Rosy Berry Soup
Submitted by willow
Chilled raspberry soup simmered with Burgundy wine and cinnamon sticks, strained smooth, and served cold with a swirl of cream. An elegant summer starter.
YIELD
5 servingsPREP
15 minCOOK
30 minREADY
8 hrsThis chilled raspberry soup is a show-stopper for warm weather entertaining. Frozen raspberries simmer with Burgundy wine, water, and cinnamon sticks until the berries break down completely, then the whole pot gets pressed through a sieve to catch every seed.
A touch of cornstarch thickens the strained liquid just enough to coat a spoon without turning it gloopy. After 6-8 hours in the fridge, you’ve got a deep ruby soup that’s tart, fruity, and lightly spiced.
The cream swirl at the end is presentation and flavor in one move. Drizzle it on top and drag a knife through in S-curves for that classic marble pattern. Serve it in white bowls for maximum contrast.
Kitchen Tips
- Use a non-aluminum pot. The acid from the berries and wine reacts with aluminum and creates off-flavors and discoloration. Stainless steel or ceramic only.
- Press the mixture firmly through the sieve. Use the back of a spoon and really work it. You want every drop of pulp through, leaving only dry seeds behind.
- Dissolve the cornstarch in cool liquid first. Mixing it directly into hot soup creates lumps that won’t dissolve.
- Chill the full 6-8 hours. The flavors need time to meld and the soup needs to be properly cold. Lukewarm berry soup is not appealing.
Variations
- Strawberry version: Swap the raspberries for strawberries. No need to strain since there are no seeds to catch.
- Non-alcoholic: Replace the Burgundy with cranberry or pomegranate juice for a booze-free version that’s still deeply fruity.
- Yogurt swirl: Use tangy plain yogurt instead of cream for a lighter, more acidic contrast.
Ingredients
Directions
Combine first 5 ingredients in a deep, ceramic, heatproof casserole or stainless steel saucepan (mixture will discolor aluminum).
Bring mixture to a boil; reduce heat, and simmer 15 minutes.
Press raspberry mixture through a sieve, and return to casserole or saucepan; discard seeds.
Combine cornstarch and ¼ cup raspberry liquid; stir well.
Bring remaining liquid to a boil.
Reduce heat to low, and stir in cornstarch mixture.
Cook, stirring constantly, until slightly thickened.
Chill 6 to 8 hours.
Drizzle whipping cream in soup, and swirl in with a knife.
Strawberries my be substituted for raspberries.
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