Vine Ripened Tomato Soup Recipe

Published: Mon, 07/31/17

July 31, 2017

Happy Monday, Slow Cookerers!!

There are 153 days left in 2017.  This is important because between now and then there are SO MANY recipes you can try in your crockpot!!

:-)

But today? Let's make tomato soup.

I hate tomato soup from the can. I hate it. I think it looks gross, smells gross, and tastes like metal.

It also has wheat starch in it for some stupid reason.

Hmm. It looks like I have rather strong feelings about canned tomato soup. I should probably talk to someone about that.

But I can't seem to get enough of fancy restaurant tomato soup. It tastes much different than canned soup---it's both sweet and tangy, and the bit of cream leaves a nice velvet layer on your tongue.

This is a great way to use up a tomato surplus from your garden.





serves 4 to 6

3 pounds vine-ripened tomatoes
1 medium onion, peeled and chopped
2 cups tomato juice
1 cup cooking sherry (or regular sherry, or apple juice)
3 tablespoons granulated white sugar
1 chicken (or vegetable) boullion cube
2 tablespoons chopped fresh basil

to add later:
--2 cups heavy cream
--salt and pepper to taste

optional:
sour cream and/or Parmesan cheese for garnish

The Directions.

Use a 5-6 quart crockpot for this soup.

Wash all of your tomatoes, and cut them in quarters. 

Nope, we're not going to peel the tomatoes, yay! 

To save your counter top from tomato gook, put your cutting board on a cookie sheet with sides. The juice will then stay inside the cookie sheet.

Put all the tomatoes in your crockpot.

Chop up the onion, and add it. 

Cover with the tomato juice and sherry, and drop in the bouillon cube. Stir in the sugar and chopped basil.

Cover and cook on low for 6-8 hours.

If you'd like your soup to have chunks, go ahead and stir in the cream. 

If you'd prefer a chunk-free soup, CAREFULLY use an immersible blender to soupify, or blend in small batches in a traditional blender. 

Then stir in the heavy cream.

Eat. 

Smile.

The Verdict.


We ate this with some drop biscuits and licked our bowls. My tomato-loving child thought it was a "bit too tomato-y," but ate it and my tomato-hater lapped up tons.

This is an elegant soup, perfect for a starter at a fancy dinner, or to serve with sandwiches at a tea party. 

Or you can stand at the counter and eat it directly out of the pot. 

I'm excited for lunch.


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“True story, the house is cleaner now than it used to be when we had housekeepers come in! Thank you so much!” — Sara


“I am so happy with these printables! I simply print them out, and leave the binder on the kitchen counter. Whenever someone is ‘bored’ I show them what they can/should do!” — Bridget




Have a happy Monday!

happy Slow Cooking!!

steph