Blender Tomato Soup

- Total Time
- 1 hour 15 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 2pounds ripe, locally grown tomatoes
- Salt to taste
- 1large garlic clove, peeled
- 2tablespoons sherry vinegar
- 2tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
- 2tablespoons tomato paste
- ¼cup fresh basil leaves, plus a few leaves, slivered, for garnish
- 1cup water
- Pinch of cayenne (optional)
Preparation
- Step 1
Cut ½ pound of the tomatoes (2 medium) in half across the equator, and grate on the large holes of a box grater set over a bowl. Line a strainer with cheesecloth, and set over a bowl. Place the grated tomatoes in the cheesecloth and allow to drain for one hour. (The “tomato water” that drips through will have an intense, pure flavor.) Meanwhile, cut the remaining tomatoes in wedges and toss in a bowl with salt to taste, the garlic clove, vinegar and olive oil.
- Step 2
After one hour, gather up the cheesecloth around the tomato pulp that remains and squeeze to extract all of the remaining juice. Transfer the juice to a blender. Add the tomato wedges and all of the juice in the bowl, along with the tomato paste, basil leaves and water. Blend until smooth (if necessary do this in two batches). Adjust seasoning, and if you want a hint of heat, add a small pinch of cayenne.
- Step 3
Strain the soup through a medium strainer set over a bowl, pushing the soup through with a spatula or the bottom of a ladle. Serve right away, or for the best flavor refrigerate for one to 24 hours before serving. Blend again or whisk before serving. Serve, garnishing each bowl with slivered basil.
- Advance preparation: The soup tastes even better if you make it several hours to a day before serving.
Private Notes
Comments
Although this recipe suggests serving it chilled on a hot summer day, I found that by replacing the fresh tomatoes with a 28oz can of high quality, organic, canned tomatoes, it is delicious served hot, on a cold winter day (and sublime along with 'Crusty Macaroni and Cheese'). I heated the combined ingredients up and then used an immersion blender to puree. Saved a lot of cleanup, and took a mere 6 minutes start to finish. Got raves.
Delicious! Since the soup was intended for dinner on my fasting day, I cut the olive oil to just one tablespoon. Also added more garlic cloves and a bit of cayenne for punch. After 24 hours in the fridge, it was great! Will def make again!
The best blueberry pie I have ever made or eaten. Actually, better than ANY pie I’ve ever had! I made exactly as written using cornstarch as I was out of arrowroot. I made this pie several years ago when it was featured in the magazine section of the NYTimes. I loved it then also and can’t explain why I waited so long to make it again except that I use only berries that I have just picked. I used the recommended crust but made a lattice crust. This pie deserves a fancy top crust!
I made this soup with our homegrown heirloom tomatoes and served it warm with grilled cheese sandwiches to my granddaughters. We all liked it but felt that there was too much vinegar. It hid the taste of the tomatoes. I will try again with only one tablespoon.
Didn’t have fresh basil on hand so replaced with dried basil plus a few other spices. Added all ingredients directly in the vitamix. Turned out very creamy and flavourful in just a few minutes!
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