serves 6
You might need to buy:
  • olive oil
  • dried rosemary
  • diced tomatoes
  • Salt and pepper to taste
  • MINI-MEATBALLS
  • plain dry bread crumbs
  • cold water
  • Salt and pepper
serves 4
You might need to buy:
  • vegetable stock
  • butter
  • cumin
  • curry powder
  • good pinch of salt and pepper
  • freshly chopped parsley
serves 8
You might need to buy:
  • small bunch of fresh dill ~ .5 oz / 15 g
  • extra virgin olive oil
  • / 56 oz / 1.5 kg leeks
  • unsalted butter
  • fine grain sea salt
serves 6
You might need to buy:
  • dried split peas
  • Olive oil
You might need to buy:
  • dried basil
  • Cooking spray
  • frozen green beans
  • tomato paste
  • dried oregano
  • kosher salt

By all means, use 1 Tablespoon each of fresh rosemary and thyme (which are both easy to grow) if you have it.

—A bowl of this soup, a nice green salad, and a loaf of warm, homemade bread (some beyond easy beer bread, perhaps?) make a well-rounded meal. If you’re serving people who must have meat every time they eat, a plate of nice hearty sausages, such as bratwurst or kielbasa, could be grilled or pan-fried and served along with the soup. Or thickly slice the sausages on a diagonal and set several slices right on top of each bowl of soup.

—Make it a celebration of spring. For those fortunate enough to have access to the first vegetables of the season, you might consider making this recipe using half the beans and twice the number of vegetables—all baby versions. I haven’t tried this yet, but I imagine that it would be splendid. You might only want to puree 1/3 of it, so that the chunks of individual vegetables remained more visible.

You might need to buy:
  • dried rosemary
  • dried thyme
  • fennel seeds
  • bay leaf
  • Salt & pepper to taste
serves 6
You might need to buy:
  • * Salt and freshly ground black pepper
  • * Nutmeg
  • * 6 cups chicken stock
  • * 2 tablespoons unsalted butter
You might need to buy:
  • water
  • Salt and pepper