Dish

(Nandana) #1
Fix-Me-Up Soup
with Dukkah

Fix-Me-Up Soup
I promised to include this recipe for one of
my lovely bloggie followers who supped on it
during her pregnancy – this is for you Rose.
(Previously called “Welcome Home Soup”.)


1 tablespoon butter
2 tablespoons olive oil
1 onion, chopped
1 leek, trimmed, halved lengthways
and chopped


sea salt and freshly ground pepper
1 large agria potato, peeled, chopped
3 cloves garlic, crushed
1 litre good-quality chicken or
vegetable stock
1 head broccoli, chopped into florets
1 cup frozen peas
120 grams baby spinach leaves
½ cup cream
½ cup basil leaves (reserve a few
for garnish)

¼ cup mint leaves
sea salt and freshly ground pepper
½ cup natural Greek-style yoghurt
¼ cup dukkah (see recipe below)

Heat butter and oil in a large pot over
medium heat and cook onion and leek for 10
minutes (season with salt during this time).
Add potato and garlic, cook for 2–3
minutes then add stock and bring to a
boil. Reduce to a simmer and cook 15–20
minutes until potato is soft.
Add broccoli and peas and cook for 5
minutes, add spinach and remove from the
heat allowing spinach to wilt into it – give it
a bit of a poke of encouragement.
Still off the heat, whizz with a stick
whizzy (or transfer to a food processor
which is more of a faff ).
Add cream, basil and mint and whizz
again until smooth, taste for seasoning and
add sea salt and freshly ground pepper.
Serve with a swirl of yoghurt, some
fresh basil leaves and a sprinkling of
dukkah. Store leftovers in a sealed
container in the fridge for up to 2 days.
Makes 3 sad-arse dinners

Dukkah
The crunch
1 cup walnuts
⅓ cup each pumpkin seed, pine nuts and
sunflower seeds
2 tablespoons sesame seeds
The flavourings
2 tablespoons each cumin, coriander and
fennel seeds
1 teaspoon each freshly ground pepper,
red chilli flakes
2 teaspoons flaky sea salt
1 tablespoon black sesame seeds

Preheat the oven to 180°C.
Put “the crunch” ingredients on one tray
and “the flavourings” on another tray.
Bake together in the oven for 10–12
minutes until “the crunch” ingredients
are lightly toasted and “the flavourings”
are fragrant. Cool on trays then put “the
crunch” in a food processor.
Grind “the flavourings” in a mortar and
pestle then add to the food processor and
pulse briefly so they are all combined and
“the crunch” is ground into chunks –
I like them to have some texture, not be
completely sandy butter!
Stir in the black sesame seeds and
transfer to an airtight container, then
use for sprinkling on anything that takes
your fancy.
Dukkah will keep stored at room
temperature for around 1 month.
Makes 2 cups

40 DISH

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