It can’t be too creamy, with no variance in texture.
It can’t be too lumpy. Potato soup has to have a pureed, smooth potato component.
It has to be full of flavor or I’ll die a thousand deaths.
And most of all…it has to make me close my eyes, sigh, and feel like everything till the end of time is going to be okay.
The Cast of Characters: Small Russet potatoes, carrots, celery, onions, milk, flour (not pictured, because I’m an airhead), heavy cream, salt, pepper (not pictured, for the same aforementioned reason), Cajun spice (ditto), parsley, and thin bacon. The sour cream is optional, as is the cheese, which is obscured by the potatoes.
Gosh, I’m thorough with these Cast of Characters set-ups, aren’t I?
Not.
Note that this will be difficult.
Next come the carrots. I don’t peel them, because then I feel rustic. I just scrub them really well…
Pour off most of the bacon grease from the pot, but leave a little in the pot for health and happiness in 2013.
Okay, happiness.
PO-TAY-TOES? Boil ‘em, mash ‘em, stick ‘em in a STEW?
(Name that movie.)
Throw the potatoes into the pot with the veggies and stir them all together. Let them cook for about 5 minutes or so, just to get the potatoes started.
Add plenty of salt (the potatoes need it!), and please try not to be overly impressed with my flawless manicure.
Then bring it to a boil and let it cook for about ten minutes, till the potatoes are starting to get tender.
Pour it into the soup, then let it cook for another five minutes, until it’s got a little more body to it.
When I’m putting something hot in a blender, I only fill it about 2/3 full because it’ll expand as it purees and you don’t want soup all over the neighbor’s house.
Not that I have neighbors. But still.
Then pour it into the pot with the un-pureed soup. This’ll result in the perfect potato soup consistency! The best of both worlds! Have your cake and eat it, too!
And have your soup and slurp it, too.
You won’t be sorry.
(You can do half-and-half instead…but do add one or the other. Sends the soup into the heavens.)
Stir it around over low heat to make sure it’s thoroughly heated, and use this opportunity to taste it and adjust the seasonings.
In addition to a little extra salt and pepper, I also added some Cajun spice for a nice flavor and just a teeny hint of spice.
Dear goodness, my hand.
Did you know I have the most unphotogenic hands in this history of hands? It’s true! It’s been proven in independent studies.
Oh, and I forgot to mention: If you want your potato soup to be pure and unadulterated in color, just leave the carrots out. I happen to love the golden brown color the carrots bring to the mix, but the onions and celery alone would add great flavor.
But wait! There’s more! Grate up a little bit of your favorite cheese. Absolutely any kind is fine. This one has peppadews in it, and I’m completely obsessed with it.
And I got it at my local grocery store!
I just love it when that happens.
You can also add sliced green onions, a dollop of sour cream—anything you want!
Here’s the handy dandy printable!
Recipe
Perfect Potato Soup
- Prep Time:
- Cook Time:
- Difficulty:
- Easy
- Servings:
- 12
Ingredients
- 6 slices Thin Bacon, Cut Into 1-inch Pieces
- 1 whole Medium Onion, Diced
- 3 whole Carrots, Scrubbed Clean And Diced
- 3 stalks Celery, Diced
- 6 whole Small Russet Potatoes, Peeled And Diced
- 8 cups Low Sodium Chicken Or Vegetable Broth
- 3 Tablespoons All-purpose Flour
- 1 cup Milk
- 1/2 cup Heavy Cream
- 1/2 teaspoon Salt, More To Taste
- Black Pepper To Taste
- 1/2 teaspoon Cajun Spice Mix
- 1 teaspoon Minced Fresh Parsley
- 1 cup Grated Cheese Of Your Choice
Preparation Instructions
Add bacon pieces to a soup pot over medium heat and cook bacon until crisp and fat is rendered. Remove the bacon from the pot and set it aside. Pour off most of the grease, but do not clean the pot.
Return the hot to medium-high heat and add the onions, carrots, and celery. Stir and cook for 2 minutes or so, then add the diced potatoes. Cook for 5 minutes, seasoning with salt, pepper, and Cajun spice.
Pour in the broth and bring it to a gentle boil. Cook for 10 minutes, or until the potatoes are starting to get tender. Whisk together the flour and the milk, then pour into the soup and allow the soup to cook for another 5 minutes.
Remove half to 2/3 the soup and blend in a blender/food process until completely smooth. Pour it back into the soup pot and stir to combine. Let it heat back up as you taste for seasonings, adding more of what it needs. Stir in cream, then stir in parsley, reserving a little for garnish.
Serve in bowls garnished with parsley, grated cheese and crisp bacon pieces.