
Text
Baldur's Gate 3's Potato Chowder - RECIPE
So a few days ago, I found this recipe around the start of act 3, near the kitchen of the Temple of the Open Hand in Rivington:
Tumblr media
[Screenshot of recipe as it appears in-game. Exact steps will be transcribed below, within the recipe.]
It looked... honestly very simple and not dissimilar from a Hungarian potato főzelék/stew (which is a very cheap and homely peasant dish I love), so I just made it for lunch today, and guys....
this soup is uh. really fucking good. I tried following it as close to the letter as possible, but since it's quite vague, I did have to improvise a fair bit- but it's very cheap and easy to make, it's warm and comforting while still quite light (there are like. NO spices in there, it's a very European-feeling dish), and I'd say it's surprisingly filling, but it's. It's potatoes, so there's nothing exactly surprising about that.
I tried to write out the recipe in a very beginner-friendly way, so even if you're not super confident in the kitchen, it should be easy to follow! ❤️
Make yourself some video game soup, it's awesome.
INGREDIENTS:
(For about 6 servings)
A roughly egg-sized lump of lard (This can be subtituted with a different cooking fat if you'd like, but I recommend sticking with lard, as it adds a nice flavor, and it's kind of the staple fat for these peasant stews.)
Potatoes (I used just under two pounds)
Half of a medium leek
Small yellow onion (or half of a larger one)
2 cloves garlic
Roughly 1/2 to 1 cup white cooking wine (optional, substitute given in recipe)
Vegetable stock (or chicken- or beef stock, or water)
2-3 tbsp all purpose flour
Salt to taste
1/2 cup of sour cream/créme fraiche (optional)
Shredded cheese and/or croutons to serve (optional)
(Recipe with transcriptions and exact steps under the cut!)
Tumblr media
(This is basically all there is in this. Honestly.)
STEPS:
"1. Put your lard in a pot- a chunky one, mind. When it stops being lard and starts being hot lard, add any good-smelling veggies (leeks, garlics, onions) that you've chopped all thin. Please salt this so it doesn't taste of nothing."
This first step is pretty self-explanatory. I sliced the white part of he leek thinly, cubed my onion, and minced my two large cloves of garlic. In the lard melted in as chunky a pot as I've got (make sure it's not non-stick!!!), I sauteed first the leek and the onion with a big pinch of salt, and once the onion was translucent, the leek soft, and they've released some liquid (around 3-5 minutes on medium-low heat), I added the garlic, and cooked it until fragrant.
"2. When it's soft and good-smelling, chuck in any flour you've got and stir the mixture so it don't burn (note for me - it's very important not to burn it, emphasize)"
"2.5. PLEASE DO NOT LET IT BURN THAT'D BE RUBBISH"
Now we make a roux by adding just enough flour to the mixture that it starts sticking together, and looks fairly dry, but no part of the flour remains powdery. (This was about 3 tbsp for me, but since this process goes quick, I did eyeball it).
It's important to keep stirring, as this can and does stick to the bottom of a pot, but it will determine the thickness of the final soup, deepen its flavor, and give it a nice, creamy consistency. I made mine fairly blonde (light tan in color, cooked just past long enough to dissipate any raw flour smell), but it can go to a fairly dark, caramel color before burning if you'd like the flavor to be a bit deeper. (This should only take a couple minutes.)
Please do be careful- it the roux burns, that flavor will be impossible to get rid of, so.... yeah, it would be rubbish.
"3. If you're fancy and have wine (or have a generously stocked temple wine cellar nearby) add a bit of it now and cook it off. When it's done, add some wedged potatoes and a lot more liquid (not wine this time or you'll have a headache in the morning)."
We now deglaze the bottom of the pot with the wine: after pouring it in, with the wooden spoon, we scrape up any stuck pieces of flour or aromatics that there might be on the bottom.
(Note: If you don't have wine, or would prefer not to use alcohol for any reason, a neat trick is to mix about 1 tbsp of white wine vinegar and 1 tsp of granulted sugar into a cup of water, and use this mixture as a substitute for 1 cup of white wine. In most recipes, the wine's main purpose is to add acidity as well as sweetness to the dish- this trick aims to replicate those qualities, and tastes very similar in the end result. I use it often in almost anything that calls for white wine if I happen to not have any at hand. But do make sure to taste beforehand, it's very easy to go too heavy on the vinegar! It should taste sour, but not so much that it's unpalatable.)
Then, I rinsed my cubed potatoes (though the text calls for wedges, those often don't cook quite evenly!) with water to get rid of the excess starch, added them to the pot, and then covered them in vegetable stock. You can use chicken- or beef stock (which would make the soup a bit richer, heavier) or water (if you want it lighter) as well- in this last case you might need to add more salt than you'd think. (Make sure to taste- it should be flavorful, but not salty! Bouillon cubes and premade stocks often have a very high salt content, so if using that, you might find you don't need to add any.)
Tumblr media
(It sohuld look something like this.)
"4. Cook for half an hour or so til the potatoes are nice and tender, and mash some of 'em up in the liquid. If you've got any cow products - cheese, milk and the like - add them now for extra delicious results."
From when the mixture starts to boil, it should take about 25-35 minutes of simmering on low heat, covered, for the potatoes to soften- you can test doneness by sticking a fork in one of the pieces, or gently pushing one against the edge of the pot with your wooden spoon. It should give easily at light pressure with both methods.
I then put the sour cream/créme fraiche in a heat-safe container (a mug will do perfectly), and ladled a bit of the hot cooking liquid on top of it, mixing it thoroughly- both to thin it out, and bring the temperatures closer to each other, which should help avoid any curdling. Stirring constantly, I then add the cream mixture to the soup in a thin, slow stream. (Any mildly acidic, creamy dairy product should work here- though I do think yogurt might be a bit too sour, if using that I would probably omit the wine.)
Then, as everything is done cooking and the cream is distributed evenly with no curds, I turn the heat off for safety, and using a very traditional, very fantasy, not at all anachronistic immersion blender, I blitz the entire thing for roughly 30 seconds. You can of course blend it less for more chunks (or remove some cooked potato bits before blending to add them back later), or even longer for a smoother consistency, but I did like that about that much blending left only a few, small chunks of nicely cooked potato in the otherwise smooth and creamy result.
I served with shredded Port Salut cheese and croutons on top- but this is of course optional, and I think just some nice, crusty bread would also work wonderfully!
Tumblr media
Go make yourself a video game soup!!!!!!! It's so easy and good!!!!!!!
134 notes · View notes
swirley1618 · 8 months
Text
Tumblr media
Happy Mabon everyone!
94 notes · View notes
brothertedd · 10 months
Text
Tumblr media
99 notes · View notes
daily-deliciousness · 9 months
Text
Tumblr media
Creamy ham and potato soup
1K notes · View notes
brattylikestoeat · 5 months
Text
51 notes · View notes
simmeringstarfruit · 1 year
Text
Roasted Carrot Stew
A delicious savoury roasted carrot stew with earthy vegetables and aromatic fresh herbs. Perfect for a cold rainy day, this vegetarian soup recipe is inspired by the carrot stew from Zelda Tears of the Kingdom and Breath of the Wild.
Roasted Carrot Stew
This delicious carrot stew recipe makes 5-6 servings and takes about 90 minutes to make. 
To reduce the recipe time to one hour, skip roasting the carrots and potatoes – just simmer them for 15-20 extra minutes during step seven. Enjoy!
Ingredients
¼ cup oil
1 – 1 ½ cups onion, diced
4 cups carrots, chopped 
4 cups potatoes, diced 
2 tbsp butter
1 – 2 tbsp flour
1 ½ cups coconut milk...
(continued in post)
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
103 notes · View notes
Text
Reason to Live #9211
  Potato soup with all the fixings. – Guest Submission
(Please don't add negative comments to these posts.)
69 notes · View notes
saltandlavenderblog · 4 months
Text
Tumblr media
Creamy Italian sausage and potato soup
80 notes · View notes