April 1, 2025

BROCCOLI, CAULIFLOWER AND BLUE CHEESE SOUP (soup maker recipe)

It's still very much soup weather here in France.  We seem to get one or two warm, sunny days, getting warmer week by week, followed by perishing cold grey, wet or drizzly days and very cold nights.  The 18°C sunshine  and clear blue sky the other day turned into a clear, starry night only a few degrees above freezing followed by a day of cold grey mizzle.  It's not time to put the soup maker to the back of the cupboard just yet and I regretted putting the electric blanket away already!

This soup was very much a "free soup" idea.  I always have to trim the leaves from a cauliflower to fit it into the fridge so had saved them and several stalks from some broccoli with the idea of turning them into soup.  My research told me it would produce a very delicate flavoured soup, which I interpreted as "not much flavour".  The usual way to add flavour to an otherwise bland soup is to add an extra stock pot or seasoning but I had decided on blue cheese, a popular flavour combo.

I discarded the floppy green bits from the cauliflower leaves and used mainly the thick white ribs.  I trimmed the ends and knobbly bits from the broccoli stems and removed the woody outer part.  I went a bit off piste and for once sautéed the leek.  

Into the cooked soup I stirred several dollops of whipped St Agur, a product I spotted here in France not long ago and it's delicious as a spread on toast or croutons.  I think that crumbling in any kind of blue cheese (to taste) would work just as well.  It added a lovely creaminess as well as the blue cheese flavour and the soup was divine.  Definitely a keeper!

Ingredients

cauliflower leaves

broccoli stems

1 leek

1 large potato, peeled and chopped

1 vegetable stock pot

creamed or whipped or crumbled blue cheese to taste

Method

Trim and wash the leek.  Slice into medium slices and fry gently in butter or oil until beginning to colour.

While the leek is cooking, discard any tired and floppy green parts of the cauliflower leaves.  Roughly chop the ribs and rinse well.

Trim the broccoli stems by removing the ends, the knobbly bits and the outer woody part.  Roughly chop and rinse well.

Add enough prepared veg to the soup maker machine to fill as far as the bottom line.  Add the stock pot and enough water to fill to the top line.

Cook on the smooth setting.

When cooked (or when reheating in a saucepan if serving later) stir in your blue cheese spread or other product to taste, until it melts and blends in.  A little can go a long way with some blue cheeses so go steady.  Season with salt and pepper to taste - remember that blue cheese can make it taste salty.

Serves 4 generous bowls of soup or 5-6 as a starter.

5 comments:

  1. I am not a fan of blue cheese, unlike my OH. But I do remember a St Agur advert where the voiceover was one of the actresses from Monarch of the Glen [which was showing on tv at that point] I found a lot of recipes, including a Mushroom soup using St A here https://www.thecheeselover.co.uk/recipes/ . There will not be room for a soup maker in the new kitchen - but my slocooker and stick blender will do the job almost as well. I will take the elec blanket off at ther weekend when I change the sheets [or maybe not, as Bob frequently puts his side on as the warmth eases his continuing back pains...] Enjoy the sunshine.🌞 Avoid poissons d'Avril! 🐟

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    1. I think cheddar or similar would also work well. As would your slow cooker and blender!
      I remember those adverts. An attempt to make blue cheese sexy if I recall correctly, which is an interesting concept !!

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    2. P.S. thanks for the link….lots of nice recipes there.

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  2. I often like the look of your soup recipes but haven't got a soup maker so no line to follow up to! Any chance you could include the amount of liquid to add?

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    Replies
    1. I looked at my machine and the lower line is 1300ml and the upper line is 1600ml. The difference therefore looks like 300ml but in fact I think it usually takes around 1 litre of liquid to fill it to that line because it first fills all the gaps in the veg!
      I hope this helps but the next time I use it I will measure exactly how much liquid went in and report back!

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