When my
kooky older sister went to med school, she brought home many
anecdotes and some interesting fellow students. My favorite
recollection is still the one about her so-called dissecting skirt.
When she took anatomy, she insisted on wearing the same skirt for
months, because she claimed that it had taken on the strong whiff of
the lab where they dissected cadavers. And she wasn't having any more
of it when it came to her other precious clothes. Besides probing
body parts, she threw a good party here and there, and her new
friends sat around until the wee hours of the morning talking,
drinking and eating.
When she
was in a generous mood, she invited me to hang out with them, and I
did once in a while but actually mostly because of the soup she
always made. She called it midnight soup, but it really was just a
doctored (ha!) up oxtail soup from a package. Even so, I liked the
concept, it made me feel included and very grown up.
A
midnight soup, or as we Germans call it “Mitternachtssuppe”, is
traditionally served, as the name suggests, either very late at night
or very early in the morning after lots of carousing, reviving
everyone with a hearty, rich steaming bowl of soup.
My
version of midnight soup has small cubes of lean meat and copious amounts of diced sweet onions. The meat gets browned on all sides and sizzles happily in a big pot. I season it with two kinds of paprika: sweet and half-sharp Hungarian which gives the soup a wonderful vibrant reddish-brown color and a deep, satisfying flavor. I also add earthy, peppery caraway seeds. It cooks for a long time in a tasty beef stock until the meat is very tender and the onions have transformed into a delicious velvety broth. The whole house smells intriguingly spicy-sweet for hours and most of the time, I can't wait until midnight.
Midnight
Soup
Serves 4
1
lbs lean beef for stewing (preferable grass-fed)
2
onions, about 12 oz
1
clove garlic
2
tb canola oil, divided
1
tb tomato paste
1-2
tsp half spicy Hungarian paprika (depending on spiciness)
2
tb sweet Hungarian paprika
1/4
tsp ground caraway seeds (or 1/4 tsp whole seeds, finely chopped)
1/2
tsp dried marjoram leaves
1
Turkish bay leaf
800
ml beef broth (packaged or canned is fine)
1
red pepper
salt,
pepper to taste
Step 1
Wash
meat and dry with paper towels. Cut into small pieces, if already
cubed for stewing, cut into 4 smaller pieces. Chop onions and garlic.
Step 2
Heat 1
tb oil in a big pot and brown meat on high heat on all sides for
about 5 min. Remove meat and any liquid, set aside. Add 2nd tb of oil and sauté onions and garlic until soft, about 5 – 7 min.
Add the tomato paste and cook for an additional 2 min to deepen
flavor. Return meat with liquid to pot, sprinkle with paprika and add broth.
Season with salt, pepper, caraway seeds, marjoram and bay leaf, let
simmer for 1 1/2 hours or until meat is fork-tender.
Step 3
Meanwhile,
wash red pepper and cut into cubes. Add to soup with 1/2 to 3/4 cup of
water and simmer an additional 20 min or until desired doneness.
Remove bay leaf and adjust seasoning. Serve with a dollop of sour
cream and a sprinkling of Gremolata (bright, finely chopped parsley
mixed with freshly minced garlic and lemon zest).
This soup goes
really well with a crusty baguette or sturdy German bread.