Sweet Potato Soup With Mascarpone

"This is a modification on a recipe that is one of my recipe books. I made it lighter by cutting out oil and nuts. You can also try it with roasted hazelnuts like the original, but I feel the soup is good enough without it."
 
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photo by AcadiaTwo photo by AcadiaTwo
photo by AcadiaTwo
Ready In:
50mins
Ingredients:
8
Serves:
4
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ingredients

  • 29.58 ml butter
  • 1 medium onion, peeled and chopped
  • 1 garlic clove, peeled and minced
  • 500 g sweet potatoes, peeled and cubed
  • 20 g ginger, peeled and chopped
  • 750 ml vegetable stock
  • 250 g low-fat mascarpone cheese
  • salt and pepper
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directions

  • Heat butter in pot on medium heat.
  • Add onions and garlic and fry until onions are clear.
  • Add potatoes and ginger and fry for 1 minute.
  • Add broth and bring to boil.
  • Cover and simmer for 30 minutes.
  • Puree with hand blender. (I like mine very smooth, but if you want it more lumpy, be careful not to over-blend).
  • Add mascarope and stir in until most large lumps are gone but small lumps remain.
  • Cook for 2 minutes on medium heat and add salt and pepper to taste. (I added a lot of pepper and only a dash of salt. The amount of salt needed will depend on the broth you used and personal taste.).
  • Serve with bread.

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Reviews

  1. WOW! This soup is so delicious! I opted not to puree it but rather mash the sweet potatoes in the soup with my manual potato masher. The cheese suprisingly didn't make the broth heavy. Great flavor profile and I will be making this again and again. Thank for posting! Made for Spring PAC 2012.
     
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RECIPE SUBMITTED BY

<p>Thanks in advance if you are making any of my recipes, and I hope that you like them as I do. <br /> <br />I grew up in the US, but I have spent most of the last few years in Europe now live in Germany, with my German husband. Much of the time that I have lived in Europe, I have lived in international student housing so I have lived with and cooked with people from all over world. I have also have had to learn to improvise a bit because it isn't always easy to get the foods I miss from the US here. <br /> <br />My husband is a good cook and likes to cook when he has time, but he quite often makes what he knows, mainly German food. So I am the one feeding him strange things. :D My husband has recently taken up hunting so I am having to learn how to cook game: wild boar, deer, hares and geese are the most common things hunted here. It isn't easy to find things for wild boar so I am trying to publish ones that I find that we really liked. <br /> <br />I like Recipezaar because I can easily find recipes for whatever I am in the mood, or whatever I happen to have laying around when I am too lazy to walk to the supermarket. :) I like trading tips with the people at the Asian and the German/Benelux forums, I lurk there mostly, but post when I have questions or think that I can help. <br /> <br />My reviews are mainly 4 or 5 stars because I won't try anything that I don't think that I will like. 5 stars is it was great, will make again, only very minor changes were made, if any. 4 stars is it was very good, will probably make again, made some changes to adjust to my taste. 3 stars is it was okay, probably won't make again but I didn't really mind eating it. I haven't had anything here that I thought was lower than that, which is good with how picky I am. I'll try most new things if it sounds good, but I am not afraid to say if I don't like it. I quite often make my own recipes out of some of the ones I find here, and don't post recipe reviews if I radically changed it.</p>
 
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