Cook the Book: Castilian Garlic Soup
Here's one for the garlic fiends: a soup that uses six whole heads of garlic. Adapted from Nancy Harmon Jenkins' New Mediterranean Diet Cookbook, Castilian garlic soup is a mellow, saffron-tinted broth with the mingled sweetness of garlic and sherry. Add a poached egg and some good bread, and it's a light but warming meal.
Win 'The New Mediterranean Diet Cookbook'
In addition to excerpting a recipe each day this week, we're giving away five (5) copies of The New Mediterranean Diet Cookbook. Enter to win here ยป
Castilian Garlic Soup
- makes 4 servings -
Reprinted from The New Mediterranean Diet Cookbook by Nancy Harmon Jenkins
Ingredients
5 or 6 whole heads of garlic, the cloves separated and peeled (about 1 cup or 1/2 pound of peeled garlic cloves)
1/4 cup extra-virgin olive oil
1 tablespoon dried red pepper
6 cups chicken stock
1/2 cup Spanish amontillado or oloroso sherry
A pinch of ground cumin
A pinch of saffron threads
Sea salt to taste
To serve
4 half-inch-thick slices of crusty bread
1 garlic clove
4 poached eggs (optional)
Freshly grated manchego cheese (optional)
Procedure
1. In a heavy soup kettle or a 2-quart saucepan , gently cook the garlic in the olive oil over low heat until the cloves are thoroughly softened, about 10 to 15 minutes. Do not let the cloves get brown. Remove them with a slotted spoon and set aside.
2. Stir the red chili pepper into the hot oil in the pan, then add the stock and sherry. Bring to a simmer while you stir in the cumin and saffron.
3. Use a fork to crush the tender garlic cloves to a paste into the soup. Taste and add salt if necessary. Cover the soup and leave to simmer very gently for about 15 minutes.
4. While the soup cooks, toast the bread slices. Cut the garlic clove in half and rub over the toasted slices. If you want to add an egg to each serving, poach the eggs gently in simmering acidulated water (water to which a couple of spoonfuls of white vinegar have been added), remove with a slotted spoon when done to taste, and drain on paper towels.
5. Serve the soup as is, hot from the pot, floating a slice of garlicky toast on each serving. If you wish, add a poached egg and sprinkle of grated cheese. When you eat the soup, break the egg and stir it and the cheese into the hot soup.
Add a comment:
Previewing your comment:
HTML Hints
Some HTML is OK: <a href="URL">link</a>, <strong>strong</strong>, <em>em</em>
Comment Guidelines
Post whatever you want, just keep it seriously about eats, seriously. We reserve the right to delete off-topic or inflammatory comments. Learn more at our Comment Policy page.
If you see something not so nice, please, report an inappropriate comment.

9 Comments:
Yes! Café Pamplona in Cambridge serves a wonderfully intense sopa de ajo. I've been looking for a good recipe, if only to avoid the hassle of travel ...
Tam Ngo at 2:05PM on 01/12/09
I like the one they serve at Waldy Malouf's restaurant uptown, Beacon.
Michele Humes at 2:07PM on 01/12/09
GARLIC SOUP TENDS TO BE GREAT OR HORRIBLE.
pksmash at 2:44PM on 01/12/09
I love garlic soup although I usually skip the poached eggs. I think I will give this version a try.
saraann at 3:30PM on 01/12/09
Rioja in Houston does an awesome garlic soup.
lambowner at 4:39PM on 01/13/09
Look at that pretty garlic stock photo! Mine never look like that :)
missdk at 1:40AM on 01/22/09
I remember a soup a l'ail I had in France. A combinatioin of beef and chicken stock, it was thickened slightly with flour, had red wine as an ingredient, bacon too. I swear it cured colds.
mymymichl at 2:30PM on 01/22/09
We liked this a lot - subtle flavors - the red pepper mellows a lot in the cooking. I don't know if I didn't mash the garlic enough but my soup ended up looking something like egg drop soup, the garlic soft sweet ribbons in the broth. This would also make a good base for other soups - scallops could be poached in it at the last minute or even matzoh balls...
PhredYammers at 9:55AM on 01/26/09
When I lived in Asturias (northern Spain) in the mid-70's, there was little money but the best food I've ever had. Sopa de ajo was prepared frequently for "cena" - that 10 pm light supper that ruins you for normal USA eating hours for the rest of your life. In the version I learned to make, bread crumbs were added to the broth and garlic and allowed to simmer briefly. The bread, of course, was at least a day or two old and it had been baked in big ovens in the village.
Colega at 5:47PM on 02/01/09