Anything can be soup. Which is not to say that everything should be. Raccoons, for example, and pewter are out of the running. As children, my sister and I loved “pretend cooking” – largely grass clippings let down with washing-up liquid, and yes, my branded line of recipes is coming to supermarkets any day now). I don’t believe in tinned soup or dried soup: my teens were fuelled by both, and look at me now. But I’ve rarely met a soup I haven’t loved. Sad? Soup. Hungry? Soup. Bored, heartbroken, too exhausted to move? Soup, soupy soup. Give me chilled and sweet (Hungarian cherry) or white and vinegary (Spanish almond) or DIY (Sichuan malatang; extra kelp please, hold the duck blood). If there is a world cuisine that excludes soup, I hope it keeps its perversions to itself.
And unlike, say, French patisserie, soup is adaptable to any mood. Give me a knife and mood-appropriate music (First Ladies of Country – wistful; Sleater-Kinney – stand back) and I’ll feed you in half an hour.
The only question is: with what?
Last weekend, as I knelt in the soil of my allotment trying to save my three remaining spinach seedlings from a lethal combination of drought, hail, tumbling branches, rats, kestrels, voles, pigeons, molluscs and ring-necked parakeets, I looked over my shoulder and noticed a vegetable miracle. Beyond the edge of my furthest bed was a cloud of thigh-high plant life: tender, verdant, doubling in size almost as I watched. I’ve spread tons of manure; I have watered and titivated. Yet my allotment remains almost bare, other than for some bolted kale and a permanent patch of sorrel. Meanwhile, unnoticed, a succulent, unendangered, iron-rich crop has been going about its business.I may be a failure when it comes to carrots, a disastrous lettuce farmer and inadequate with flowers, but if you want nettles I’m your woman.
Washing nettle tops in a kitchen sink isn’t easy, but my fingers were already stung beyond feeling
Washing nettle tops in a kitchen sink isn’t easy, but my fingers were already stung beyond feeling
It’s impossible to spend as much time reading recipes as I do without accidentally learning how to make nettle soup. Dimly, I recalled that, once you’d chucked in potato, water, alliums and maybe nutmeg, you had a virtually free, family-sized pot of nourishing deliciousness. How long could it take?
Obviously, I had gloves in my bag. Strangely, they didn’t work from inside the bag, but wasn’t that part of the fun? No bold adventurer remains unscarred. The patch seemed limitless; I could shun old, stringy leaves and take only the tips. Pinch – ow! – repeat; plus sorrel, wild garlic and a couple of cleavers for luck. Soon I had a full carrier bag.
By the time I’d walked home, I was ready to eat my harvest raw. Washing nettle tops in a kitchen sink isn’t easy, but my fingers were already stung beyond feeling. Blanching? OK, if I must, during the standard 95 minutes needed to soften the onion. And, fine, so none of the authors I consulted were thinking of my vegan girlfriend, with their milk, butter and chicken stock. But this isn’t my first rodeo. Sling in some oat milk, a sprinkling of Marigold powder and a tin of butter beans for body and we’d be grand. Then I’d use my stick blender, and…
Within seconds, the puny blade was choked with nettle fibres. Once, in childhood, I tried cutting an entire lawn with scissors. That was quicker. But, eventually, we were down to a purée. And that’s how I made an interesting discovery: unless you like prickly soup, fibres plus histamines is a combination best avoided. My family, at whom I’d hyped nettle soup like a corrupt TV evangelist, realised after one polite taste that they weren’t hungry after all. And I’d remembered something important: I still have three spinach plants. Give me a couple of months, and it’ll be dinner time.
James Robertshaw / Alamy Stock Photo
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