Part one of the recipe involves lots of chopping. Two cups each of diced carrots, potatoes and leek (or onion). I had neither leek nor onion on hand, but luckily had a whole bunch of green onion left over from our weekly farm boxes. I figure this is as close as anything to leeks (just a bit skinnier.) Added those funny dried beans to the pot along with some salt and 3 quarts (that is, 12 cups) of water to boil for 40 min.
Now looking at this in the pot, we seem to have a perfectly decent soup going on. Add to it later 2 cups of fresh green beans, some pasta and bread crumbs, and one would think it was good to go. And I have to admit, I was a bit tempted at this point to enjoy the rest of my Saturday afternoon. But the name of this recipe includes "au Pistou" after all. And what exactly is "au Pistou" you may ask?
Well, first of all, it involved 3 lbs of tomatoes! Yes that's right - sneaky Julia took me all the way to p.74 to make "Fresh Tomato Purée with Garlic and Herbs aka Coulis de Tomate à la Provençale". And in the process of working through this bonus recipe, I got the double bonus of flipping to p.505 to learn the perfect technique of peeling, seeding, juicing and chopping said tomatoes. Those cooked on their own for just over 1/2 hour, along with lots of garlic and herbs (many of which I did not have on hand, so were sadly omitted) but turned out quite nicely.
Now back to the pistou recipe. Add my marvelous tomato purée to some mashed garlic, fresh basil, parmesan cheese, and olive oil. All blended together into a delicious smelling paste. Once the soup base is done, a cup is stirred into this pistou, then the whole lot is combined.
OH am I glad I did NOT skip the PISTOU! Definitely the key ingredient to make what would otherwise have been merely an "okay" vegetable soup. Husband was actually impressed enough to refer to it as "restaurant" quality... "no wait...Better than restaurant" quality. YUM!
So no being lazy and skipping the pistou portion. Believe me - totally worth the extra effort! But P.S. - Next time I think I'll go for different beans. The dried mix was okay, but they ended up being much smaller than the navy or kidney beans called for.
So next on the list will be Garlic Soup aka Aigo Bouido (I just have to learn to put those two little dots on top of the "i"s in Aigo Bouido.

