Has your garden exploded yet? Mine has, as has my farm share. So much goodness all at once. It is amazing and wonderful and I am constantly eating just to keep up with it. But no matter how much I eat (I eat A LOT) I still have an abundance of fresh amazing produce, which is exactly what I planned because I freeze a lot of stuff for winter.
Which brings me to soup bags. To know me is to know that I am a soup person, like I eat soup everyday all day, kind of person. And so having veggies on hand at all times for soup is a necessity. Sure I sometimes use fresh ingredients but more often then not, especially in the winter months (which will be here before you know it), I just grab whatever bag of frozen veggies I have in the freezer and that is that.
A few years ago I started being a little more strategic about how I freeze my veggies and started making bags that are specifically for soup. Hence soup bags.
What’s in a soup bag you ask? Well anything you want. Mine are usually filled with things like lots of tomatoes, zucchinis, onions, eggplants, pepper, and so forth. Basically whatever I hav an abundance of. Like right now. I am bagging a shit load of zucchinis and tomatoes. In the next coming weeks, I will do another soup bag day and there will be more sweet potatoes and roots in the mix. I tend to not add greens because well, honestly, I never have too many fresh greens, I alway just eat them all. But you can if you want. Thats the beauty of making them yourself. You choose what you stick in them.
Either food from your garden, farm share, or grocery store, doing this now will give you a good jump on some meal prepping for the future months. It’s a no brainer. You will thank yourself, and me, but mostly yourself.
To the soup bags!
The stuff can be whatever stuff you have plenty of or whoever stuff you usually put in your soups. Me, I just grabbed an armful of stuff that was overflowing from the fridge and counter. Eggplants, zucchinis, tomatoes, corn. onion, peppers, potatoes. Whatever you have and whatever you want.
Simple as can be. Just chop everything up. And sure, you could blanch things if you want but really, I have never seen the difference when it comes to soup and that is just one more step that you don’t need to take.
Once everything is chopped, bag it, adding whatever feels right. I just start tossing handfuls of whatever into the bags until they are full. Sometimes I will fill bags with more specific veggies and label them for specific soups, but most of the time, its just a mixture of whatever. And I am never disappointed when I dump a bag out and see the medley.
Oh, and corn. I always toss the cob into the pot when I am making soup, extra flavor, so they go into the bags too.
Then you just label and date them and pop those bad boys into the freezer.
And now you are more then half way to soup at any given time. Just pop a bag out, dump it into a pot or your slow or pressure cooker with a liquid of your choice (water, stock, crashed tomatoes), toss in whatever spices you are feeling, maybe add some lentils or beans, and voila. You are souping.
Is souping a word? Well it is now.
Souping. verb The act of making and or eating soup.
-C