Cream Of Oat Soup

Mary McCabe • January 19, 2022

INGREDIENTS

  • One white onion sliced thin double half moons
  • Two cups cooked whole oats (recipe follows)
  • Four cups spring water
  • One inch piece Kombu
  • One cup of plant milk, preferably oat milk
  • 3/4 tsp. Sea salt
  • 2 tsp. Soy sauce or white miso to taste
  • Scallion slivers or chopped parsley or both for garnish
  • 1/2 tsp. Toasted sesame oil (optional)

DIRECTIONS


  1. If using oil, warm a 2 qt. stainless steel pot on low flame, add oil.
  2. Add the onions, dash of salt, sauté until translucent.
  3. Add water and Kombu, bring to a boil, lower the flame to medium.
  4. Add the oats, milk, and salt, cook until bubbling.
  5. Using a flame diffuser, cook on low for about an hour until creamy.
  6. Add seasoning to your taste. Garnish and serve hot.
  7. If not using oil, bring water, and Kombu to a boil.
  8. Add onions and salt and cook until onions are translucent. 
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When I lived in Southern California, studying with Sensei Muramoto, we made dried persimmons. We would get cases of them. It was early winter and he had a wood burning stove, since it would get chilly. He built what appeared to be a makeshift fort to dry the peeled persimmons. He used grass mats and built them all around the wood burning stove. We would sit for hours peeling them. He took great pride in being able to peel the whole fruit with one long peel. I never could do it. Every day, he would turn them. When they began to be more dry, he would press them slightly in the middle. It took several weeks before they were ready. In the morning, we would slice them in slivers and serve them with green tea. It was the most delightful combination. He said it created a seventh taste. After I moved back to Philadelphia, we remained good friends. Every year, he would send me a big box of dried persimmons for Christmas. And every year, I would send him a wool vest with leather buttons from Lord & Taylor. My children and I loved them. His persimmons were the most beautiful, they would have a natural sugary coating and beautiful texture and sweetness. His hands had golden microbes. Every food he touched blossomed into it's most highest potential. There is no real recipe to creating dried persimmons. Buy fresh persimmons not too ripe. Wash and then carefully peel the skin off, leaving as much fruit as possible. Set them out on a clean straw mat or something that would be makeshift. The area should be warm, near a wood burning stove. Make sure they don't touch each other. With clean dry hands, turn them each day. When they begin to crystalize on the outside, press the center slightly. When they are completely dried yet tender, store them in a dry air paper box, like cardboard, with wax or parchment paper to store. I would slice them and best serve with green tea.
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