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Tuesday, 21 October 2014


Woman doesn't live by cake alone and so I present a rare (for this blog) savory recipe -- a delicious lentil soup -- perfect for the cooler fall weather. I'm breaking from my all-sugar-all-the-time recipes because this soup is just that good. (And it looks much better in real life than in the above photo.)

This Very Best Lentil Soup recipe is courtesy my dear childhood friend Susan Zetzer who, many years ago (in the pre-internet age), hand wrote the recipe and mailed it to me from her home in San Francisco. (Susan is an amazing cook, not to mention a very successful executive in the financial world.) I make this a lot and each time I serve it to guests they request the recipe.

Below are some of the ingredients. Not pictured are the kale, the wine and the beef stock (and probably a few other things).


Susan's handwritten recipe is below, and below that is an easier-to-read typed version. It's fairly easy to make and fills the entire house with a lovely aroma.



The Very Best Lentil Soup (adapted by Susan Zetzer from Marcella Hazen)

2 medium yellow onions, chopped
4-5 large carrots, chopped
8 stalks celery, chopped
1 head kale, chopped into 1 inch strips (take out ribs)
Olive oil
½ stick butter
½ cup shredded pancetta
2/3  cup white wine
2 medium cans chopped tomatoes
1 ½ tsp. red pepper flakes (adjust the amount to your taste; some people have reported that it's too spicy with even half this amount!)
¾ pound lentils (I use French lentils, but brown lentils work fine)
2 cans beef broth and three cans water

Saute onions in olive oil and butter until yellow in a large stock pot.
Add carrots – sauté.  
Add celery – sauté together for almost five minutes, gently! 
Then add kale and sauté three minutes more.  (Do not try to cook all the vegetables at one time!)
Add tomatoes and juice, sauté over medium heat – not too fast!
Put some butter in a small sauté pan, heat it up and sauté the pancetta until it starts to curl.  Cook a little more and add the wine.  Cook until alcohol is gone and it starts to thicken.
Add lentils to the tomato-vegetable mixture and cook through five minutes
Add the pancetta and wine – cook for another minute.
Add the broth and water (more water if it gets too thick). Add the red pepper flakes.


Cook at a high enough heat so that the soup is always smiling, about 1 ½ hours, when the lentils are tender.  

Note from Susan at the bottom of the recipe: This freezes beautifully and is a very big crowd pleaser. You can make a vegetarian version but it will not have the same elusive taste that happens when pancetta and dark greens come together. You will like it with shaved Parmesan and a nice olive focaccia.

Below, a pix of Susan and me last month when she was in NYC for business. She is so sophisticated!


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