The weekend calls for a cocktail.
We have a few variations on the theme below. Sometimes we use rosemary, sometimes we use less simple syrup and oftentimes we use more bourbon. I would also like to have it with a sparkling cider or even a mulled adaptation. However you chose to assemble it please sit back, relax and enjoy. Toast to it with someone you appreciate and who appreciates you back.
The work week is too long to do anything less.
Apple Thyme Bourbon Cocktail
Ingredients:
2 ounces Bourbon
2 ounces Chilled Apple Cider
Fresh Thyme
2 Cinnamon Sticks
4 Whole Cloves
2 Star Anise
1 cup of Sugar
Ice
Method:
(1) Make your spiced simple syrup by combining equal parts sugar and water in a small saucepan (one cup of sugar and one cup of water). Add cinnamon sticks, whole cloves and star anise. Simmer until sugar is dissolved and mixture thickens to a syrup. Chill.
(2) Muddle thyme and 1/4 ounce of the spiced simple syrup in a cocktail shaker. Add ice, bourbon and cider. Shake, strain and serve over ice with a thyme sprig for garnish.
* Spiced simple syrup can be kept, covered, in the refrigerator for a few weeks.
There are two types of people in this world – those who are soup people and those who are not. Undeniably, indisputably, I am a soup person.
I find myself turning to soup when the comforts of home are very evidently needed. When I can’t concentrate on anything besides wanting to curl up on the couch with an oversized steaming mug and sip my way to oblivion, I know it’s time. These phases of intense soup making come and go, but one constant remains – I am a soup lover through and through.
There is something quite extraordinary about taking a mere handful of humble pantry staples and creating something entirely soul satisfying. It’s often a leisurely process – the sweating of aromatics, the simmering of stock, the gentle and quiet reduction and intensity of flavour that only patience and time can create. Consuming it is also a slow process as you simply cannot rush your way through a hot bowl of redemption – you must tread lightly.
The soup below is not of the creamy silken variety. While I admire and appreciate those incarnations as well, this time I needed something much more – rustic home fare. I needed a reminder that soup, and food in general, can be transforming – that no matter how little you have or how restless you feel in your current circumstance, comfort can still be found – and quite easily. This soup is special to me not only owing to all of the above, but because it is also a perfect example of how the rhythm of cookery can be a comfort. After making this soup many times in the past, I know that I can now stand at the stove, barely thinking – sometimes shattered within, and still produce a pot of soothing, undemanding sustenance.
I hope you benefit from this soup as much as we do here in our little home.
Vegetable Barley Soup
Ingredients:
1 – 1 1/2 cups pearl barley
A good splash of olive oil
1 large yellow onion – coarsely chopped
3 cloves of garlic – thinly sliced
2 sticks of celery – coarsely chopped
2 medium carrots – coarsely chopped
2 bacon slices – coarsely chopped
4 large tomatoes – blanched, peeled and coarsely chopped
4 cups of vegetable stock
2 cups of chicken stock
1 teaspoon of sugar
Fresh italian parsley – chopped
1/4 cup tomato paste
Method:
(1) Cook pearl barley according to directions on package. Set aside.
(2) Heat the olive oil in a large soup pot. Add the bacon and cook until crisp. Set aside.
(3) Add the onion, garlic, carrot and celery to the remaining oil in the pot and sweat until just tender.
(4) Add the tomato and cook, stirring, for five minutes or until the tomato is soft.
(5) Stir in the pearl barley, stock(s), sugar, parsley, reserved bacon and tomato paste. Bring to a boil. Reduce the heat and simmer, covered, for about 1 1/2 hours. Season to taste.
* Can be made and frozen for up to 2 months.
** You can use a combination of vegetable stock, chicken stock, or whichever stock you prefer.
*** You may need less tomato paste. Add and taste as you go.