I like a chunky soup in a clear style broth. Almost borderline stew i guess.
The main idea of rice in soup is as a thickener, not for flavour, it does that well, eg in carrot soup.Here we use pearl barley in soups, it’s de-husked and soaks up all the flavour of a good broth soup., It’s a good starch, by no means as nutritious as Quinoa, but a good basic ingredient. Like potatoes, doesn’t pretend to be much other than carbs. I totally agree with you on rice = insipid, it’s not a soup ingredient, it has a realm of its own as a sponge for powerful spicy dishes.
Here‘s a question. Does a soup need to have at least some of the ingredients cooked? I’ve had a type of Gazpacho that was pretty much a sieved blender thing made with raw tomatoes, garlic, a light stock, fresh herbs, with some of the pulp pushed through the sieve. Really lovely cold “soup”. I think the onion was softened in a pan but that was it.
In answer to our man Zornt, yes indeed, a soup a day.
The main idea of rice in soup is as a thickener, not for flavour, it does that well, eg in carrot soup.
Exactly, it gives a body and a pleasant mouth feel, its worth putting in any soup which can be a bit watery, so no need in say curried swede and lentil, but fresh pea or carrot or celery can benefit from it.I've found a small amount of creamed rice can work extremely well with Bushcrafty foraged veg to provide body substance and a creamy silky feel.
Fresh home made sourdough bread. Yaaaay!I do like soups, I just don't invest enough time in making them, we had a large quantity of squashes this year so we had a lot of squash soup, that was tasty.
I like spicy soups, thick soups and nice bread with them!
Not sure I could do every day though, maybe every other!!