I want snow! Yes, if it is going to be that cold, I think we deserve a bit of snow. The last time I have known such a cold Winter was five years ago. In between, I was enjoying Australian Winters. I am not saying it is not cold in Melbourne in Winter, you can even go skiing less than two hours from the city. But it just feels much milder there.
At the same time, I did miss crisp cold Winter days. I feel I am served right now!
Five years ago, I would come back from long work hours and visit E. at his house (we had only been dating a few months then). One of the things he would cook a lot at the time was a delicious tomato soup with red kidney beans and chorizo. We would eat it with big slices of crusty bread while warming up near the 'fireplace' (ahem! You should actually read 'tiny radiator', the house was really cold). E. would pour a tin of tomato soup in a saucepan, add the beans and pieces of chorizo and it would be ready within five minutes.

Well, at the time, the idea of tinned soup was really not my forte being French and all that, so I produced a lot of honhonhon sounds in my head, and sometimes out loud too let's be honest!
I did appreciate a lot the fact that someone was cooking for me though, especially after the long work hours. Did I say that already? Well understand long hours and thinking about food a lot of the time is huge.
And just so you know, E. does not only make soup from tinned ingredients, he also cooks other delicious things like the best green Thai curry I have ever had and very importantly: amazing poached eggs!
For the past couple of years though, I have used his recipe and improved it a bit. So here you have my own version of the tomato soup with red kidney beans and chorizo.

Tomato Soup With Red Kidney Beans, Chorizo And Parsley Oil Recipe (Gluten Free)

Ingredients (serves 4 for a main course or 6 as a starter)

20g unsalted butter
2 shallots (roughly chopped)
2 x 400g tins chopped tomatoes
500ml chicken stock
500ml water
230g red kidney beans (from a tin, drained and rinsed)
300g chorizo sausage (cut into small chunks, approximately the size of a thumb nail)
1/2 tbsp olive oil
pepper

For the parsley oil
100ml extra virgin olive oil
50g finely chopped flat leaf parsley

Put a large saucepan over a medium heat. Add in the butter. When it has melted, add the chopped shallots and stir frequently for 4 to 5 minutes until they have softened.
Pour in the chopped tomatoes, the chicken stock, the water and stir well. Bring it to the boil, then lower the heat and let it simmer for 30 minutes (covered for the first 15 minutes, uncovered for the remaining 15).
In the meantime, make the parsley oil. Heat up the olive oil in a small frying pan, add the parsley and stir for 3 to 4 minutes. You can blend the ingredients in a small food processor or serve as it is. Pour the parsley oil in a small serving bowl (I kept some aside and used it to roast a chicken the following day).
While the soup is still simmering, put a frying pan over a high heat and add half a tablespoon of olive oil. When it is hot, add the chorizo and fry it for 4 to 5 minutes. Transfer it with a slotted spoon onto some kitchen paper to absorb some of the fat (you can keep the remaining fat from the pan and use it to roast meat or saute potatoes during the week).
After the soup has been simmering for 30 minutes, you can either blend it for a smooth soup or leave it as it is for a soup with chunky bits of tomatoes. I took the saucepan off the heat and used a hand blender to smooth it a bit and put it back on a low heat.
Add the red kidney beans and the chorizo. Stir well, cover and simmer for another 10 minutes.
Season to your taste with pepper when it has finished cooking.
You can notice here I have not used salt at any stage. I find there is enough salt in the chorizo to season the soup.

Divide the soup between the bowls and drizzle the parsley oil on top.
A great accompaniment to the soup is a lovely side of fresh bread with butter. I made my own using Heidi Swanson's recipe of an Easy Little Bread on her website 101 Cookbooks (I ran out of wholemeal flour so I used buckwheat instead, it was as delicious).


Bon appétit!
 


Comments

15/01/2013 2:13pm

I want snow too. It would be lovely, I was away last time it snowed in Ireland. Your soup was delicious and I love the picture :-)

Reply
15/01/2013 2:15pm

Thanks K.! So glad you enjoyed the soup, I made more last night, it shall be lunches for a while :)

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James
15/01/2013 5:55pm

Made the soup last night , Delicious,,,

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21/01/2013 5:40pm

So glad you enjoyed the soup James!

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16/01/2013 10:36am

Il y a de la neige en France, je vais aller acheter les ingrédients pour une soupe... (Sinon, pas de galette pour toi? J'ai une très bonne recette, si tu veux)

Reply
16/01/2013 12:23pm

Eh non pas de neige et pas de galette non plus pour moi! Mais si j'avais voulu une galette des rois, il y avait une bonne recette sur le blog de French Foodie In Dublin (lien sur mon article précédent de gâteau au yaourt).

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Tisseur
19/01/2013 1:21pm

Une soupe totalement et absolument excellente et divine et trop bonne et je parle pas super français tellement mes papilles sont en extase :)
Chapeau !

Reply
21/01/2013 5:39pm

Quel compliment! Merci beaucoup!

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Yolande
22/04/2013 9:45am

A la soirée où j'étais samedi soir, ma nièce Coraline m'a dit qu'elle avait fait cette recette à son ami Arnaud et il est venu me dire que cette soupe était une véritable tuerie, il a adoré.

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