Cold Fennel Soup With Lobster
- 2 large fennel bulbs
- 1 tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil
- 1/2 cup finely chopped onion
- 6 cups vegetable stock or water
- 2 baking potatoes, peeled and diced
- 1/2 teaspoon ground cumin
- 1 small lobster, about 1 1/4 pounds
- 1/2 cup half and half, or to taste
- 2 tablespoons Pernod or other anise-flavored spirits
- Salt and freshly ground white pepper to taste
- Remove the stalks and feathery leaves from the fennel bulbs.
- Mince two tablespoons of the leaves and set aside.
- Chop the bulbs.
- You should have about two cups of the chopped bulbs.
- If additional fennel is needed, chop some of the stalks.
- Discard any unused stalks.
- Heat the oil in a heavy four-quart saucepan.
- Add the onion and chopped fennel bulbs and cook slowly, covered, until they are soft and transparent.
- Add the stock, bring to a simmer, and stir in the potatoes and cumin.
- Simmer partly covered until the vegetables are very tender, about 30 minutes.
- While the vegetables are simmering, steam the lobster for 10 minutes, allow it to cool briefly, then remove the meat from the tail and claws.
- Dice the meat and refrigerate it, covered, until ready to serve.
- When the vegetables are tender, allow them to cool briefly, then puree in a blender in batches.
- Puree the soup in a food processor, if you prefer.
- It will not be as smooth and will benefit from being forced through a fine sieve.
- Refrigerate the puree, covered, at least four hours or overnight.
- Before serving, stir the half and half into the puree, using as much as you need to give the soup a creamy, but not too thick, consistency.
- If calories are a concern, the soup can be thinned with water.
- Add the Pernod and season the soup with salt and pepper.
- Ladle the soup into six shallow soup plates and spoon some of the lobster into the middle of each.
- Scatter the minced fennel leaves over the soup and serve.
fennel bulbs, extravirgin olive oil, onion, vegetable stock, baking potatoes, ground cumin, lobster, spirits, salt
Taken from cooking.nytimes.com/recipes/6173 (may not work)