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4 servings
suggest servings
| 4 | tablespoons | butter | |
| 1 | medium | onion | chopped |
| 1 | medium | cauliflower florets | |
| 1 | large | potato | boiling |
| 1 | quart | chicken broth | |
| 2 | tablespoons | chives | snipped |
| 1/2 | teaspoon | fine herbs | herbes de provence |
| 1 | x | black pepper | liquid seasoning, a few drops |
| 1 | cup | heavy whipping cream | |
| 2 | each | egg yolks | room temperature |
| 2 | tablespoons | armagnac | |
| 1/2 | pound | roquefort cheese | crumbled |
Melt butter in large, heavy Dutch oven over moderately high heat and sauté onion for 1 minute; cover; sweat for 10 minutes.
Meanwhile, halve and core the cauliflower.
Reserve some flowerets and chop remainder to total about 6 cups.
Peel and dice potato. Add cauliflower and potato to Dutch oven; cook, stirring, for 1 minute.
Add chicken broth, chives, Herbes de Provence and red pepper seasoning.
Bring to boil; cover; lower heat and simmer for 10 minutes, or until vegetables are just tender.
Cool slightly. Puree all but 1 1/2 cups mixture in food processor or blender in batches; return to pan.
In a small bowl, blend cream, yolks and Armagnac; add 1 cup of the hot soup, beating constantly with wire whip.
Return to pan; add half of crumbled Roquefort.
Heat very slowly, stirring constantly, until cheese melts and soup thickens slightly.
Do not allow soup to boil. Garnish soup with reserved cauliflowerets, crumbled Roquefort and chives.
Makes 4 to 6 servings.
| % Daily Value* | |
| Total Fat 52.0g | 79% |
| Saturated Fat 32.0g | 160% |
| Trans Fat 0.0g | |
| Cholesterol 164mg | 55% |
| Sodium 1221mg | 51% |
| Total Carbohydrate 23.0g | 8% |
| Dietary Fiber 2.0g | 7% |
| Sugars 3.0g | |
| Protein 17.0g | 33% |
| Vitamin A | 38% | Vitamin C | 15% | |
| Calcium | 43% | Iron | 4% |
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily values may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.
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History - The species name dracunculus derive from Latin draco "dragon" and Greek drákoon, because the herb was, in the Middle Age, popular for driving away these beasts. Tarragon was used by the ancient Greeks to relieve toothaches. During the Middl...
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