- Joined
- 11 Oct 2012
- Local time
- 10:36 PM
- Messages
- 20,693
- Location
- SE Australia
- Website
- www.satnavsaysstraighton.com
I've just made up our evening meal. It's the first time I've made this recipe, leek and mushroom bisque. I've made a mushroom bisque many many times in the past and thought I had worked out what a bisque was, but this recipe is totally different.
My mushroom bisque (well the veganised version of it) is mushrooms, onions, thyme ,dill tips, cayenne pepper, paprika (sweet), pureed cashew nuts and lemon juice. It all gets liquidised at the end to made a smooth but very flavourful soup . The leek and mushroom bisque is completely different. It is leeks ,mushrooms , tomato pureé, farina, mixed herbs and mixed spices. You cook the whites of the leeks, add the tomato pureé, herbs and spices, water and then the farina to thicken it. The greens of the leeks go in with the mushrooms, but get taken out (not sure that will happen) at the end . It states very clearly that the soup must stand for a minimum of an hour before being reheated to be eaten without being liquidised.
So utterly different ythat on left wondering how what exactly is a bisque?
My mushroom bisque (well the veganised version of it) is mushrooms, onions, thyme ,dill tips, cayenne pepper, paprika (sweet), pureed cashew nuts and lemon juice. It all gets liquidised at the end to made a smooth but very flavourful soup . The leek and mushroom bisque is completely different. It is leeks ,mushrooms , tomato pureé, farina, mixed herbs and mixed spices. You cook the whites of the leeks, add the tomato pureé, herbs and spices, water and then the farina to thicken it. The greens of the leeks go in with the mushrooms, but get taken out (not sure that will happen) at the end . It states very clearly that the soup must stand for a minimum of an hour before being reheated to be eaten without being liquidised.
So utterly different ythat on left wondering how what exactly is a bisque?