29 December 2013

Three Little Pigs Soup

As the name suggests, this soup has three types of pork in it. Of course, you can eliminate one or two of them but I think you'd loose some of the depth this soup has. Its everything a soup should be: hearty, earthy, thick, and bursting with layers of flavor.

I had my sister and her main squeeze over for dinner and they agreed by helping themselves to seconds. This was a great way to use up the leftover christmas ham (check the blog because that recipe was FANTASTIC and blows the national ham chain out of the water) and get in some fiber and warm up on a cold Ohio December day.

I served this with a very delicious homemade cornbread (recipe on the blog also). This particular cornbread is a bit sweet (but not overly sweet) to balance the smokiness of the soup.

You're welcome in advance!


Three Little Piggies Soup




6 slices of bacon, coursely chopped
3 links of mild italian sausage, cut into bite size pieces (casing removed)
Ham, chopped into small pieces (I used leftover, equivalent of about 4-6 spiral slices)
1 small white onion, diced
3 cloves garlic, chopped
2 cans black beans, drained and rinsed
1 can garbanzo beans, drained and rinsed
1 28oz can fire roasted diced tomatoes
2 cans chicken broth (the normal size cans) I always use low sodium/low fat
1 chipotle pepper (with adobe sauce), chopped small
2 teaspoons cumin
3/4 teaspoons dried oregano
few dashes of smoked paprika
dash of dried minced onion
salt and pepper to taste

1) In a frying pan, cook the chopped bacon until it is crispy. Remove from the pan and put on a paper towel lined plate to remove excess grease. Reserve 1 tablespoon of the grease, discard the rest. 

2) In the reserved grease, add onion, garlic and italian sausage and cook until the sausage is done and the onions are not burnt.

3) Combine all the other ingredients into a stock pot and bring to a boil. Add in sausage/onion mixture and bacon.

4) Allow to boil for a short period of time, then reduce heat to medium low and allow soup to cook for 3-4 hours. Stir occasionally and adjust flavors as you see fit. I liked the smokiness that the adobe paste brought to the soup so I added a bit more while it was cooking. If you like less heat, remove the seeds from the pepper before adding it to the pot.

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