I’ve made some really fart worthy pea ham soup for Yummy Lummy before but the focus in this recipe is to get it to look green and taste good too. My previous attempts have focussed on the taste and flavour [My first go http://yumlum.co/2k2oA4Z and then the repeat a week later http://bit.ly/2ki5w0c] but they ended up looking a yellow-brown colour.
[wprm-recipe-jump]
[social_warfare]
Pea and ham soup with an emphasis on the green | Yummy Lummy
This recipe is about two things, flavour and looks. I wanted the soup to be green rather than a yellow-brown like my previous attempts.
1 Ham hock
500 g Green split peas
½ Potato ((small cubes))
½ White onion ((diced))
500 g Frozen peas
2 L Chicken stock
Wash the split peas and empty them into the slow cooker chamber.
Add the onion, cubed potato and the packet of frozen peas.
Place the ham hock on top of everything and then pour in 2 litres of chicken stock.
Put the slow cooker bucket into the slow cooker and seal it with the lid. Set the timer to 6 hours and let it cook.
After the 6 hours, remove the cooking vessel and then remove the ham hock and begin to peel off the skin and pull the muscle bundles apart and put into a clean bowl. Discard the bones.
With a stick blender, process everything in the cooking vessel until it is smooth.
Plate up by adding some ham to the bottom of a bowl and add a dollop of sour cream plus ¼ of a teaspoon of chilli flakes for a spicy kick.
Garnish with spring onions and chives.
Shoot a photograph and then eat the soup.
Wash the dishes and then write the recipe up.
Write a blog post and hope your friends on social media share the recipe and make you famous 🤣🤣😂
This is enough soup for 4 servings. If you live alone, I suggest freezing aliquots and then using a microwave oven to heat it up for lunches and/or dinners.
[social_warfare]
Frequently asked questions
Will this make me fart?
I reckon it will. It all depends on your bowel’s microbiome. If you’re lucky, you can really stink up the place. Just don’t light a match if you fart under the sheets.
Can I make this soup vegetarian?
Yes, but it wouldn’t be pea and ham soup. If you don’t add the ham hock and if you use vegetable stock, you’ll have pea soup. I reckon it would taste okay, but for me, I need the ham in it for the flavour.
Can I eat this for lunch?
Yes, definitively, just don’t attend meetings afterwards if you’re prone to farting a lot.
Can I eat this soup cold the next day?
Yes, but all the fat would be congealed and it wouldn’t be that appealing in my opinion.
Social media
Please follow me on my food-based social media on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram. What I’d love you to do is share this post on Twitter and Facebook and anywhere else you’d like, even Google+
A post shared by Yummy Lummy Gary Lum Food Blog (@yummylummyblog) on
[social_warfare]
[social_warfare]
Pumpkin soup
Pumpkin soup is a favourite of many. I added some red chillies, jalapeño pepper and chilli flakes to make this soup a bit spicy along with a good nob of ginger to add a slight Asian feel.
1/2 piece Kent pumpkin (It can be any kind really)
2 pieces Potatoes (Any kind will do)
1/2 piece White onion (diced)
100 grams Bacon (diced)
1 nob Ginger (fresh, cut and crushed)
1 teaspoon Chilli flakes
1 teaspoon Curry powder
1 teaspoon Garlic powder
1 piece Red chilli (diced)
1 piece Jalapeño pepper (diced)
1/2 bunch Parsley (chopped)
1/2 cup Cream
In a large saucepan sauté the onion and bacon until softened
Add the ginger and stir until it’s soft
Tip in the pumpkin and potato pieces
Pour in boiling water halfway up the level of the top piece of visible pumpkin or potato to avoid the soup being too thin
To the soup add the garlic powder, curry powder and chilli flakes
Bring the soup to the boil and simmer with a lid on for 30 minutes
Process the soup with a stick blender
Add the chopped red chilli and jalapeño pepper
Pour in the cream and stir
You could fold in some parsley but I just blended it in
Then you plate it up in a bowl and garnish with more parsley
Shoot a photograph and drink the soup
Edit the footage from two cameras and keep swearing about the slow upload speeds in Belconnen
Post the blog post hoping people will read it and share it on social media
One of the nicest pumpkin soups I’ve made. If you try it please let me know.
If you try this pumpkin soup please let me know how it went.
Social media
Please follow me on my food-based social media on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram. What I’d love you to do is share this post on Twitter and Facebook and anywhere else you’d like, even Google+
Cauliflower soup is one of my favourite dishes because it tastes great and is easy to make. Winter is approaching and weekend soup is definitely a thing.
[wprm-recipe-jump]
[social_warfare]
How do you make cauliflower soup taste sensational?
This recipe will have you wanting another bowl, even after you feel full.
1 piece cauliflower (remove leaves and breakdown florets)
100 grams bacon pieces (bought from a delicatessen)
1 piece potato (cut into cubes)
1 tablespoon curry powder (Clive of India)
2 glugs olive oil
½ piece white onion (diced)
1 piece stock cube (chicken)
1 teaspoon chilli flakes
¼ cup cream
¼ cup cheese (grated)
¼ cup parsley (chopped)
1 litre boiling water (from a kettle)
Add the olive oil to a saucepan
Sauté the bacon pieces and diced onion
Add the potato and cauliflower
Add sufficient boiling water to cover the potato and cauliflower
Add the stock cube and curry power
Bring the water to the boil and turn down to a simmer
Simmer until the cauliflower and potato are tender (at least 30 minutes)
Remove the saucepan from the heat source
Use a stick blender to process the soup
Add the cream
Add the grated cheese, chilli flakes and cream and then stir through
Prior to serving to recipients (me) add the chopped parsley
Serve in a bowl
As winter approaches this is a soup to be made again and again. If you choose, this goes nicely with a piece of bread or a roll or just on its own.
[social_warfare]
As much as I love pumpkin soup, I really enjoy this cauliflower soup.
Scotch fillet steak on a Saturday night is even better if it’s a steak sandwich
I watched a Nicko’s Kitchen video on YouTube recently on how to cook a perfect scotch fillet steak. My technique is slightly different in that I follow the Heston Blumenthal method of rapid flipping every fifteen to twenty seconds.
Anyway, I wanted a steak sandwich for dinner. I liked the way Nicko crusted his steak by using Dijon mustard and chopped chives. It looked very pretty. It also added a nice taste too.
What you’ll need
Scotch fillet steak
Salt
Olive oil
Butter
Thyme
Chives
Dijon mustard
Cracked pepper
Lettuce
Tomato
Swiss cheese slices
Bread roll
Here’s what you do
Slice the bread roll into halves
Apply some Dijon mustard to the inside of each half
Add a slice of Swiss cheese
Put the bread under a grill for a few minutes to slightly melt the cheese
Remove some lettuce leaves and wash them
Slice the tomato and allow it to rest on some paper towel
Apple some pepper to one side of the tomato
The steak should have been in the refrigerator for about half a day at least uncovered
Take the steak out at least an hour before you’re ready to cook to get it to room temperature
Rub some olive oil all over the steak
Season the steak with salt
Get a pan smoking hot
Put the steak in the pan and flip every 15 to 20 seconds and cook until you like it
I like my steak rare
Add some thyme and a bit of butter and allow the butter to melt and the thyme to flavour the meat
Let the steak rest for at least 5 minutes
Coat one side of the steak with Dijon Mustard
Flip the steak over onto a plate of chopped chives and coat the steak
Slice into the desired thickness
Prepare the steak sandwich with the bread roll and melted cheese
Enjoy a nice juicy steak sandwich
Parting words
I regularly post photographs of food to Twitter, Facebook and Instagram. Please feel free to connect with me on any social media platform. I also have a podcast. It’s not food related but each show is short and it’s named Medical Fun Facts. You can find it in the iTunes podcast store as well as Stitcher. A show drops every Monday and Tuesday. It has a little cynicism, a little scepticism and occasionally some sarcasm.
Thanks for visiting. Please check out the rest of Yummy Lummy. I’d love it if you shared this site with your friends.
I’ve just spent three nights in Helsinki, Finland for a work meeting. This is my first time visiting continental Europe. I’ve been to England twice (for work) but never to the continent. As I prepared for the meeting I took a look at where Finland is on Google Maps. I didn’t quite appreciate how far north it is in comparison with England. I recall watching a documentary on World War 2 and learning some history of Finland and its relationship with Sweden and Russia. Helsinki is in the south of Finland, can you imagine what it would be like if the capital was in Lapland. Being summer, the sun set well after 10.30 pm and it never really got completely dark. The sun rose before 4 am so I was grateful for curtains not that I was asleep after 3.30 am. The room I was in had a view of the water and the reflection of the low sun on the water produced a lot of glare that beamed straight into my room. The weather was very similar to Canberra at the same time. Early morning was <10 °C (I note Canberra was ‘enjoying’ some subzero mornings) and the maximum temperature was about 18 °C. It was like being in Canberra with extra sunlight. That’s not a good thing. Like Canberra, it was very dry. We all know how much I dislike the weather of Canberra. I don’t think I would like a Finnish winter. The cold dry darkness would be inhospitable and the snow would depress me.
I flew to Helsinki via Melbourne and Singapore. It was a pretty long trip. Because of the flights schedules I ended up with some time on the day of my arrival and the day of my departure to walk around a bit of the Helsinki CBD.
I’d been told that Finnish cuisine has a high seafood content and that I might also be able to try some reindeer. Regular readers will know my love of salmon. I wasn’t disappointed. I had salmon at least once every day in Helsinki and also became fond of pickled herring. I love whole baked salmon. It is just so moist and full of flavour. Whole baked salmon beats baked salmon fillets hands down. It would be great to bake a whole salmon but it would be hugely expensive and even I would have trouble eating a whole salmon at once. Friends and even my mother told me about rollmops but I never saw any. The best I could do was put a bit of gherkin between two pieces of pickled herring to make my own sort of rollmop. I don’t know that I could eat a lot of pickled herring in one sitting, but a few pieces for breakfast was really good especially with a poached egg and Hollandaise sauce.
I also got to try reindeer. It was cooked very nicely (medium rare) with a juniper sauce which offset the flavour of the reindeer nicely.
I also got to try some pike-perch which I assume is more perch than pike. It has a delightfully delicate white flesh which flaked really nicely.
Apart from proteins, I also drank my fill of lingonberry and blueberry juice. Who knew egg butter is a thing!
I was expecting the coffee to be good, but it was more akin to American and Canadian coffee.
Helsinki is a really nice city. I saw no homeless people and only a few people begging for money. The streets and buildings are all clean and I get an impression that Finnish people are very neat and tidy. I’m guessing the social welfare system is second to none and unemployment is minimal.
The city is about 150 years old, so it is about one and a half times older than Canberra. The buildings, especially the larger ones are beautiful. There are also some magnificent places of worship. They are quite architecturally beautiful.
The other revelation is the taxicabs. They are so clean and the drivers are friendly, neat, clean and they do not smell of really bad body odour. They also speak excellent English and know where they are going without referring to a GPS device and relying on a customer for directions. A trip from the airport to the CBD will set you back about €30.
While in Helsinki I stayed at the Hilton Strand Helsinki. This was the recommended hotel by the meeting organisers. I found it to be an excellent option. The staff are all friendly and helpful. The breakfast buffet was very good and the restaurant served very nice meals for lunch and dinner. I did not try room service because there is an associated €10 service charge. The Wi-Fi was fast and reliable with good upload capacity if you’re backing up files to a cloud service.
One the subject of currency, euros are quaint looking notes and the coins are nice and solid. I like them more than Australian coins.
As part of the meeting we spent one night socialising at the Design Museum which was really interesting. The Finns are very proud of their designers. A significant portion of the museum is currently dedicated to the designer of the ball chair, which in my opinion is a most uncomfortable and impractical chair. This designer, viz., Eero Aarnio,also developed a pony chair for children and the bubble lamp. Again I’m not sure why these designs are awarding winning. I prefer function over form especially when it comes to posture and maximising comfort and efficiency.
On another evening, meeting participants dined in a floating restaurant which isn’t a boat. This was quite nice and gave me an opportunity to meet new people. I learnt quite a lot about Holland, Denmark and Norway. The word is Scandinavia can be seen in two weeks with good planning.
So I shot a few photographs of food and some of the things I found interesting as I walked in the CBD.
Have you been to Helsinki? What did you think? If you haven’t, would you like to visit?
Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here:
Cookie Policy