Green Garlic Soup

This recipe showcases the unique flavor profile of mature green garlic to create a velvety, deep-yet-delicate soup.

INGREDIENTS:

750 grams green garlic, including the tops
1 medium yellow onion, diced
4 tablespoons butter
1 large russet potato, peeled and diced into ½–inch pieces
6 cups best-available chicken or veggie stock
1 cup parsley, stemmed (to boost the colour)
salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste
1 lemon
best available olive oil for finishing
optional additions (see below)

DIRECTIONS:

Trim off any roots and the fibrous top ends of the green garlic stalks. Then cut the green garlic at the point where the white(ish) half ends and the remaining green tops begin. Roughly chop both halves but keep them separate. In a large pot over medium heat, add butter, the white half of the green garlic and onion, and cook for about 5 minutes, stirring frequently, or until they are translucent but not browned.

Add potato, chopped green garlic tops and stock. Bring to a boil, then lower heat and simmer for 30 minutes.
Let cool, then purée in a blender along with parsley.

Press the soup through a fine meshed strainer (ideally a Chinois). Season to taste with salt, pepper and lemon juice.

Reheat just before serving, top with the optional additions if you choose, and drizzle with olive oil just before serving.

Cooking time: 1 hour
Yield: 8 – 12 servings

Advance work: Soup can be made up to a couple of days in advance. Plan-overs: Extra soup will last in the fridge for 3—4 days, and in the freezer for 6+ months.

Chinois

A chinois is a large cone-shaped strainer made from a super-fine woven metal mesh. When you “push” (i.e., use the bottom of a ladle to force the liquids through the mesh) a blended soup through a chinois, only a small amount of fibrous mash will remain caught in the finely knit mesh. But what a difference that makes. The resulting soup will have a velvety mouth feel that is satisfyingly rich and decadent.

A chinois can also be used for filtering stocks, straining fresh cheeses and, in a pinch, straining out cork fragments.

Bob Blumer

Bob Blumer is a Food Network O.G. He created and hosted three pioneering series that ran for 12 consecutive years and aired in over 20 countries. He has also written seven acclaimed cookbooks, broken eight food-related Guinness World Records, and is a long-term ambassador for Second Harvest. His most recent cookbook Flavorbomb: A Rogue Guide to Making Everything Taste Better is a collection of the tricks, tips, hacks and techniques he gleaned as he ate his way around the globe for the past 25 years.
The Toronto Sun says “Blumer once again pushes boundaries, but in a way that encourages readers to let go their own culinary hesitations to create simple meals built on layers of flavor.”
Bob’s Instagram feed exudes creativity and reveals his passion for cooking, foraging and taking the road less traveled. Follow him: @bobblumer.
To work with Bob, contact him at: gastronaut@bobblumer.com
Website: http://bobblumer.com/

Posted on Friday, April 25th, 2025

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