| Serves | 6 |
This wonderfully warming winter soup pushes the culinary envelope, using a variety of ingredients rarely seen in the American kitchen — parsley root, barberries, and sunchokes — along with the comfortably familiar flavors of apples and walnuts. If you can’t find parsley root, try substituting the more readily available salsify, parsnip, or celery root.
| ¼ | cup plus 1 tablespoon olive oil | |
| ½ | cup coarsely chopped walnuts | |
| 2 | Tbsp. dried barberries | |
| 3 | garlic cloves, chopped | |
| ~ | Juice of 1 lemon | |
| 1½ | tsp. walnut oil | |
| 1 | apple, peeled, cored, and finely diced | |
| 1 | Tbsp. chopped parsley | |
| 1 | Tbsp. chopped fresh tarragon | |
| ~ | Salt and freshly ground black pepper | |
| 3 | cups peeled and diced parsley root | |
| 1 | cup peeled and diced sunchokes | |
| ½ | tsp. ground turmeric | |
| 1 | tsp. ground cumin | |
| 2 | tsp. garam masala | |
| ½ | tsp. salt | |
| 1 | cup heavy cream | |
| 2 | cups chicken stock | |
| 3 | cups water |
This content is from the book New American Table by Marcus Samuelsson.
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1. by the weekly veggie on Nov 2, 2009 at 8:29 AM PST
Yum I’d like to give this soup a try. I saw Parsley Root at the Hillsdale Farmers’ Market this past weekend at the Gathering Together Farm booth. I was wondering if it was different from parsnips as they look so much the same. Now I know. There were also walnuts and sunchokes around the market. Wish I’d had this recipe then!
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