I’ve
been living in the south for over 20 years so when I feel the need for comfort
food, I visit one of the many meat-and-three restaurants
that call Nashville home. For those of you
who are unfamiliar with the term, a meat-and-three restaurant is typically a family owned restaurant where you pick one meat
from a daily selection of 3–6 choices (such as fried chicken, country ham, pot roast, country-fried steak, meatloaf or pork chop) and three side dishes from a list that may
include up to a dozen options (such as mashed potatoes, macaroni and cheese,
squash casserole, creamed corn, green beans or turnip greens). The meal is often served with biscuit or cornbread and sweet iced tea. Perhaps not the
healthy vegetables you might have thought of, but definitely what we in the south consider
comfort food.
But when the temperatures in Nashville slipped to single digits this week, I longed for the comfort foods of my childhood which could only be found in my mother’s kitchen or a New York Deli. I couldn’t wait to pull out my big soup pot and make one of my northern comfort foods, Mushroom Barley Soup. The temperature may have been frigid, but the bowl of soup warmed my soul.
But when the temperatures in Nashville slipped to single digits this week, I longed for the comfort foods of my childhood which could only be found in my mother’s kitchen or a New York Deli. I couldn’t wait to pull out my big soup pot and make one of my northern comfort foods, Mushroom Barley Soup. The temperature may have been frigid, but the bowl of soup warmed my soul.
Ingredients:
§ 2 pounds
chuck or stew meat, cut into bite sized cubes§ 3 tablespoons vegetable oil
§ 1 pound package of carrots, peeled and sliced
§ 1 small bunch of celery, sliced
§ 3 quarts of beef broth
§ 1 bay leaf (optional)
§ 1 large onion (whole or finely diced)
§ 1 cup pearl barley
§ 1 cup baby lima beans (optional)
§ 1 pound sliced white mushrooms
§ Salt and Pepper to taste (I added 1 tablespoon salt and 1 teaspoon pepper)
Directions:
Chop the carrots into small pieces and set aside.
Chop the celery into small pieces and set aside.
Heat 3 tablespoons of vegetable oil in a large pot over medium high heat. Add the beef and brown. Scrape the bottom of the pot to loosen the brown bits of delicious goodness.
Pour the beef broth into the pot and bring to boil. The meat will emit a frothy scum which I like to skim off.
Add the chopped onion, carrots, celery, bay leaf, salt and pepper and bring to boil. Add the mushrooms, barley and baby lima beans.
Reduce heat to low simmer and cook uncovered for approximately 2 hours or until the barley and baby lima beans are completely tender and the soup is nicely thickened. If the soup becomes overly thick, add water or broth. Serve hot.
For a printer friendly copy of this recipe, go to Mushroom Barley Soup. Enjoy!
Notes:
§ In
the past, I used water to cook this soup but since broth is so readily
available and adds a depth of flavor I now use broth. You can make this
soup using water only, broth only or a combination of both. If you want the soup to have a richer flavor,
you can always a few bouillon cubes. If
you want to keep it vegetarian, leave out the beef and use vegetable stock for
your base.
§ When
making soup, it is less important to stick with the exact measurements than it
is to make it appeal to your taste. If
you like a thicker soup, add more barley.
If you like, add more vegetables.
I prefer a thinner soup, so I add a few more cups of liquid at the end.
§ Mushroom
Barley Soup does not typically have baby lima beans but I love them and
feel they add texture and taste to the soup.
If you don’t like beans, leave them out.
§ I
like adding diced onion to my soup, but my mother would add a whole, peeled
onion. When the onion is soft and has
flavored the soup, remove and toss.