this post was submitted on 23 Oct 2024
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[QUESTION] What are your favorite spices to use in soups?

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Washed tomatoes and pasta

  1. Get half-kilo of fresh tomatoes, three onions, and three carrots. You can use the cheapest tomatoes for this, the heat treatment will average the taste. Wash everything. Chop onions and carrots, dump into the frying pan. Add salt.

Onions and carrots

  1. Fry diced onions and carrots in a pan, using a generous finger-thick layer of oil, preferrably olive, until the onions don't sting anymore and carrots start to soften.

Simmered tomatoes and hot pepper

  1. Cut tomatoes in 2 pieces each, you'll mash them anyway so thin slices do not matter. Dump tomatoes into the pan. Cover with a lid, cook on a slow fire for about 10 minutes until they become sauce. Mash and stir each 3 minutes so they won't burn. Cooking less will preserve taste of fresh tomatoes, cooking longer will make it taste closer to canned pasta sauce. But they won't have that taste of the can that you will get with canned tomatoes.

The secret ingredient and spices

  1. Add the secret ingredient - half-kilo of canned pork. This is an optional step - if you prefer taste over calories, it's better to prepare a separate meat dish instead. If you want to add hot pepper, add it now so it will spread uniformly.

The secret ingredient

  1. Boil pasta while tomatoes are cooking - the standard 500 gram package will do, preferably something with a lot of surface like penne so it can soak up more sauce.

  2. Dump Italian or French spice mix into the pan. Turn off the heat, let it simmer for 1 minute so the herbs will soften.

Finished pasta

  1. Dump pasta into the pan. Done! Plating is optional, you can eat it straight from the pan. And the next day you can prepare another wonderful dish - yesterday's pasta re-heated until it's crusty.
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[–] deegeese@sopuli.xyz 3 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

Is there any reason for choosing canned pork over fresh ground pork?

Something like this I would ordinarily start by browning the meat, then remove and use its rendered fat to cook the onions, then deglaze the pan with the tomatoes. Your method obviously works, but is backwards from what I'd expect.

[–] pelya@lemmy.world 4 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (1 children)

The main reason is that I've got this can of pork for free, and it wasn't super high quality, with skin and sinew. Eating it as-is was meh, so my choice was either to dump it into a soup, or army-style macaroni, which is a downgrade of navy-style macaroni, the recipe is literally - dump the can of meat into a pasta, and you can replace the pasta with instant noodles for an extra decrease of cooking time and dish quality.

[–] deegeese@sopuli.xyz 2 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

Gotcha. Sauce is a good use for lesser quality meat.

[–] pelya@lemmy.world 1 points 2 weeks ago

If you don't add the meat, this becomes a classic vegetarian pasta recipe. Eat with a slice of Brie, or grind some hard cheese on top. Or simply put sliced cheese on top, it is going to melt anyway.

[–] peachfaced@lemmy.world 1 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (2 children)

Could you specify the type of tomatoes? Where I come from, the common tomatoes aren't sour at all so they probably wouldn't work

[–] howrar@lemmy.ca 2 points 2 weeks ago

Do you have canned tomatoes or tomato paste? If so, then maybe consider using that. Canned tomatoes can be used the same way OP does. Tomato paste can be added if your tomato tastes insufficiently tomato, regardless of whether it's fresh or canned.

[–] pelya@lemmy.world 2 points 2 weeks ago

They were just called 'tomatoes' on the label. They also were more sweet than sour, and over-ripened.

You can use plum tomatoes, they are usually the cheapest, and will have the taste closest to the tomato paste.