Tuscan Bread and Tomato Soup

- Total Time
- 30 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 3tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
- 1small onion, chopped
- 4garlic cloves, minced
- 1(28-ounce) can chopped tomatoes, with juice
- 2tablespoons tomato paste
- Pinch of sugar
- Pinch of red chili flakes
- Salt
- freshly ground pepper
- 4cups water
- 1pound stale country bread, crusts removed, cut into cubes about 7 cups
- 2 to 3tablespoons slivered fresh basil
For the Tuscan Bread and Tomato Soup
Preparation
For the Tuscan Bread and Tomato Soup
- Step 1
Heat 2 tablespoons of the oil in a large, heavy soup pot over medium-low heat. Add the onion, and cook, stirring, until tender, about five minutes. Meanwhile, pulse the tomatoes in a food processor fitted with the steel blade until coarsely blended.
- Step 2
Add the garlic to the pot. Cook, stirring, for about a minute until fragrant. Add the tomatoes, tomato paste, sugar, red chili flakes, and salt and pepper. Cook, stirring occasionally, until the tomatoes have cooked down, about 10 minutes.
- Step 3
Stir the bread cubes into the tomatoes. Add the water, half the basil and salt to taste. Increase the heat, and simmer, stirring and mashing the bread, for about 10 minutes until the soup is thick, like pap. Stir in the remaining basil, and taste and adjust the seasonings. Serve hot, warm or room temperature with the remaining olive oil drizzled over each serving.
- Advance preparation: This soup can be made a day ahead and will be even more flavorful the second day. I reheat mine in a microwave.
Private Notes
Comments
Oh my, I love this soup. It's a simple recipe, not too many ingredients. I added a slice of reggiano rind, which helps with the thickening and the flavour. I did use organic, fire-roasted canned tomatoes and they, to me, taste just as good as fresh, at least in this soup. I also left the crusts and used leftover sourdough because that's what I had. P.S. 'Pap' means thick like baby food...
This is an okay recipe as it stands, but it is so much better when made with fresh heirloom tomatoes rather than canned tomatoes. Used three large tomatoes.
Good but . . . . . I used canned tomatoes . . . . not so good . . . . . next time, either fresh tomatoes or perhaps, organic fire roasted canned tomatoes. Also, too much bread. "Soup" was more of a stew and I didn't even use a pound of bread. Next time, I think I'll try a few red pepper flakes, as someone recommended, or maybe a dash of ground fennel.
I followed the directions exactly as prescribed and I thought there was too much bread for the amount of tomato product. My husband liked the soup better before I used an immersion blender on it, but I liked it better smoother. It is tasty and easy!
Really good—so much so, I think about it when craving comfort food. Easy to make. Great way to use up stale leftover bakery bread. Inspired to make this after trip to Italy where I first tried similar soup. Freezes & reheats well! Yummy yummy yummy! And healthy too.
Make sure to chop the onions small and really cook them down. Otherwise they add a bite to an otherwise smooth and silky soup.
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