So Good Carrot & Orange Soup
Submitted by snowpuppy4
Carrot and orange soup with leeks, cayenne, and ginger blended into a silky vegan puree. Bright citrus and warm spice work together for a soup that shines hot or chilled.
YIELD
12 servingsPREP
15 minCOOK
60 minREADY
75 minCarrot soup with an attitude. A dozen carrots get sweated low and slow with leeks, then simmered in stock until they collapse, before orange juice and zest cut through the sweetness with a citrus snap. Cayenne and ginger bring warmth at the back of the throat without overpowering the carrots up front, and a pinch of nutmeg ties it all together.
Pureed smooth in the blender, the soup turns velvety and almost glossy from the olive oil. Serve hot in winter or chilled in summer, both work, both flatter the orange. Vegan when made with vegetable stock, low in calories, and quietly elegant as a dinner-party starter.
Pro Tips
- Use only the white parts of the leeks; the dark green tops are fibrous and bitter even after cooking
- Sweat the leeks covered to soften without browning; browning muddies the final color
- Zest the orange before juicing, it is nearly impossible the other way around
- Blend hot soup in batches with the lid cracked open, sealing it traps steam and erupts
- For a silkier finish, pass the blended soup through a fine sieve before reheating
Variations
- Swirl a spoonful of coconut milk into each bowl for a creamier, Thai-leaning version
- Garnish with toasted pumpkin seeds and a drizzle of chili oil for texture
- Add a peeled, chopped sweet potato along with the carrots for a thicker, sweeter pot
Ingredients
Directions
Pour the oil in a good-sized pot and gently sauté the leeks for about 2 minutes with the pot covered.
Add the chopped carrots, stir well, cover the pot, and continue cooking for about 4 to 5 minutes over low heat.
Uncover the pot, stir once more, and add the stock, nutmeg, paprika, cayenne, ginger, cilantro, orange rind, orange juice, salt, and pepper to taste.
Bring the soup to a boil.
Cover the pot and let the soup simmer for 30 to 40 minutes.
Allow the soup to cook and then pass it through a sieve or blend it in a blender or food processor.
This soup can be refrigerated for a few hours and served cold, or if you decide to serve it hot, reheat it just before serving and let the soup stand for 3 minutes.
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