Order Chestnuts Now. Email ufomuseum@comcast.net- subject to availability

Fresh chestnuts still firm and nice thanks to cold storage are available from St Peter's Dome Flora in Oregon (ufomuseum@comcast.net) prices subject to change. Inquire for prices if not the same date as this listing .

2013 prices are $54 including postage for an 10 pound flat rate box. $28 including postage for a 5 lb box . 1.75 lbs in a small flat rate box including postage is $14. Compare to offerings on Ebay. Chestnut supplies are limited and are gone when they are gone. a paypal request can be sent to your email address for purchase.

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

How To Make A Chestnut Soup With Any Recipe

It is easy to make Chestnut Soup with any recipe that already has potato's in it. I make at least one batch of chestnut soup a year since i have so many chestnuts around being a chestnut grower. My favorite chestnut soup is Chestnut leek soup. The last one i made this year was both chestnut and potato leek soup. I just used one potato instead of two and substituted chestnut meat for one of the potato's. It took around 20 chestnuts which i flash cooked after making holes in them in the microwave oven. The recipe is in any cook book or your own. Just precook the chestnuts peal and get the inner skin off too, mash or dice and add to the boiling soup base instead of all the potato's or just some of them.

The approximate recipe i use for chestnut leek soup is:

6 cups of water

20 chestnuts precooked and mashed from the microwave and one yellow potato or 4o chestnuts and no potato

3 leeks pan fried before boiling with light oil

a half of a carrot diced

a bay leaf, thyme, pepper, salt and other spices to taste

Several drops of Aromatic bitters used for flavoring cocktails

3 garlic sections mashed from a fresh clove or garlic powder.

This is the basic recipe and it is boiled until it has the consistency of a melded soup.

You can use any recipe with chestnuts instead of potato's including making a chestnut clam chowder as one of the more unusual sounding suggestions. Any potato soup recipe can become a chestnut bisque instead by substituting all or just some of the the potato's for chestnuts.

1 comment:

  1. Okay - this is less a comment than it is a wonderful introduction.

    I also am a total chestnut nerd (though mostly the dead American variety)AND also tried to use my blog to make me an instant billionare AND totally think that gravity is a bogus scam and that we never ever went to the moon! How remarkable!

    I recently tried to prove god by taking thousands of pictures of oddly formed clouds and writing in a style of desperate theological persuasion. All it got me was trouble. The Vatican didn't even write me back. Sucks to be a prophet, dude. Ha!

    (The proof is actually quite compelling...genius really. Makes total sense, given the fact that I actually am a genius.)

    (I was fully prepared to DESTROY corporate media, religion, the military industrial complex, the pharmaceutical and mental health industries, and capitalist culture. i.e. Save the World. I sort of still want to do all those things. Unless, of course, I get that awesome job at a gas station that I just applied for.)

    I totally appreciate your vast interests and am relieved to find that I am not the only one who is quite suspicious of this whole 'gravity' business. I also think that 'potential energy' is a heap of rubbish, rolling down a hill or not.

    Oh yeah, I brilliantly unlocked the secrets of human consciousness a few days ago. Nobody noticed.

    Have a mighty fine day and thanks for the excellent reading material. If you ever want to help me Save the World, just let me know.

    "Portland is awesome, I used to live there."

    Hahahaha! Man, I slay myself. I really did live in Portland though. Of course I did.

    email me and I'll give you my blog address, as don't want to besmirch this fine chestnut bloggage with shameless self-promotion. Oops, I just did, huh? faithrhyne@gmail.com

    ReplyDelete