Pumpkin cheese soup

6 servings

Ingredients

Quantity Ingredient
1 Pumpkin (big enough to hold 6-10 servings of soup)
2 tablespoons Butter, melted
2 tablespoons Butter
1 large Onion, chopped
2 larges Carrots, shredded
2 Celery sticks, chopped
4 cups Vegetable broth
1 Garlic clove, minced
¼ teaspoon Salt
¼ teaspoon Pepper
¼ teaspoon Nutmeg
¾ cup Cream, light
1 cup Cheddar or gruyere cheese, grated
cup White wine, dry
2 tablespoons Parsley, minced

Directions

Preheat oven to 375 degrees F. Butter a baking sheet.

Prepare pumpkin: cut off the top, scoop out seeds, brush inside with about 2 T melted butter. Replace top and place pumpkin on baking sheet. Bake 45 mins or until tender when pierced with a fork. The pumpkin should be a bit droopy but still hold its shape well.

Meanwhile, melt about 2 T butter in a big saucepan. Add onion, carrots, celery. Saute until soft, about 10 mins. Add broth, garlic, salt, pepper and nutmeg. Cover and simmer 20 minutes. Cool slightly.

Puree vegetable mixture in 2 or 3 batches in a blender or food processor. Put back in saucepan; stir in the cream. Reheat. Add cheese and wine, heat until cheese melts. Stir frequently after adding milk to avoid scorching. Place hot pumpkin on serving platter.

Pour in soup. Sprinkle with parsley.

Serve the soup by ladling out of the pumpkin at the table, scooping a little bit of pumpkin into each serving. The pumpkin then makes a great centerpiece for your table, while allowing people to have second helpings.

NOTES:

* Cheese soup in a pumpkin shell -- This recipe came from the 1983 Half Moon Bay Pumpkin Festival and was published in our local newspaper in 1984.

* I use half gruyere and half cheddar. Shred the cheeses very finely so they will melt rapidly. After the soup is all gone, the pumpkin can be cut up, washed, and used in pumpkin pie. It may need more baking to become soft enough to puree for the pies.

* It was impossible to find pumpkins after Halloween near San Francisco, but fortunately they keep for a month until Thanksgiving in a cool area if left uncut.

* In North America, light cream is often called half and half.

: Difficulty: moderate.

: Time: 1 hour.

: Precision: approximate measurement OK.

: Judy Anderson

: Lucid, Inc., Menlo Park, California, USA : decwrl!spar!edsel!yduJ

: Copyright (C) 1986 USENET Community Trust

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