Pota Brata (Irish Flag Soup)

‘Brata’ is Irish for flag and ‘pota’ is pot. This winter warming vegetable soup is called flag soup because when you cut the vegetables up it makes the colors of the Irish flag. The French call it ‘mirepoix,’ the Italians ‘soffrito.’ Either way, it makes a lovely soup for those chilly winter days. Serve with crusty bread rolls.

INGRIDIENT

DIRECTION

Step: 1

Heat the olive oil in a large pot over medium heat; cook and stir the onions, carrots, celery, and garlic in the hot oil until the onions are translucent, 5 to 7 minutes.

Step: 2

Pour the vegetable stock into the pan and bring to a boil while scraping the browned bits of food off of the bottom of the pan with a wooden spoon. Season with the sage, salt, and black pepper. Reduce heat to low, place a cover on the pot, and cook until the flavors blend, about 1 hour.

Step: 3

Pour the soup into a blender pitcher to no more than half full. Hold the lid of the blender firmly in place. Carefully start the blender, using a few quick pulses to get the soup moving before leaving it on to puree. Puree in batches until smooth and pour into your serving vessel. Alternately, you can use a stick blender and puree the soup in the cooking pot.

NUTRITION FACT

Per Serving: 81 calories; protein 2g; carbohydrates 13.5g; fat 2.3g; sodium 385.6mg.

The name of “stew” can refer to both a dish and a cooking method. Stewing makes slowly cooking chunks of meat, vegetables or beans in a tastefull liquid . It’s similar to braising, but it does have a few piece of differences. The raw animal vested is chopped into smaller pieces but of being cooked whole , and the liquid all of it covers the essential in a stew as different to a braise’s halfway all of it . When meat or raw fruit are cooked using this method, the resulting dish is called stew.

Stew has a perception for making a rib-sticking eating process that comfortable you up on a freezing , winter day. It’s true ; a bowl of classic beef stew can make warming featured food , but stew’s cozy factor goes way beyond preserving you from the cold . It’s all about those soft and chunks of meat and vegetables, swimming in a thick, ultra-rich gravy. The more they come together creates the greatest comfort food, no matter the weather.

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