a little kiss of holiday chaos and the promise of new snow in the forecast – these are the dear dreams surrounding this weekend. december undoubtedly carries the greatest weight of the year – home to an array of celebratory holidays, as well the finality of an entire year’s worth of months. not necessarily a burdensome weight, but a heavy gravity nonetheless. it’s here in december that we sign the waiver for the new year – ablaze with enlightenment for the prospect of new and limitless. to recollect, to gather, and to begin again.
somewhere nestled between hopes, reality, dreams, and luck i always find a home for the new year. she’s always glittering and shining, and i’m always at my very best – even the years i’ve had to account for my very worst. the stars are the brightest, the night is cold, and i am as sentimental as i come at year’s end. the concept of regeneration and rejuvenation – a different approach, yet a familiarity. four new seasons, a new palette of unpredictable and unbridled weather. these are my honest attractions.
wishing you the ambient warmth of a holiday-lit room, and a heady but brilliant wave of new-year progressions and philosophies. if i start thinking now, those stars will just be so much brighter on that last night.
and on a side note – if you haven’t participated in my mustard giveaway – it’s going on until monday – just let me know in that post what you dig about mustard.
and on one more side note, i’m really beaming that the soup came out the color of album.
- 1 lb broccoli, chopped into florets
- 3 large garlic cloves, skin on
- 1 tsp oil
- 1-2 lb rutabagas
- 1 tbl grapeseed oil
- 1 / 4 cup yellow cornmeal
- salt and pepper
- ½ tsp olive oil
- 1 small onion, chopped
- 1 tsp fresh dill
- 4 cups vegetable stock
- 1 cup cooked white beans/1 can tinned, drained
- salt and pepper
- to garnish: dill, sesame oil, gomasio
- preheat oven to 400 degrees. toss broccoli with oil and splay on a large sheet pan. add garlic cloves to pan.
- prepare fries by cutting rutabagas into a desired and uniform match size. toss fries with oil and either in a paper bag or ziploc, toss and shake with (salted and peppered) cornmeal to coat. lay flat out on a large separate sheet pan.
- place both fries and broccoli in oven. bake broccoil and garlic for 30 minutes until roasted and beginning to brown. leave rutabagas in oven and monitor for the next 30 minutes for doneness, being careful to keep from burning.
- in a 5 qt pot on stove heat oil and add onion, stirring to coat. cook until softened but not brown, over medium high heat. add dill and cook 1-2 minutes for fragrance. add vegetable stock, white beans, broccoli and garlic (squeezed from skins). bring to a boil, lower to simmer, and cook partially covered 20-30 minutes. puree carefully with blender or immersion until smooth. adjust seasoning with salt and pepper to taste.
- serve garnished with dill, sesame oil, and gomasio*
All your post’s are so beautifully written and the photo’s are lovely! This soup looks so nourishing and comforting for these cold winter days!
Erin, thank you. Getting to connect with people is such a pleasure. I’m happy you like the soup – perfect for raging winter weather. ♥
Can’t believe the new year is so close already!! I feel very unprepared… This broccoli soup looks incredible though – I love that you have made rutabaga fries, and that colour is amazing. Gorgeous bowls too! <3
Isn’t it crazy Claudia! It’s so amazing to think that time has won again! Thank you for visiting, your presence is cherished. And I hope your year’s end is full of happiness and peace.
Danielle, this soup sounds so fun and wintery! I love the unexpected addition of the gomasio, I imagine it would really sing with the white bean base.
And I agree with you about the new year. I always use it as a time for reflection and reevaluation. Hoping those stars shine their brightest for you from now until the start of 2016 and beyond, sweet lady!
Thank you dearest Brooke – it seems that we are receiving quite the soup weather currently – a vivid and restless snow storm they call Echo. I return the shining star wishes to your sky, as well – all hope and promise. ♥
D this looks so gorgeous! I’m loving the colours here. Wishing you a happy festive season!
Also, I’m in love with your new logo, it’s divine!
Sus, I absolutely love that you call me D. (: Thank you so much for the love and I hope your festivities are brilliant and beautiful. Keep warm and nurture your lovely thoughts. ♥
I love this recipe Danielle, especially the fries
Warmest wishes for the new year from Greece.
Thank you so much Marilena, your wishes mean more to me than you can know. happy new years to you too ♥