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Blog

Butteryum food blog recipes

Filtering by Category: pork recipes

Better than OG's Zuppa Toscana (Hearty Tuscan Soup)

Patricia @ ButterYum

HeartyTuscanSoup.ZuppaToscana.ButterYum

It's that crazy time of the year when the weather doesn't quite know if it should be warm or cold.  Perfect soup weather - not that I need cold weather to enjoy soup, but it does seem a bit more appropriate when there's a chill in the air.   

A dear friend recently had surgery so I volunteered to bring her dinner.  She and I occasionally have lunch together and every time we've eaten at Olive Garden, she's ordered the Zuppa Toscana.  I’ve had it once or twice, and think it’s ok, but it’s so watery. I knew I could come up with a much heartier version.  

The verdict, I received an email saying they loved the soup and one family member proclaimed it the best soup she'd ever had.  I don't know about that, but who am I to argue?  

Start with sweet Italian sausage (although hot sausage works equally well if that’s what you like).  I bought links and removed the casings.

Break up the sausage as it cooks.  This awesome tool works so well for breaking up clumps of ground beef, turkey, and sausage.

The sausage is done when no traces of pink remain.

Remove the cooked sausage from the pan, leaving the rendered fat in the pan.

In the same pan, saute the onions (and garlic if using) in the rendered sausage fat.

DSC_9073.JPG

When the onions are translucent, add the potatoes.  I cut my potatoes into small pieces so they'd cook fast, but you can leave them in larger slices like the restaurant does if you prefer.  I forgot to add my carrots at this point (you'll see my fix for that later, but you can add them now).

Return the sausage to the pan and add the chicken stock and bacon (regular or turkey bacon).  Simmer until the potatoes are tender.

When the potatoes are tender, add the chopped kale.

The kale will wilt down quite a bit.

DSC_9079.JPG

This is where I realized that I had forgotten to add the carrots earlier so I put them in a microwave safe container, with a little of the chicken stock from the pan, and I cooked them for a few minutes to soften before adding them to the soup.  That little bit of extra color adds so much!

Just before serving, stir in the heavy cream and chopped fresh parsley.

How good does that look?  Don't forget to taste and adjust the seasoning with salt and pepper if needed.  Enjoy!

Items used to make this recipe:

(affiliate links)


Hearty Tuscan Soup (Zuppa Toscana)

Printable Recipe

Ingredients

  • 1 tablespoon olive oil

  • 1 pound sweet Italian sausage

  • 1 large yellow onion, peeled and diced

  • 3 cloves garlic, minced

  • 2 pound russet potatoes, peeled and cut into 1/4-inch slices (or dice if you need them to cook faster)

  • 2 large carrots, peeled and minced

  • 1/2 cup chopped cooked bacon

  • 5 cups chicken broth (homemade is best - try my easy recipe here)

  • 3 cups chopped kale (no stems)

  • 1 cup heavy cream

  • salt and pepper to taste

  • 3 tablespoons chopped fresh parsley

  • optional: 28 ounces canned cannellini beans, rinsed and drained

Directions

  1. Remove sausage from casing if purchased in link form.

  2. In a large pan, heat oil and brown sausage until cooked through, breaking up large clumps as you go; remove from pan and reserve.

  3. In same pan, saute onions in the rendered sausage fat until translucent; add the garlic and sauté 30 seconds more.

  4. Add potatoes, carrots, sausage, bacon, and chicken broth; simmer over medium heat for 20-30 minutes or until carrots and potatoes are tender.

  5. Add chopped kale; simmer for another 10 minutes.

  6. Stir in heavy cream and adjust salt and pepper if needed.

  7. Stir in chopped parsley and optional cannellini beans just before serving.

Note

  • For an even more hearty version, add a can or two of rinsed and drained cannellini beans about 5 minutes before serving.

Sweet and Spicy Dr. Pepper Pulled Pork

Patricia @ ButterYum

Here's a phenomenal recipe for sweet and smoky pulled pork that's a breeze to make.  All you need to do is toss the ingredients together in a dutch oven and let it braise for 6 hours until the roast is falling apart. It’s absolutely delish.  You'll have a hard time fighting the crowd away from this one.    

Place sliced onions in the bottom of a 5 1/2-quart dutch oven.

Add a 5 to 7 pound pork shoulder roast (aka Boston butt).

Sprinkle the roast liberally with Kosher salt and pepper.

Next add an entire 7.5 ounce can of chipotle peppers in adobo sauce.

This cool tool is the best thing I've found to scrape all the yummy goodness out of cans and jars.

Next you add two 16-ounce cans of Dr. Pepper.  Trust me, you won't taste it in the end, but it does something magical to this roast.

And 2 tablespoons of brown sugar and 2 whole cloves of peeled garlic.

Cover Dutch oven with a tight fitting lid.

Pop it in a 300F oven for a total of 6 hours, turning the roast over at 2 hours, and again at 4 hours. 

Here's what the roast looks like after 2 hours - time for the first turn.

Here we are a 4 hours (really wish you could smell it!!).  Okay, turn it over again.

Ding! - 6 hours are up.   Feast your eyes on that beauty.  Drooling!!  Now watch what happens when you remove the roast from the dutch oven.

It totally falls apart - oh yeah baby!

Shred the meat with 2 forks, or do like I do and slip on some disposable gloves so you can pull it apart by hand (I use them for all kinds of messy kitchen jobs).  Discard any large globs of fat you come across as you shred the meat.

Remove as much rendered fat from the pan juices as you can.  There will be a lot, and whatever you do, DO NOT pour the rendered fat down your sink drain.  I like to keep empty jars on hand for occasions like this.  I use a funnel to pour the rendered fat into a jar, screw on the lid, let it cool, and then I throw it away (easy peasy and no emergency call to a plumber needed).  

I also like to remove the onions and chipotle peppers from the pan and chop them finely so I can add them back to the pan juices. 

Return the shredded pork to the the pan and serve any way you like.  We like it straight up, but it makes great pulled pork sandwiches, tacos, pizza, panini, mexican lasagna, quesadillas, tequitos, etc.   

Yummo.   Go, make!

Items used to make this recipe:

(affiliate links)


Sweet and Spicy Dr. Pepper Pulled Pork

Printable Recipe

Ingredients

  • 1 large onion, sliced

  • 5 to 7 pound pork shoulder (aka Boston butt roast)

  • Kosher salt and pepper

  • 1 7.5-ounce can chipotle peppers in adobo sauce

  • 2 cans Dr. Pepper

  • 2 tablespoons brown sugar

  • 2 whole cloves garlic, peeled

Directions

  1. Preheat oven to 300F.

  2. Place sliced onions in bottom of a 5.5-quart Dutch Oven.

  3. Place roast on onions and sprinkle liberally with Kosher salt and pepper.

  4. Pour chipotle peppers and the adobo sauce on top of the roast.

  5. Pour both cans of Dr. Pepper over the roast.

  6. Place brown sugar and garlic cloves down into the Dr. Pepper.

  7. Cover Dutch oven with tight fitting lid.

  8. Place in oven for a total of 6 hours; turning roast over at 2 hours and 4 hours.

  9. Remove pork from dutch oven and shred meat with 2 forks, discarding large globs of fat.

  10. Remove rendered fat from pan juices; discard (don't put this down your drain!!).

  11. Remove onions and chipotle peppers from pan juices and chop finely; return to juice.

  12. Place shredded pork back in the pan juices and serve.

Note

  • I've doubled this recipe in a gigantic 13.25-quart dutch oven (great if you have a huge crowd to feed, but it's very, very heavy so you may need a strong person to lift it in and out of the oven for you).

adapted from Tasty Kitchen