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Soup of the Week: Strawberry

A different kind of cold soup for a hot day

Kelly Rossiter

By Kelly Rossiter
Toronto, Canada | Fri Jul 11, 2008 10:24 AM ET

Another heat wave has hit Toronto and with the temperature hovering around 30C, I ditched the plans I had for a hot soup and started searching for something I could make ahead and serve cold. I had some strawberries left over from my foray into jam making, and they were getting a little mushy. I certainly didn't want to waste my farmers' market berries, so I decided to make strawberry soup. I'm used to cold vegetables soups such as cucumber, avocado, and the classic Vichyssoise but this is an entirely different take on cold soups. Usually fruit based soups are sweet and can be served for dessert. The only sweetness in this soup comes from the berries themselves.

This recipe is from How to Cook Everything Vegetarian by Mark Bittman and like most of the recipes in the book, he gives you a number of variations for the recipe. Use this recipe as a jumping off point. If you don't have strawberries, use blueberries and replace the balsamic vinegar with orange juice. Use tomatoes and add basil rather than mint. I like the sound of pineapples with curry powder. The point is you can do whatever you want. He calls this a soup, but really it is a fruit base with the yogurt mixture spooned on top, which is how I did it. I guess if you wanted to mix it all together you could do that, but it's quite pretty served this way and every mouthful is slightly different. He calls for straining the yogurt mixture and discarding the mint, but as it was from my garden, I didn't have a cup, and I hated the thought of throwing it out, so I just left it in.

Strawberry Yogurt Soup
2 cups organic yogurt
1/4 cup milk
1 cup chopped mint leaves, plus sprigs for garnish
salt to taste
2 cups strawberries, sliced
2 tbsp balsamic vinegar
black pepper to taste
1/4 cup toasted almonds, chopped

  1. Vigorously stir the yogurt, milk, and chopped mint together in a bowl for a minute or two, until you smell the mint. Stir in a sprinkle of salt and push the mxiture through a strainer. Discard the mint and refrigerate the yogurt.

  2. In another bowl, combine the strawberries, vinegar and pepper. Refrigerate for at least 2 hours, stirring occasionally.

  3. To serve, spoon the fruit mixture into the bowl and top with the yogurt mixture. Garnish with the chopped almonds and mint sprig.

Difficulty Level: Easy

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