Authors: Maggie Stuckey
Serves 6
Rich with the flavors of Thailand — coconut milk, ginger, and lime — this wonderful soup is comfort food at its most exotic.
Make ahead?
Through step 1; refrigerate.
For large crowds:
Multiply by as much as 4.
Chicago, Illinois
Noah Stein is a young man on a mission: getting families involved in projects that promote healthy living — in particular, urban farming.
In Chicago neighborhoods, as in much of the country, community gardens are a very popular way for people without traditional garden spaces to grow fresh produce. Noah, a Chicago native who returned home after living in California for several years, was struck by what he describes as the “territorial nature” of community gardens there.
To break through that, he hit upon the idea of a community soup night. The overall goal is to get people who are involved in community gardens and gardening in general to know each other, to share ideas and resources. “Sharing soup,” he says, “is of course an age-old idea.”
He found a perfect venue in the Logan Square Kitchen, a commercial kitchen and event space committed to sustainability. He recruited volunteers to help with cooking and cleanup, got local grocers to donate bread and crackers, and found a sponsor in a local food co-op that offered him wholesale prices.
Noah did all the organizing, but “people I had never met came to help wash dishes. Some people brought desserts; we didn’t ask, they just showed up.” Sitting together at long tables, people were meeting each other for the first time and making good connections.
Soup Night is held monthly, on Tuesday evenings. There is no specific charge, but donations are welcome. At the first event, February 2011, more than 50 people attended; the next month, 75; and the third month, 100. Noah is especially pleased that about 25 percent of those attending are children. Getting whole families involved was his main goal.
Serves 6–8
Dennis Battles has had the great joy of taking cooking classes at Le Cordon Bleu in France. Back home in Long Beach, Washington, he uses those skills to create his own specialties, including this soup that honors the one item he says he can’t imagine cooking without — garlic.
Make ahead?
Yes. Or, depending on your schedule, through step 3.
For large crowds:
If you have a big enough roasting pan, you could double or triple this recipe.
Serves 6–8
This simple carrot soup is delicious both hot and cold. In warm weather, consider serving it chilled, in tall drinking glasses.
Make ahead?
Through step 2.
For large crowds:
It’s perfect for a crowd. Just multiply by as much as you need for your party.
Salem, Oregon
On the first Sunday in May, the youth group of this church puts on a soup luncheon in the downstairs meeting room. It’s a fund-raiser for the youth programs.
Parents and other adults have volunteered to bring soup, bread, or dessert. For a while the large, bright room is mostly empty and quiet. Then, about the time church service begins upstairs, chaos slides in downstairs. Seven soups arrive in large slow cookers, and there is a mad scramble for more extension cords. There aren’t enough ladles. One of the tent cards, displaying the soup name, has fallen in the soup kettle. Teenage boys stand around, willing to work but clueless. Teenage girls take over, directing the boys to set up tables and chairs. Over all, the calm guidance of
Ann Armstrong
, youth education coordinator, keeps everything moving smoothly. She ran a restaurant kitchen for many years; she knows what she’s doing.
When the worship service ends, people start to filter downstairs, dropping donations into a beautiful woven bowl, and line up to be served their choice of soup. In what seems like no time, everyone is seated at one of the long tables, enjoying hot soup, and the noise level has ratcheted up significantly.
One of the parents (and soup contributors) explains why she loves this event: “We’re a family, people in this church. So on this day, I get to sit down with all my friends in one place and enjoy this lovely lunch. What could be better?”
Marilee Corey
and her daughter Allison came up with the idea of Soup Sunday, and still serve as sponsors. “It’s our way of giving back to the congregation that has given us so much,” Marilee says. “These Sunday Soup lunches give everyone a chance to support our kids and get a nice meal at the same time.” Allison, herself not far from teenagerdom, adds, “And the kids helping here get the satisfaction of knowing they are doing a service to the church.”
Unlike some of the neighborhood gatherings profiled, this soup event was not created as a way to bring people closer. Most church members already know one another, in varying degrees of closeness. But it has that effect nonetheless. Eating together means that acquaintances grow into friendships, friendships get deeper and richer.
Recipe from Ann Armstrong,
Unity Church
, Salem, Oregon
Serves 6–8
The taste of the peanut butter is almost unrecognizable here, but it adds a depth of flavor that you don’t want to miss. Don’t skip the sesame oil; it provides a flavor note I can only describe as haunting and essential. And sesame oil also adds authenticity: along with peanuts, sesame seeds were introduced into the United States by slaves from Africa, who called them benne. The soup is equally good and equally nutritious with or without the chicken.
Make ahead?
Sure. But hold off on adding the chicken until dinnertime, so it doesn’t get rubbery.
For large crowds:
This is very easy, and very economical, to expand, especially if you opt for the vegetarian version.
For vegetarians:
Use vegetable broth, and skip the chicken.