- Home >> Lifestyle: Soups:
-
- Calling
All Garlic Lovers
- BY
DANA JACOBI FOR THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR CANCER RESEARCH
Do you have a food obsession? I have an addiction
to dark chocolate and share another passion enjoyed by many:
I adore garlic.
I
love eating garlic to the point of mashing roasted cloves into
baked potatoes, steamed broccoli and even scrambled eggs. This
passion springs from more than a taste for garlics flavor.
Food and emotions, as we all know, can be strongly linked. For
me, garlic has that association because my grandmother fed me
black pumpernickel bread slathered with sweet butter and dotted
with thin slivers of raw garlic. Like many of her generation,
she believed this would keep me well and cure me if I did get
sick, a practice to keep in mind if you are in the throes of
a summer cold.
Eventually,
studying garlics health benefits, I learned that it is
anti-bacterial, and much of its power is lost in cooking. So
Gran was right feeding it to me raw, although, frankly, I think
that helped more by keeping people at such a distance any germs
they carried did not reach me.
For
social reasons, I stopped eating raw garlic in high school. By
college, cooking for myself, I switched to my current preference
for roasted garlic. It has a milder flavor since cooking gentles
the pungent substances in this potent allium. But I confess that
when sick, I go back to eating raw garlic even though I suspect
that the comforting ritual of eating Grans cure is as effective
as the garlic itself.
In
summer, when I reject even the thought of turning on the oven,
this cold soup is another way I get a good garlic fix. Bread
thickens the soup, giving it a pleasing body, the way it does
in gazpacho. But instead of balancing the garlic with sharp-tasting
vinegar and olive oil, as gazpacho does, caramelized onions and
milk round off the edges of this soups sautéed garlic
kick. Not for the faint-hearted, this soup should be served ice
cold, garnished with a sprinkling of fresh parsley to compliment
its cool beige color.
Chilled
Garlic and Onion Soup - Makes
4-6 servings.
1
1/2 cups cubed whole-wheat Italian bread, without crust
1 Tbsp. unsalted butter
1 Tbsp. canola oil
3 cups chopped onions
6 large garlic cloves, chopped
4 cups fat-free, reduced sodium chicken broth
4 parsley sprigs (see note)
4 fresh thyme sprigs, or 1 tsp. dried
1 bay leaf
1 cup whole milk
Salt and ground pepper, preferably white
1/4 cup chopped flat-leaf parsley, for garnish
Let
the bread cubes stand overnight so they are stale and hard, or
dry them in 300 F. oven for about 15 minutes, stirring them once
or twice. Cool until the bread is hard.
In
a deep, heavy pot, heat the butter and oil over medium heat.
Add the onions, and sauté until they start to color, 10
minutes. Add the garlic and cook until the onions are deep gold,
with dark brown edges, 15-20 minutes.
Add
the broth, parsley, thyme and bay leaf. (To make the later removal
of the herbs easier, place them in a large mesh teaball, or one
made specifically for holding herbs.) Increase the heat. When
the soup comes to a boil, reduce the heat and simmer 10 minutes.
Add the bread and cook 10 minutes. Remove from heat and let stand
20 minutes to cool slightly.
Remove
the parsley, thyme and the bay leaf. Purée the soup in
a blender until smooth. Blend in the milk. Season to taste with
salt and pepper. (Refrigeration dampens the flavor, so chilled
soups need more than the usual amount of seasoning.) Chill completely,
4 to 24 hours.
Before
serving, adjust the seasoning. Divide the chilled soup among
4 bowls and serve garnished with the parsley.
Per serving: 125 calories, 6 g. total fat (2 g. saturated
fat), 14 g. carbohydrate, 5 g. protein, 2 g. dietary fiber, 438
mg. sodium.
----------------------------------------------------------
Something Different is written for the American
Institute for Cancer Research (AICR) by Dana Jacobi, author of
The Joy of Soy and recipe creator for AICRs Stopping Cancer
Before It Starts.
AICRs
Nutrition Hotline
is a free service that allows you to ask a registered dietitian
questions about diet, nutrition and cancer. Access it on-line
at www.aicr.org/hotline
or by phone (1-800-843-8114) 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. ET Monday-Friday.
AICR is the only major cancer charity focused exclusively on
the link between diet, nutrition and cancer. It provides education
programs that help Americans learn to make changes for lower
cancer risk. AICR also supports innovative research in cancer
prevention and treatment at universities, hospitals and research
centers. It has provided more than $78 million for research in
diet, nutrition and cancer. AICRs Web address is www.aicr.org.
_______________________________________
RECIPE POSTED
JULY 17, 2006
|