Seamus used 6 large onions while making this recipe and served it with some stale bread and melted cheese. Perfect!
French Onion Soup
Courtesy of "Good and Cheap" by Leanne BrownIngredients
4lb onions, any type
4 cloves garlic
2 tbsp butter
2 bay leaves
8 cups beef broth
1 and 1/2 cups cheddar, grated
1 tbsp vinegar, any type (optional)
3 tsp salt
6 slices bread
Directions
4 cloves garlic
2 tbsp butter
2 bay leaves
8 cups beef broth
1 and 1/2 cups cheddar, grated
1 tbsp vinegar, any type (optional)
3 tsp salt
6 slices bread
Directions
Chop each onion in half lengthwise,
peel them, then cut them into half-
moon slices. These big slices are fine
since you’re cooking the onions for so
long. Slice the garlic as well. Melt the butter in a large pot on
medium heat. Add the onions, garlic,
and bay leaves. Cover the pot with a
lid and leave it for 10 minutes. When
you come back, the onions should have
released a lot of moisture. Give them a
stir. Pour in the vinegar and put the lid
back on. Cook for 1 hour, stirring every 20
minutes. When the onions at the
bottom start to stick and turn dark,
add a splash of water to unstick them.
Don’t worry, the onions aren’t burning,
just caramelizing. The water helps lift
off the sticky, delicious, sweet part!
Once the onions are very dark and about a quarter the volume they once were, add all the water and a bunch of salt and pepper. Cover the pot again, turn the heat down to low, and let it simmer for another hour. Taste and adjust salt and pepper as needed. Ladle the soup into bowls. Now it’s time to make cheese toast! If you want classic French onion soup— with the toast directly in the soup, which makes it a bit soggy—place a piece of bread on top of each bowl of soup, sprinkle with cheese, then heat the bowls under your oven’s broiler until the cheese is bubbly.
Once the onions are very dark and about a quarter the volume they once were, add all the water and a bunch of salt and pepper. Cover the pot again, turn the heat down to low, and let it simmer for another hour. Taste and adjust salt and pepper as needed. Ladle the soup into bowls. Now it’s time to make cheese toast! If you want classic French onion soup— with the toast directly in the soup, which makes it a bit soggy—place a piece of bread on top of each bowl of soup, sprinkle with cheese, then heat the bowls under your oven’s broiler until the cheese is bubbly.
No comments:
Post a Comment