Happy New Year! I am hoping 2010 will be an exciting year of more exercise (what a terrible cliche!) and my first full year of liking mushrooms. Mushrooms and I have had a hard relationship in the past, but I’ve decided we can make things work. Since our Michigan weather is now really cold and that white stuff is all over the ground, all I seem to want these days is soup. Maybe I want to be in one of the Campbell’s soup commercials. Remember the one with the boy that is a snowman and the soup defrosts him? While at my parents’ for the holidays, Marc and I went to one of our favorite new restaurants, “The Biscuit” and had a delicious Mushroom Tarragon soup. It was a bit creamy, but it wasn’t super thick. For me, it was perfection. It was silky and just really good. To combine my dreams of being in a soup commercial and my new found love of the mushroom, I sought to recreate the delicious soup. After some internet research, I think I found the perfect one. It’s full of flavor and gets its creamy texture from some low-fat milk and blending half of the soup. I know I said in a previous post that I don’t like getting out my food processor or blender for soups, but after working hard to chop the ingredients, I did not want to taste the soup and feel like it might have been better. The chopping is pretty labor intensive, but it’s worth it. I promise.
Mushroom Tarragon Soup
Adapted from Epicurious
Serves 4-6
1 T. butter (or olive oil)
4 shallots, minced
1-2 garlic cloves, minced
6 cups cremini mushrooms, minced
1 1/4 C. vegetable stock
1 1/4 C. 1% milk (you could use 2%, whole or half and half if you would like it extra creamy)
2 T. fresh tarragon, chopped
2 T. dry sherry
1 t. salt (more to taste)
1/2 t. freshly ground black pepper (more to taste)
1. Melt butter (or add olive oil) in a large pot. Add the shallots and garlic and cook over medium low heat for 5 minutes, stirring occasionally.
2. Add the mushrooms and cook gently for 4 minutes, stirring.
3. Add the stock and milk and bring to a boil (watch carefully as the milk can make this boil over quickly). Lower the heat, cover and simmer for about 20 minutes or until mushrooms are soft.
4. Stir in the chopped tarragon, salt and pepper. Taste and check if you need more seasoning. Salt and pepper to taste.
5. Ladle half of the soup into a blender or food processor and blend until smooth. Return the pureed portion back to the pot and reheat slowly on medium low heat.
6. Stir in sherry. Serve immediately.
You know what else I’m resolving to do in 2010? I want to use up ingredients in my fridge before they go bad or before I’m sick of looking at them. I get very sad when I have to throw food in the garbage. Since this is my first time ever purchasing tarragon, I was trying to think of a way to use up the rest of my package. When I opened the package, there was a dandy marinade recipe inside and I quickly thought of a beautiful piece of halibut I had in the fridge. Oh yes, I used all of my tarragon and made two delicious and healthy dinners from it. Score.
Tarragon Chili Marinade
Recipe from The Herbal Garden package of tarragon
I made half of the recipe and it made enough for a marinade for 1 lb. of halibut and enough left over to dress a spinach salad and spoon over the top of the finished dish. Below are the measurements I used, but you can double it if you’d like more.
1/2 pkg. of tarragon (or approximately 6 T. of tarragon)
1/8 C. chili powder (I used good quality ancho chili powder)
4 cloves garlic
1/4 C. lemon juice (I juiced 1 lemon)
1/8 honey (I had agave nectar on hand)
1/8 C. sweet molasses
1/2 C. extra virgin olive oil
salt to taste (I used about 1/2-1 t.)
Add all ingredients into a blender or food processor, except for extra virgin olive oil and blend well. With blender or food processor running, stream in olive oil (this was tricky with my blender, because it wanted to spit out of the top. I ended up adding a bit at a time and covering the blender completely after each addition and it worked just fine). Adjust with salt or chili powder to your taste.
Halibut with Tarragon Chili Marinade
my recipe, if you want to call it a recipe
3/4-1 lb. halibut filet (or your favorite firm, white fish)
1 batch of Tarragon Chili Marinade (recipe above)
4-6 C. baby spinach leaves
1 orange, supremed
1. Line a rimmed baking sheet with foil and add halibut filet. Cover the fish generously with about half of the marinade recipe. Cover and refrigerate for several hours or overnight.
2. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Wipe off all of the marinade from the halibut and discard so the sugars in the marinade do not burn in the oven. Bake halibut for 15-25 minutes or until it flakes easily.
3. Toss a few tablespoons of the marinade with spinach and add orange slices.
4. Add generous helping of salad to plate and serve halibut over the salad. Spoon extra marinade over, if desired.
We love, love, loved the soup. So flavorful and interesting from the combination of flavorful mushrooms and tarragon. We were really happy with how the halibut turned out, too. The marinade is sweet from the molasses and has a kick from the chili powder and garlic. I thought the orange in the salad really made the flavors come to life. This marinade would be really good with shrimp, pork, chicken, veggies, anything really. I like how 2010 is going already.



