H50’s Strawberry Champagne Soup, served with Champagne Ice, Pistachios and Mint

So earlier this week, I wrote about how I visited H50 for Portland Dining Month, where I loved their strawberry champagne soup. I know I just talked about a creamy but healthy watercress cauliflower soup because it got all rainy and sucky weather wise. But now I’m following that with this chilled fruit soup recipe which was shared by H50- the exact soup I had! This should be perfect as the weather is heating back up for this weekend (just this weekend… than back to more rain) so hurry up as the strawberries are ready for the picking at various U-Pick farms in the area.

H50 Bistro’s Chilled Strawberry Soup Recipe served with champagne ice, pistachios and mint

chilled strawberry soup served with champagne ice, pistachios and mint, H50 Bistro Bar, Hotel 50 restaurant, Portland, waterfront restaurant

Ingredients:

Strawberry Soup

  • 3 cups strawberries
  • Juice of 1 lemon
  • 1/3 cup champagne
  • 1/3 cup sugar
  • 1/2 cup orange juice
  • 1/2 cup toasted pistachios
  • A sprig of Fresh Mint

Champagne Ice

  • 1 and 1/2 cups champagne
  • 3 tablespoons sugar
  • Juice from 1/2 lemon

Directions:

  1. Juice the lemons- separate them because you are using 1 lemon for the soup, and 1/2 lemon for the champagne ice
  2. Now, for the Champagne Ice, take the 1 1/2 cups champagne, 3 tablespoons sugar, and that 1/2 of a lemon’s juice in mix and pour into a flat tray that can fit into your freezer. It should freeze to the consistency of sorbet.
  3. Meanwhile, chill all the rest of the ingredients in the refrigerator. Well, probably not the sugar. Chill the bowl(s) you are going to serve this in too.
  4. Ice, Ice baby… When your ice is ready, now let’s make the soup. In a blender place the juice of 1 lemon, the strawberries, 1/3 cup of champagne, 1/2 cup sugar and 1/2 cup orange juice, and puree. Since everything is already cold (right? You chilled it? Previous step and all) it is now up to you to adjust consistency and seasoning with the rest of the sugar, and if necessary, perhaps more orange juice.
  5. If it’s not cold enough to your liking… chill some more! When you are ready temperature wise with your Champagne Ice and Chilled Strawberry Soup, ladle the strawberry soup into a chilled bowl. Take out your sorbet freeze of Champagne Ice and “shave” into some chunks by running a tablespoon over it, and top your soup with these shavings. Garnish with crushed toasted pistachio and fresh mint. And now, what to do, what to do with that rest of the strawberries and champagne…

chilled strawberry soup served with champagne ice, pistachios and mint, H50 Bistro Bar, Hotel 50 restaurant, Portland, waterfront restaurant

AND/OR, head on over to H50 and just have the 3 course menu for $29 like I did!

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Watercress Cauliflower Soup

Inspired from the watercress cauliflower soup from Martha Stewart recipe. Besides having the touch of pepper from the watercress, it also has a feel of creaminess from the cauliflower but without the fat, and is extremely simple to make. You just need to saute some onion, cut the cauliflower, pull apart the watercress, and have a blender. On a rainy cool day, it’s comforting yet takes advantage of very nutritious ingredients.

Or I guess it would be if I didn’t eat mine with a thick slice of garlicky cheese bread. I have poor restraint with cheese. But, I felt it was a fair reward as I was cutting and cleaning the cauliflower and came across a worm. I know it’s a possibility when I buy vegetables from the Farmers Market, and it’s totally normal and natural, probably a testament to not using pesticides. So I always clean everything carefully, and cut everything. Yes, this is the rationale (? is it rationale if it’s the reason behind a fear, which is not rational at all) why I don’t eat whole fruit, I always cut it… even strawberries.

I know it’s just a little harmless worm- not like it’s the horror movie Squirm – but I always freak out. Don’t worry, I’m not a screamer. Instead, I am the type of person who freezes in fear. Great survival skill no? I then have to mentally snap myself out of it and get myself under control. And then ask F (not yelling… maybe just a loud insistent raised voice…) to come take it outside to freedom. So I needed that garlic cheese bread for a bit of extra comfort with the comforting healthy soup.

This recipe yields 4 bowls of soup.

Watercress Cauliflower Soup recipe, Martha Stewart

Ingredients:

  • 2 tablespoons butter, or you can use olive oil here as well
  • 1 cup of chopped onion
  • 1 small head cauliflower (about 1 3/4 pounds), cut into 1-inch florets
  • 2 cups of stock (I used vegetable)
  • 2 cups of water
  • Salt to taste
  • Freshly ground pepper to taste
  • 5 cups of watercress- leaves and thin stems only, plus additional sprigs for garnish

Directions:

  1. Melt butter in a medium pot over medium heat. Saute the onion until is translucent.
  2. Add the sautéed onion, cauliflower florets, 2 cups of stock, as well as 2 cups water pot together in a. Bring to a boil. Cover, and reduce heat. Simmer, stirring once, until cauliflower is very tender, about 15 minutes. Salt and pepper to taste.
    Watercress Cauliflower Soup recipe, Martha Stewart
  3. Remove from heat, and stir in watercress. Now working in small batches after the soup has cooled (don’t do this while it’s hot, or fill the whole container!), puree the soup in a blender.
    Watercress Cauliflower Soup recipe, Martha Stewart Watercress Cauliflower Soup recipe, Martha Stewart
  4. Put the pureed soup back in the pot on low heat to warm. To serve,  garnish each bowl with a few sprigs of watercress, and season with a freshly ground pepper to taste.

I am still in my microgreens crush stage, so instead of garnishing with watercress (I forgot to reserve any), I used pea shoots and spicy sprouts from Nightlight Farms from the Portland Farmers Market. Not pictured is that I seasoned my soup pretty liberally with the freshly ground pepper and liked the contrast and layering of the peppery tone of the watercresses versus the peppery tone of the ground pepper.

Watercress Cauliflower Soup recipe, Martha Stewart

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