Pumpkin soup recipes?
Moderators: DJKeefy, 4u Network
Pumpkin soup recipes?
Hi,
With Halloween round the corner I'm feeling a bit domesticated and wondered if anyone has any good pumpkin soup recipes or butternut squash soup.
Many thanks
Jo x
P.S must be relatively simple!
With Halloween round the corner I'm feeling a bit domesticated and wondered if anyone has any good pumpkin soup recipes or butternut squash soup.
Many thanks
Jo x
P.S must be relatively simple!
- Mimimay
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A lot of the recipes I have contain bacon
so they're out for us but I keep trying differnt ones I come across and have yet to find one that the kids (and Mr MM) really like. I used to have one years ago whic was lovely and I think it had curry powder in which was the only time I used the stuff
even my Mum liked it which was something
So I shall watch this thread with great interest



So I shall watch this thread with great interest

Different eyes see different things......different hearts beat different strings 

- Bearded Brian
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50ml vegetable oil
1 small onion
2 leeks
1 carrot
2 stix of celery
2 red chillies
1 red pepper
2 cloves of garlic
2cm fresh ginger (grated)
1kg diced pumpkin
2 tsp curry powder
2 litres veg stock
60g red split lentils
salt and pepper
Fresh coriander
First soak the lentils in water for about 2 hours.
Heat the oil in a large pan and add the chopped onion, leeks, carrot, celery, chillies, red pepper, garlic and ginger. Fry until the vegetables are soft and well browned. Add the diced pumpkin and sweat in the mixture for about ten minutes turning regularly. Add the curry powder and cook out for 1 minute. Add the stock and lentils and simmer up for at least 1 hour or until the lentils are soft. Season with the salt and pepper and whizz up in a jug blender. Reheat to serve and finish with some chopped fresh coriander.
I usually leave out the lentils and sometimes replace them with pearl barley.
1 small onion
2 leeks
1 carrot
2 stix of celery
2 red chillies
1 red pepper
2 cloves of garlic
2cm fresh ginger (grated)
1kg diced pumpkin
2 tsp curry powder
2 litres veg stock
60g red split lentils
salt and pepper
Fresh coriander
First soak the lentils in water for about 2 hours.
Heat the oil in a large pan and add the chopped onion, leeks, carrot, celery, chillies, red pepper, garlic and ginger. Fry until the vegetables are soft and well browned. Add the diced pumpkin and sweat in the mixture for about ten minutes turning regularly. Add the curry powder and cook out for 1 minute. Add the stock and lentils and simmer up for at least 1 hour or until the lentils are soft. Season with the salt and pepper and whizz up in a jug blender. Reheat to serve and finish with some chopped fresh coriander.
I usually leave out the lentils and sometimes replace them with pearl barley.
- Horus
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- Lisak
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Funnily enough I made some tonight.
Quarter the pumpkin remove seeds and brush with olive oil , bake for 25 mins., leave to cool then scoop off the flesh.
One large onion fried in 25 g of butter to soften.....add 1.5pints of veg stock and add the pumpkin to it
Peel and chop a bramley apple then add to the pumpkin mix which is still on the heat untill all softened. Season to taste, then blitz.
Its actually quite tasty...roasting it apparently brings out the taste, as does the apple.
Good luck.
Quarter the pumpkin remove seeds and brush with olive oil , bake for 25 mins., leave to cool then scoop off the flesh.
One large onion fried in 25 g of butter to soften.....add 1.5pints of veg stock and add the pumpkin to it
Peel and chop a bramley apple then add to the pumpkin mix which is still on the heat untill all softened. Season to taste, then blitz.
Its actually quite tasty...roasting it apparently brings out the taste, as does the apple.
Good luck.
Life isn't about how to survive the storm, but how to dance in the rain.
- Mimimay
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I know Jewel, my two insist on having a pumpkin, of course, because that's what the kids these days are used to using but when I was young (many moons ago
) we had never seen a real pumpkin only on TV programmes from America and never thougt of using anything else but a turnip (swede now
) the smell still reminds me of bonfire night and halloween. That's another thing we always made more of bonfire night and halloween and mischevious night now it's all hallloween. I supose it's all elf and safety, but we always had a bonfire in one of our gardens with my Dad in charge who was a bit of a pyromaniac
he loved making garden fires and always started off the bonnfire with a touch of petrol 




Different eyes see different things......different hearts beat different strings 

- Horus
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- Wendy clark
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Well I finally made it! I took advice from all your recipes and put them all together with some other friends had given me to create the Joey special.
This was for a big big pot and I hang my head in shame I should have listened to Brian and others and added the spicey factor as although it was very nice it could have used curry powder too. I also should have increased my ginger according to my pot as it was lost a bit.
1 large pumpkin,
2 onions
1 large leek
5 carrots
5 celery sticks
1 garlic bulb (not clove)
grated fresh ginger
1 chopped apple
1 chopped red pepper
All spice
worcester sauce
black pepper
single cream
Chicken stock
grated cheese
croutons
I cut all my pumpkin up roughly and also the carrots popped them in the oven to roast with the cloves of a garlic bulb and sprinkled with olive oil.
On the hob I sweated the leeks,celery, onions, peppers and apple and added the grated ginger and a little water.
When the pumpkin mix was browned and soft I added it to the onion pan and blitzed it with the hand blender added the chicken stock bit by bit until a good consistency was reached then simmered a little more adding all spice and worcester sauce ( as realised it needed the spice!) and black pepper.
Took it off the heat stired in a little single cream got back to heat again the served with grated cheese and croutons.
It was lovely but think I should have upped my apple and roasted garlic and a few extras to account for the larger pan, and think curry powder would work!
Thanks everyone for your input x
Next week I shall be attempting a light moist fruit cake
This was for a big big pot and I hang my head in shame I should have listened to Brian and others and added the spicey factor as although it was very nice it could have used curry powder too. I also should have increased my ginger according to my pot as it was lost a bit.
1 large pumpkin,
2 onions
1 large leek
5 carrots
5 celery sticks
1 garlic bulb (not clove)
grated fresh ginger
1 chopped apple
1 chopped red pepper
All spice
worcester sauce
black pepper
single cream
Chicken stock
grated cheese
croutons
I cut all my pumpkin up roughly and also the carrots popped them in the oven to roast with the cloves of a garlic bulb and sprinkled with olive oil.
On the hob I sweated the leeks,celery, onions, peppers and apple and added the grated ginger and a little water.
When the pumpkin mix was browned and soft I added it to the onion pan and blitzed it with the hand blender added the chicken stock bit by bit until a good consistency was reached then simmered a little more adding all spice and worcester sauce ( as realised it needed the spice!) and black pepper.
Took it off the heat stired in a little single cream got back to heat again the served with grated cheese and croutons.

It was lovely but think I should have upped my apple and roasted garlic and a few extras to account for the larger pan, and think curry powder would work!
Thanks everyone for your input x
Next week I shall be attempting a light moist fruit cake

- Lisak
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Mmmmm, sounds yummy....for the record, the one I made, personally if it had been just for me, I'd have just added a couple of dashes of tabasco to it, but being as there was a 19 month old eating it too, I thought i had better not.
Life isn't about how to survive the storm, but how to dance in the rain.
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