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    Categories: Cooking

Split Pea Soup

I think this split pea soup is the very soup about which was written:

Pea porridge hot, pea porridge cold, pea porridge in the pot nine days old.

After an hour on the stove, it gains a thick consistency, like a porridge. And the quantity of soup produced is so large that I definitely understand how it could sit around for 9 days. Ours sat around for at least 6–though in the fridge, mind you. And in a nice airtight container, for those concerned.

In her original recipe, Tracy says you can use bacon or ham, but I’m completely advocating the use of ham. Because the bacon, after simmering for an hour, is bound to get floppy–and who likes floppy bacon? The chunks of ham are totally satisfying and delicious. Troist me. This is a great comforting soup with awesome flavor, and very little prep work.

The ultimate test: the man of the house. He said (and I quote):

“Why don’t we eat things like this all the time?”

Bless his ever-loving soul. I love it when he says that.

And it’s a good thing he loved it, since we ate this soup all week long and it yielded no less than 4 meals for the two of us–plus a little extra for some hungry members of our Bible study.

Ingredients

( Serves 8 )

2 sweet potatoes or yams, or 1/2 butternut squash
1 large onion
2 carrots
2 stalks celery
2-3 cups ham cut into 1″ pieces
8 cups water
2 vegetable bouillon cubes
16 oz dried split peas
1/2 tsp ground thyme
1 TBS dried sage
1 TBS fresh basil
Salt and pepper, to taste

Before we jump in, I must explain that my flash temporarily decided to be broken. I switched out batteries a few times, prodded it, swiveled it around–but it would not work. The lighting in my kitchen is very bad, but I was also very hungry and not willing to waste any more time messing with the flash, so I gritted my teeth and took some very bad pictures. Bad light . . . bad focus . . . bad color balance. Man, I’d really grown dependent on that flash unit for my food photography.

Anyway–less about Mr. Speedlight SB-600 and more about the veggies at hand!

Peel the sweet potatoes or yams, and chop ’em up (along with the carrots for OrangeFest 2011) into smallish cubes.

Dice the onion and celery . . .

. . . and cut the ham into 1” cubes.

Dice the basil and pretend I took a picture.

Thoroughly rinse and clean the split peas.

Combine all the ingredients in a very large pot.

Oooh, a shred of light is coming through the window!

It’s the first decent picture of the lot.

Don’t forget the herbs and spices, along with a generous amount of salt and pepper!

Bring to a boil over medium high heat . . .

. . . and rejoice that your flash suddenly decided to work again!

Once the soup boils, turn the heat down to low, cover the pot, and simmer it for about an hour, stirring a couple times to make sure nothing is sticking to the bottom and creating a layer of burnination. Remove the cover of the pot during the final 10-15 minutes of cooking. Taste, and add salt and pepper as needed.

Serve hot!

You can also freeze it within 5 days. Or hope for the best and polish it off on day 6.

A note: the soup looks a little watery here, but after a night in the fridge it was so thick it definitely qualified as ‘porridge.’

It was so good that after eating it all week long, by the time I scooped up the very last spoonfuls from the very last bowl, I was actually disappointed.

I actually started plotting when I could make it again.

True story.

I think you guys will love this one!

Click here for printer-friendly version: Split Pea Soup

Jenna:

View Comments (21)

  • Jenna, your cooking "how to's" are always so fun -- and funny! I think your humor infuses into your food -- no wonder it makes your hubby happy! (Besides the food tasting great, I mean.) :)

  • yum! i've made split pea soup once, about 2 years ago. my husband asked when i'd make it again. maybe soon!!

  • I'm gong to have to start a board on Pinterest called "Jenna's soups to try" b/c I've pinned so many! lol! I can't wait to try this one. I've had split pea soup and loved it--but it wasn't as pretty as this. Must make again.

  • Looks delicious. I have white bean and ham on the stove now - and you aren't kidding - those beans [peas] make copious amounts. We use hamhock in our soups though. We like a stronger ham flavor.

    I can't wait to make yours.

    • I will have to use a ham hock next time! There was a small bone in my piece of ham which I threw into the soup, but next time I'll go for the gold. Hooray for great ham flavor!

  • I'm so glad you loved the soup! And I'm going to have to agree with you; I'm definitely making it with ham next time. I liked the flavor from the bacon, but I think the texture of the ham goes better with the soup. Maybe I'll take your reader's suggestion and use ham hock!

    • Tracy, thank you so much again for posting such great recipes on your blog. I'm posting about your pumpkin spice latte syrup soon, so as you can see I'm getting quite addicted to cooking what you share!

  • I'm glad your flash started working again, but I have to say, I was more rejoicing that your pot didn't boil over! It's looking dangerously close in that last picture.

  • Your split pea soup looks so tasteful & full of real flavours!
    This is the ultimate good for you comforting soup! Yum! ;)

  • Split pea soup is among my favorites. I never understood why some people talk about hating it. I mean, how could you go wrong? Split peas, ham and vegetable. It's like a no-brainer for deliciousness

  • I LOVE split pea soup! I can't wait to make this. I can't imagine how wonderful this homemade version will be since normally I just get it from a can.