When my Mom opened a package of dried mushrooms, the whole house filled with pungent perfume and I knew that we are in for a treat – the mushroom barley soup. I looked forward to that woodsy aroma so much that I didn’t even think of this dish as soup. I ate the other soups the way American children eat broccoli – it makes your parents proud and it’s supposed to be good for you. But the mushroom soup was different and I ate it because I loved it.
Now that I don’t have to eat soups every day, I love them all -- borsch (beet soup), uha (fish soup), shi (sauerkraut soup) – but there is always going to be a special place in my heart for the mushroom barley soup.
Note: Make sure to use dried porcini (or cepe) mushrooms that are wild since they have a much stronger aroma. Do not buy fresh porcini for this soup. They won’t give you a strong mushroom stock and will cost a fortune. Although wild dried porcini are around $50-70 per pound, 4 oz that you need for a huge pot of soup will only cost you $12-17.
It’s best to start this soup the night before you are planning to serve it, since the mushrooms takes several hours to soak.
Serves 10 as first course, 6 as main course
For mushroom stock:
4 oz wild dried porcini mushrooms
1 carrot, peeled
1 parsnip, peeled
1 whole yellow onion, peeled
4 Tbsp kosher salt (or 2 Tbsp table salt)
1 bay leaf
¼ tsp whole black peppercorns
For the soup:
1 carrot, peeled
3 medium boiling potatoes, peeled and diced
½ cup barley
Carrot onion flavoring:
2 Tbsp butter
2 Tbsp olive oil
2 onions, finely diced
2 carrots, peeled and shredded
Salt
For mushroom stock:
- Put mushrooms in a 2 quart bowl, cover with 6 cups boiling water and soak for at least 1 hour or overnight.
- Bring 2 quarts of water to a boil in a large heavy soup pot. Season it with salt, like for pasta. Add barley and boil gently over medium heat until almost tender, 25-30 minutes. Drain in a colander and reserve for later.
- While barley is cooking prepare the mushrooms. Carefully remove them with a slotted spoon out of reconstituting liquid into another bowl. Strain the dark aromatic mushroom liquid through a sieve lined with a paper towel to get rid of sand. Reserve it for the stock.
- Cover the mushrooms with water and rub gently to remove dirt and sand. Let stand 5 minutes to let the sand to settle. Remove them with a slotted spoon and discard the water. Repeat until there is no more sand on the bottom of the bowl when you pore out the water. Don’t skip this step, or you’ll have a gritty soup.
- Chop the mushrooms into rough pieces about ¼ inches big.
- Place chopped mushrooms into the pot you used for barley. Add the reserved mushroom liquid, 3 quarts cold water, a whole carrot, a whole parsnip, a whole onion, and salt. Cover, and bring to a boil over high heat. Turn down the heat to medium-low and simmer partially covered for 30 minutes. Occasionally, skim the foam that rises to the top being careful not to remove any mushrooms.
- Add peppercorns and bay leaf and remove the whole carrot, parsnip and onion.
- Cut the carrot into quarters lengthwise, and then thinly slice crosswise. Add sliced carrot and potatoes to the soup pot with mushroom stock and simmer partially covered until tender, about 30 minutes.
- Add barley and simmer partially covered until soup thickens slightly, 30 minutes.
While the soup is simmering prepare the carrot onion flavoring.
- Set a large skillet over medium-low heat. Add 1 Tbsp oil and 2 Tbsp butter and wait for them to melt. Add the onions and 1/2 tsp kosher salt (1/4 tsp table salt) and cook stirring occasionally until onions are tender and starting to brown, 10 minutes.
- Add the carrots and another 1/2 tsp kosher salt (1/4 tsp table), and cook on medium heat stirring occasionally until tender, 10 minutes. Add the remaining 1 Tbsp oil and cook until the mixture is nicely browned, 10 minutes.
- Stir the carrot-onion mixture into the soup. Taste and correct seasoning. Take off heat and let stand 15 minutes for flavors to blend. Serve with sour cream.
I love soup, especially in the wintertime. I'll definately give this recipie a try, it sounds wonderful. Also, I'm going to have to try this "Shi." I LOVE sauerkraut!
ReplyDeleteWhat a nice memory. I like the photo of your soup. Delicious!
ReplyDeleteHappy Holiays and have a fantasic New Years!
Paz
I share your passion for cookbooks. I love reading them almost as much as I love cooking which is to say a _lot_. New they are expensive but I am always picking them up at library sales and the annual Five College Book Sale in Hanover, NH.
ReplyDeleteThe soup looks wonderful!
Merry Christmas!
-Walter
Sugar Mountain Farm
in Vermont
I'm looking forward to making this soup. I too am a cookbook reader. I enjoy reading old cookbooks. It really helps to understand what real life was like at the time the book was written.
ReplyDeleteThis soup rocks! I really like it. It may be because I am from Russia and am somewhat familiar with the "carrot-onion" flavoring. Eating it now. I am not sure if I did everything correctly. I put some parsely in it for color to spice up the brown. Thank you Helen:-)
ReplyDelete