CreamyGoodness
Well-Known Member
3 butternut squashes, destemmed and seeded (save the seeds!)
1 carton of chicken stock with more on hand (I use homemade, so I use about 3 of the little ziplock bags full)
3 or 4 slices of your favorite bacon, baked until crispy and and crumbled
A few grates of fresh nutmeg
Half a can of evaporated milk, or roughly the same amount of heavy or light cream (I've also used whole milk successfully).
Roughly 1 TBLS olive oil
Kosher salt, cracked black pepper, paprika, chili powder and cayenne to taste
1) Bake your bacon until crispy. Crumble and set aside.
2) Destem and cut each squash at least in half lengthwise (you can cut again crosswise to save space in cookie tray/oven if you want.
3) Separate the seeds from the pulp, rinse well and put in a paper towel to dry
4) Put squash pieces skin side up on a cookie sheet or roasting pan and put in a 400 degree oven until meat softens and skin blisters (roughly 1 hour but keep an eye on it, it seems to vary widely.
5) Let the pieces cool just until you can handle them. Peel and cube and put in a big soup pot.
6) Add enough chicken stock to cover your cubes and season with salt and pepper. Bring to a boil and then simmer for about 20 minutes to a half hour (you want the squash to be falling apart)
7) Adjust seasoning and then use either an immersion blender or a food processor and blend until smooth with no lumps. If you need to add more stock and simmer longer to achieve this, then you can do so.
8) Add your cream and stir. You'll see a real change in color at this point. Add a little nutmeg and let it cook for a few minutes more on lowered heat until it further reduces and the raw cream taste changes to a more even squash flavor. Feel free to adjust seasoning again, but don’t go too crazy with salt, as you will be adding a lot with the toppings.
9) Get a nonstick pan and add your olive oil. Make a spice mix out of kosher salt, cracked black pepper, paprika, chili powder and cayenne and liberally season your seeds before throwing in the pan. Cook until crispy and well toasted, but not black.
10) Ladle your soup into bowls and sprinkle each bowl with seeds and bacon. Do not skimp on the seeds nor the bacon
1 carton of chicken stock with more on hand (I use homemade, so I use about 3 of the little ziplock bags full)
3 or 4 slices of your favorite bacon, baked until crispy and and crumbled
A few grates of fresh nutmeg
Half a can of evaporated milk, or roughly the same amount of heavy or light cream (I've also used whole milk successfully).
Roughly 1 TBLS olive oil
Kosher salt, cracked black pepper, paprika, chili powder and cayenne to taste
1) Bake your bacon until crispy. Crumble and set aside.
2) Destem and cut each squash at least in half lengthwise (you can cut again crosswise to save space in cookie tray/oven if you want.
3) Separate the seeds from the pulp, rinse well and put in a paper towel to dry
4) Put squash pieces skin side up on a cookie sheet or roasting pan and put in a 400 degree oven until meat softens and skin blisters (roughly 1 hour but keep an eye on it, it seems to vary widely.
5) Let the pieces cool just until you can handle them. Peel and cube and put in a big soup pot.
6) Add enough chicken stock to cover your cubes and season with salt and pepper. Bring to a boil and then simmer for about 20 minutes to a half hour (you want the squash to be falling apart)
7) Adjust seasoning and then use either an immersion blender or a food processor and blend until smooth with no lumps. If you need to add more stock and simmer longer to achieve this, then you can do so.
8) Add your cream and stir. You'll see a real change in color at this point. Add a little nutmeg and let it cook for a few minutes more on lowered heat until it further reduces and the raw cream taste changes to a more even squash flavor. Feel free to adjust seasoning again, but don’t go too crazy with salt, as you will be adding a lot with the toppings.
9) Get a nonstick pan and add your olive oil. Make a spice mix out of kosher salt, cracked black pepper, paprika, chili powder and cayenne and liberally season your seeds before throwing in the pan. Cook until crispy and well toasted, but not black.
10) Ladle your soup into bowls and sprinkle each bowl with seeds and bacon. Do not skimp on the seeds nor the bacon