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Monday, October 26, 2015

Fall Soups: Stretching the Never-Ending Soup

We tend to wax poetic about soups at The Temple. Soup is our reward for surviving the heat of summer. Fall comes and soup can never be far behind.

Earlier this week we were talking about cooking while poor and I took the stance, as I always have, that peasant cuisine always aims to give both sustenance and comfort.

While we enjoy the soup course and the odd cup-of-soup for lunch as accompaniment to a small sandwich, what we love is soup as a meal. The added beauty, of course, is that it keeps so that you do not have to cook for at least a couple of nights.


One of the things that we enjoy most is what we call the never-ending soup. It often starts as a chicken soup and then we’ll add garbanzos or black beans, sometimes carrots or peas; around the third serving, we may add sausage and potatoes, then tomatoes or artichokes. A beef-based soup may turn into a lentil soup.

We used to have a friend who would be horrified by the idea of a soup made almost entirely of leftovers. We could not convince her it was heaven and kept our palate on alert—and every serving came with its own nuanced flavor and shifting aroma.

You can start with a root vegetable soup. Once the veggies are gone and you’re left with just stock, you may begin adding elements to transform it and stretch its existence. Additions may include a variety of ingredients like barley, pasta or rice; beans; sautéed or raw vegetables; or even homemade croutons.

Think of it in the same terms of a good ramen: you cook it for hours (and it does as you add ingredients and heats and reheats and replenishes stock). The flavors deepen as you add toppings: butter, beans, braised or roasted meats, cheese rinds, corn, olives, scallions, ramen eggs!

Credit: Kumamoto kakuni ramen by woinary,
Wikipedia Creative Commons

Sometimes you end up with something that resembles a sancocho without starting out that way (and a good sancocho is not a bad meal in itself either). We used to have a Cuban friend who’d make a giant pot of it for Christmas. It was always perfect. But that’s another story!

SOURCE FoxNews latino. RECIPE: http://bit.ly/1P0v0tt

The addition of lemon juice, olive oil, vinegar, hot sauce will refresh the taste, as will fresh herbs, seeds, bacon…


There is a fantastic soup with five-day permutations over at Serious Eats that we’d like to try out soon because it sounds delicious in every form.

We've had small batches of chicken, beef, and lentil soups. We're ready to commit now!


Also check out the Fall Soups Pinterest board for more!

Thursday, October 8, 2015

13 Frightfully Fun Halloween Cocktails

Halloween was relegated to the children many moons ago. Though there are many of us – Wiccan and not – who love the holiday as well. There is something refreshing and transformative about it, beyond the cross-dressing and plain dress-up.

For many, Halloween is the last hurrah before a full season of familial and professional enforced gaiety – whence they drag the vessel of their stress and repository of all the fear and loathing in this world from office party to family gathering in a month-long horror fest of duty and pain they cannot escape without great cost…


It is a high holiday for a great many, but beyond your ideal of religion, philosophy or spirituality, I suggest you take Halloween as an opportunity to relive the fun parts of childhood. Become something or someone else for a few hours. Then partake in a treat or two… (tricks optional: ya freaks!)



1.    Bloody Brain Shooters

2.    Dark & Stormy Death Punch

3.    Bleeding Heart Martini

4.    Corpse Reviver

5.    Candy Corn Cocktail

6.    Pumpkin Spice Margarita

7.    Embalming Fluid

8.    Brain Hemorrhage

9.    Black Heart Cider

10. Fiery Eyeball

Fiery Eyeball (Courtesy of Andrea Correale)
1 oz. pineapple juice
1 oz. orange juice
1/2 oz. apple brandy
2 oz. light rum
2 oz. dark rum
1 oz. lime juice
1/2 oz grenadine
1 oz. 151 Rum
Chill mixing glasses with ice. Remove the ice and add the juices, brandy, and the light and dark rums. Prepare glass by pouring grenadine around inside of rim and letting it bleed down along the glass. Carefully pour the contents of the mixer into a Tuscany Classics Crystal Martini Glass By Lenox. Float the 151 rum and grenadine. Light the cocktail with a wooden match.
11. Black Magic Martini

12. Creepy Bubbles

13. Candy Bar Martinis

Don’t forget the Creepy Cocktail Garnishes!