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Split Pea Soup with Bacon, Ham and Caramelized Onions

February 21, 2016 By WooPigFoodie 2 Comments

I’m a soup man. Always have been. There is nothing more close to my definition of a perfect food, than soup. Sick? Soup. Tired? Soup. Celebrating? Start with soup. See what I mean?

My mom was really a soup master (mistress? momstress?). Split pea soup is one of those that I remember from early childhood. Creamy, rich, green and garden-y, hammy…mmmmn.

I like to dress this up with bacon and caramelized onions. That combination is brings a deep resonance, a smoky richness that pervades the dish itself. If you skip that step, you might as well throw the dish away—no matter how much ham you add, it will never have the true porky flavor that it deserves. That you deserve.

Here’s how I make it. (The full recipe is at the end.)

I do this as a two-day recipe, or at least a night-before and a day recipe. You’ll start off with soaking your split green peas. I buy these organic in a two pound bag for about $2.50. Take your largest pot and pour your beans in. As you pour, take a look and see if you find any stones. I’ve never found any, but that is the standard direction with this.

Once you have them in your pot, cover them with cold water by about 4 inches. The will suck up a ton of water and if you use less water, you’ll end up with dry beans and no water. So add enough. It’s perfectly fine to add more later if you find out they soaked it all up. At some point, the peas will stop soaking up the water. That takes a few hours for me. At that point, I like to sample them. These taste of fresh spring, and childhood gardens. Perfect.

Green Peas

So let’s get cooking. Take a ham hock and score it with x’s by slicing the fat on its outside first in one direction, then in the opposite. You don’t need to cut very deeply into it, just an 1/8th inch or ¼ inch or so. This is a fresh ham hock from a local farm, but you can use a smoked ham hock from the grocery. It will taste great.

Ham Hock

Place that ham hock in a small pot of cold water (not your soup pot), covering it with the water. I like to add in a little salt and pepper and a bay leaf, but it isn’t truly necessary. I don’t think it adds much flavor to the hock, and you don’t want to add this water to the pea soup pot. Bring this to the boil and skim off any foam that accumulates. That is coagulated protein escaping from the ham hock, and makes the broth cloudy. (If that sounds tasty, it’s not.) I like to clear it away, so that the ham hock is cooking in just clear broth. Cook the ham hock for about 45 minutes, until it is cooked through.

Cooked ham hock

While the ham chock is cooking, slice up 5 pieces of bacon. I freeze my bacon so that it stays as a block, and I slice across that block to give me perfect small bacon slices.

Bacon slicing

Chop up a red onion into ¼” dice and add the bacon and onion to your largest soup pot. Heat that up over medium heat and caramelize the onions until they are soft and colored. You can take these as caramelized as you like, so as darkly brown as you want.

Carmelizing onions

Next up are your carrots and celery. You want two cups of each, chopped. I buy it frozen, and mine contains onions, too. Throw all of that in the pot and stir it around for about three minutes to soften.

Adding in the carrots and celery

Push them to the side and add in your ham hock.

Add in the ham hock

Brown the ham hock on all sides until it has some color. That color is flavor. It’s ok if it the bottom of your pot gets some dark color; don’t worry about that. It’s called fond, and fond is flavor. Once the ham hock is browned, add in your green peas.

Add in the green peas

Add in salt and pepper.

Add salt

Add in a tablespoon of bouillon. I like to use the Better Than Bouillon brand – whatever flavor I have in the house. Today, it’s organic vegetable.

Add bouillion

Now add in enough water to cover the ingredients. For mine, it took about 64 oz. of water (8 cups). Use what works for you.

Add water

Now add in some thyme and a bay leaf or two. I am using thyme from my garden, which I dried and store in a glass jar. I also like to add in a good pinch of hot pepper flakes. I like the zip that it gives the soup.

Thyme and bay leaf

Keep the flame at medium high until it boils, then turn down to low and cover it. Cook it for one hour. If you leave it uncovered, it will boil off the liquid and leave you with paste. The liquid is absolutely delicious, so don’t lose a drop.

Cooking pea soup

Once an hour has gone by, pull out the ham hock, let it cool, and strip or chop away the meat from it, adding it back to the soup.

Cooked ham hock

Let it cook about 1 hour more, until the peas lose their crunch. If the soup is too thin, you can boil it down some more. If it is too thick, go ahead and add in some more water and heat it through.

Take a taste. You want to adjust things for salt and pepper. If it doesn’t have enough life at this point, then add some salt and pepper, perhaps a ¼ teaspoon of each at a time.

Once the flavor is nicely balanced, now it’s time to zizz things. Pull out your immersion blender and blend this up. I like it “rough-smooth” so that it still has some body. But if you like, you can take it all the way to smooth.

I like to fry up some more bacon …

Frying Bacon

… and serve it on top!

Split Pea Soup with Bacon

Split Pea Soup with Bacon, Ham and Caramelized Onions
 
Print
My favorite split pea soup. Rich, smoky, and full of bacon and caramelized onions. That combination is brings a deep resonance, a smoky richness that pervades the dish itself. If you skip that step, you might as well throw the dish away—no matter how much ham you add, it will never have the true porky flavor that it deserves. That you deserve.
Author: WooPigFoodie
Cuisine: Soup
Ingredients
  • 2 pounds split peas (I like the organic ones, which are nominally more expensive)
  • 5 slices bacon, sliced into thin strips
  • 1 red onion chopped
  • 1 ham hock
  • 4 carrots, chopped
  • 4 celery ribs, chopped
  • salt and pepper to taste
  • 1 Tablespoon bouillon
  • 1 Tablespoon thyme
  • 1-2 bay leaves (1 if large, 2 if small)
  • 1 teaspoon crushed red pepper (if you like it)
Instructions
  1. I do this as a two-day recipe, or at least a night-before and a day recipe.
  2. You’ll start off with soaking your split green peas. Take your largest pot and pour your beans in. As you pour, take a look and see if you find any stones. I’ve never found any, but that is the standard direction with this.
  3. Once you have them in your pot, cover them with cold water by about 4 inches. The will suck up a ton of water and if you use less, you’ll end up with dry beans and no water. So add enough. It’s perfectly fine to add more as needed. At some point, they will stop soaking in the water. That takes a few hours for me.
  4. Take a ham hock and score it with x’s by slicing the fat on its outside first in one direction, then in the opposite. You don’t need to cut very deeply into it, just an ⅛th inch or ¼ inch or so.
  5. Place that ham hock in a small pot of cold water (not your soup pot), covering it with the water. I like to add in a little salt and pepper and a bay leaf, but it isn’t truly necessary. I don’t think it adds much flavor to the hock, and you don’t want to add this water to the pea soup pot.
  6. Bring this to the boil and skim off any foam that accumulates. That is protein escaping from the ham hock, and makes the broth cloudy. I like to clear it away, so that the ham hock is cooking in just clear broth. Cook the ham hock for about 45 minutes, until it is cooked through.
  7. While the ham chock is cooking, slice up 5 pieces of bacon. I freeze my bacon so that it stays as a block, and I slice across that block to give me perfect small bacon slices.
  8. Chop up a red onion into ¼” dice and add the bacon and onion to your largest soup pot. Heat that up over medium heat and caramelize the onions until they are soft and colored. You can take these as caramelized as you like, so as darkly brown as you want.
  9. Next up are your carrots and celery. You want two cups of each, chopped. I buy it frozen, and mine contains onions, too. Throw all of that in the pot and stir it around for about three minutes to soften. Push them to the side and add in your cooked ham hock.
  10. Brown the ham hock on all sides until it has some color. That color is flavor. It’s ok if it the bottom of your pot gets some dark color; don’t worry about that. It’s called fond, and fond is flavor. Once the ham hock is browned, add in your green peas.
  11. Add in salt and pepper and a tablespoon of bouillon. I like to use the Better Than Bouillon brand – whatever flavor I have in the house. Today, it’s organic vegetable.
  12. Now add in enough water to cover the ingredients. For mine, it took about 64 oz. of water (8 cups). Use what works for you.
  13. Now add in the thyme and a bay leaf or two. I am using thyme from my garden, which I dried and store in a glass jar. I also like to add in a good pinch of hot pepper flakes. I like the zip that it gives the soup.
  14. Keep the flame at medium high until the soup boils, then turn down to low and cover it. Cook it for one hour. If you leave it uncovered, it will boil off the liquid and leave you with paste. The liquid is absolutely delicious, so don’t lose a drop.
  15. Once an hour has gone by, pull out the ham hock, let it cool, and strip or chop away the meat from it, adding it back to the soup. Let it cook about 1 hour more, until the peas lose their crunch. If the soup is too thin, you can boil it down some more. If it is too thick, go ahead and add in some more water and heat it through.
  16. Take a taste. You want to adjust things for salt and pepper. If it doesn’t have enough life at this point, then add some salt and pepper, perhaps a ¼ teaspoon of each at a time.
  17. Once the flavor is nicely balanced, now it’s time to zizz things. Pull out your immersion blender and blend this up. I like it “rough-smooth” so that it still has some body. But if you like, you can take it all the way to smooth.
  18. Serve it with more bacon on top!
3.4.3177

 

Filed Under: Dinner, Recipes, Soups, Vegetables

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Comments

  1. Mary Higens

    April 6, 2017 at 4:54 pm

    I think this is an excellent recipe. Will make this weekend!

    Reply
    • WooPigFoodie

      April 6, 2017 at 5:39 pm

      I hope you enjoy it!!! Let me know how it goes!

      Reply

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