I first heard of celeriac because Harriet Smith mentions it in Gwyneth Paltrow’s film version of Emma. To be honest I only looked up the vegetable because the scene was running in my head like a parallel to my feelings. You can’t really find it in grocery stores, and even the farmer’s market, sell grains in bulk, entire sections devoted to vitamins and organic produce stores didn’t have it. But when I happened to be at Whole Foods with a friend this week, I checked and sure enough, there was the knobby root with the cropped remnant of celery stalks on the top. “Knobby” is actually an understatement. Celery root (celeriac) looks like dirty brains. Anyway, I chose one – a smaller one that was still heavy; denser is better.
After showing off my find to everyone in the house – my 81 year old grandmother has never even seen one – I sat down to find a recipe for what I’m impudently renaming “Irony Soup.” Every recipe I could find had onions and leeks. I don’t have either on hand. Onions I usually leave out anyway. Leeks I have never used and for that reason I was hesitant, besides knowing they’re in the onion family. Ginger I had – for the first time I was going to try grating my own straight from the root, into some recipe or other. So at the last minute, before heading to the grocery store to pick up leeks, I did a Google search for a soup with celeriac and ginger. What I found, here: http://straightfromthefarm.net/2009/03/07/celeriac-and-ginger-soup/ is Irony Soup.
No onions even to be crossed off of the recipe. An entire head of garlic. Carrots and cream and potato and herbs, some of my favorite soup ingredients (you know – for the two or three soups I’ve ever made or eaten).
Chopping the vegetables and peeling the garlic took way longer than I expected, but this is just what one would expect from Irony Soup. I chopped away. I forgot the salt when I first started simmering the mixture, so maybe that’s why the vegetables took so long to soften. I also improvised on measurements a bit and added celery just to enhance that edge of the flavor. Making it up as you go following general guidelines is also apropos for Irony Soup.
The celeriac and ginger smells wafted through the house while the soup simmered. Because I started late and the softening process took longer than expected, I had to interrupt the soup and go to a party. I resumed this afternoon.
I paired my serving with buttered wheat toast, because you want to make sure you have something you like at your side when you’re trying something new. The soup came out ideally creamy and thicker than most soups I’ve had.
And just like irony whose poignancy lingers, the ginger is strong, with a bite still felt after you swallow. It’s full of healthy things, low in calories, so it won’t boost your energy all that much, and low in fat so you won’t end up regretting the experience.
In this house, where we like to share things, the batch will probably serve more than four.
To God be all glory.
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