Have Mercy on Me Spicy Lentil Soup (With Crock Pot Instructions)
photo by scancan
- Ready In:
- 2hrs 45mins
- Ingredients:
- 16
- Serves:
-
8
ingredients
- 1⁄4 cup extra virgin olive oil
- 1 large onion (dice half and chop the other half)
- kosher salt, to taste
- black pepper, to taste
- 1 -2 teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes
- 3 large celery ribs, chopped
- 3 carrots, chopped
- 2 garlic cloves (minced)
- 1 cup chopped cauliflower
- 2 teaspoons curry powder
- 1 teaspoon cumin
- 16 ounces dry lentils
- 1 (14 1/2 ounce) can vegetable broth
- 2 (14 1/2 ounce) cans diced tomatoes with juice
- 8 cups water
- 2 teaspoons cayenne pepper
directions
- Heat 1/4 cup olive oil in a large pot over medium-low heat. Add onions, salt, pepper, and crushed red pepper, cover and simmer for 6 minutes, or until onions are clear and soft.
- (If using the crockpot, you would now transfer the onion mixture to your crockpot, add all other dry and liquid ingredients and give it a good stir, and cook on LOW for 8 hours until the lentils are soft. If using the stovetop, please continue to step 3.).
- Add celery, carrots, garlic, cauliflower, curry, and cumin, and stir. Cover and let simmer for 10 minutes, stirring occasionally.
- Stir in lentils, vegetable broth and tomatoes. Cover and let simmer for another 10 minutes, stirring occasionally.
- Add 8 cups of water and increase to high heat, and leave uncovered until it begins to boil.
- When the soup comes to a boil, reduce heat and add cayenne pepper. Let simmer for at least 2 hours, or until lentils are soft.
Questions & Replies
Got a question?
Share it with the community!
Reviews
-
This soup was all heat, which I love, but no FLAVOR. I followed the recipe exactly and was very disappointed. I had to doctor it up so that it will be eaten and not thrown out. I added bay leaf, ginger, garam masala, some beef bouillon and reheated. I also added fresh sauteed cilantro and spinach. Much better!
-
This was an incredibly beautiful soup to look at but could have been so much better. There is so much curry in this that it overwhelms the taste of anything else ( I used the hot pepper according to my taste so that was not interfering with the taste in any way) so that all you taste is curry. I would have enjoyed this more with alot less curry so that I would actually be able to taste the vegetables, the cumin, etc. I'm sure this would be wonderful with the spice adjustments as suggested.
-
I'm giving this 5 stars even though there was too much heat for us to taste all the other flavors. We like spice, and it wasn't too spicy, just a bit overpowering. The leftovers were even tastier, and with a slight heat adjustment this will be just terrific for a cool fall or winter night. I'll be dialing it down from 1.5 teaspoons of cayenne to 1 or less. Thanks, elastigirl!
see 12 more reviews
RECIPE SUBMITTED BY
My name is Stephanie, and I'm keenly interested in food and the science (yes, science!) of cooking. I'm an avid Alton Brown fan, and I take a similar scientific approach to the food I eat. I'm a former successful Atkins dieter who just recently went vegetarian and I'm having to relearn how to cook.
My passion for cooking is second only to my passion for music in any and most forms. Some examples: Arcade Fire, Bright Eyes, Cat Power, Death Cab for Cutie, Elliott Smith, Franz Ferdinand, Gnarls Barkley (just A-G, to name a few).
Favorite cookbook of the moment: "I Like Food, Food Tastes Good: In the Kitchen with Your Favorite Bands" by Kara Zuaro.
All-time favorite: Better Homes and Gardens New Cookbook. My grandma had one, my mom has one (and grandma's copy!), and I have one. Great format, simplicity, ease of use, can't beat it.
Next cookbook acquisition will be a good metric cookbook. I already convert to metric in my head as I cook, but you lose something in the translation.