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Belgian Onion Soup

4.1

(16)

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Belgian Onion SoupAmanda Marsalis, courtesy of Mark Batty Publisher

In winter, the section of our cupboard devoted to onions seems to grow exponentially, filled with all forms of eye-dripping lovelies: red and white onions, shallots, massive white-bulbed scallions. Grilling a sack of onions down to a cereal bowl of caramelized noodles is a rare fall pleasure. And few pillars of French cooking are as widely and voraciously loved as scalding hot onion soup cloaked in a blistering layer of melted Gruyère. But like with many epic dishes canonized by the cuisine of rural folk, vegetarians usually remain wholly uninvited. So how does one mitigate the beef stock in every single recipe of the gooiest of soups? Our "ah-ha moment" was beer. After trying small batches of all three colors of the proverbial tricolore (blue, white, and red) we settled on Chimay Blue, a dubbel style beer that's become a household name for boozers. This so-called grande réserve, or any other basic dubbel, is a super substitute for the essence of animal gore. The malts and sugars play on your tongue in a way that's strikingly similar to the flavor of liquefied fat and tendon.

Cooks' Note

BEVERAGE
De Proef Flemish Primitive Wild Ale

SOUNDTRACK
Métal Urbain
"Hystérie connective"

Recipe information

  • Yield

    Serves four

Ingredients

2 tablespoons butter
2 tablespoons of extra virgin olive oil
5 large onions, halved and sliced thin
6 cloves of garlic, minced
4 shallots, sliced thin
750 milliliter Chimay Blue
4 cups vegetable stock
4 bay leaves
6 sprigs of thyme
1/2 teaspoon ground white pepper
4 slices sourdough bread for garnish
1/2 pound Gruyère cheese for garnish
Sea salt to taste

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    1. Heat a wide pot or cast-iron on medium heat. Add the butter and let it blister.

    Step 2

    2. Add the onion and cook uncovered. Let them sit for about four minutes and then stir. Repeat until the onions have all begun to brown, at least twenty minutes.

    Step 3

    3. Add the olive oil, garlic, and shallots and stir in the same fashion as before, once every five minutes, until the garlic and shallots have caramelized.

    Step 4

    4. Add 2 1/2 cups of the beer and crank the heat to just shy of high. Let the beer boil off until there is half as much beer volume as onion volume.

    Step 5

    5. Add the stock, bay leaves, thyme leaves, and white pepper. Cook until the liquid has reduced by about two finger widths. Taste the soup and add salt to adjust. Cook for at least an additional twenty minutes before garnishing. In an ideal world, you would let the soup sit a day before serving it. (Just be sure to reheat it.)

    Step 6

    6. Take a slice of sourdough and cut it to fit your bowl or cup. Set atop the soup and cover with several slices of Gruyère. Broil until brown and serve hot, topped with extra thyme.

Reprinted with permission from The Hot Knives Vegetarian Cookbook: Salad Daze by Alex Brown and Evan George, © 2011 Mark Batty Publisher

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