When it is still too cold for a fresh salad and too early for local young potatoes, this soup will brighten a cool spring day while bringing warmth and cheerful energy into your kitchen.
I adapted Melissa Clark’s excellent recipe into a chunkier and slightly more exotic one by adding lentils, ginger and a whole lemon instead of the zest. I also dropped out the miso as I don’t usually have it. I also made more of it.
May your early spring day be exempt of turmeric stains, and full of bright and soft spices.
Ingredients
1 whole organic lemon
2 large shallots
2 tsp fresh garlic, crushed
2 tsp fresh ginger, crushed
Olive oil
Turmeric
10 cups water
Bay leaf
1 cup yellow lentils
1/2 cup uncooked brown rice
1 lbs carrots
1 cauliflower (whole head)
Salt and lemon pepper to taste
Curry spice and other spices, such as cardamom, as desired
Method
- Wash the lemon well, remove the seeds, chop into medium pieces and puree whole in a food processor; set aside
- Sautee the finely chopped shallots in olive oil while finely mincing and crushing the ginger and the garlic unless you have fresh garlic and ginger cubes in the freezer; sauté those too
- Add turmeric for a few seconds and mix, then add 10 cups of water, salt, and the bay leaf
- Add brown rice and lentils and allow to cook for 10 minutes
- Add the carrots and allow to cook for an additional 10 minutes
- Add the cauliflower cut in florets; cook, covered, for an additional 10 minutes
- Remove the lid briefly, mix, replace the lid and let cook off the heat for another 10 minutes or until the rice and lentils are tender enough to puree
- Puree, along with the lemon set aside earlier using an immersible blender
- Check consistency and add more water if needed
- Adjust salt, lemon pepper and add other suitable spices as desired (I used a lemon-garlic spice mixture and some red pepper flakes; check consistency and add
- Serve topped with the fixings of your choice; Melissa’s recipe suggested cilantro, sea salt and more olive oil; this time, I used red pepper flakes and flat leaf parsley
We usually eat this soup it with my homemade Finnish oat bread buns (I’ll publish my recipe on another occasion) and a little bit of butter, but good, fresh bread, perhaps with seeds and whole grains, would certainly do.

Lots of brightness to your day!


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