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Potato Soup

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Ingredients

  • 1 medium yellow onion $0.79
  • 2 stalks celery $0.35
  • 2 medium carrots $0.25
  • 1 Tbsp minced garlic $0.24
  • 3 lbs. potatoes $3.00
  • 2 Tbsp chicken base $0.40
  • 6 cups water $0.00
  • 1/4 tsp cracked pepper $0.02
  • 2 cups milk $0.72
  • 1/4 cup all-purpose flour $0.05
  • 1 tsp salt $0.05

Details

Preparation

Step 1

STEP 1: Finely dice the celery and onion. Peel the carrots and then grate them on a cheese grater. Mince the garlic or use pre-minced from a jar. Add all of this to the slow cooker. Clean the potatoes well, cut into one inch cubes or smaller, and add them to the slow cooker.

STEP 2: Prepare 6 cups of chicken broth by dissolving the chicken base in 6 cups of water (or use homemade or store bought broth). Add to the slow cooker. Add some freshly cracked black pepper (about a 1/4 tsp). Secure the lid on the cooker and cook on high for approximately 8 hours (give or take an hour).

STEP 3: Open the slow cooker and test the potatoes for tenderness. They should be very soft. The onions and celery should also be very soft and transparent. Whisk 1/4 cup of flour into 2 cups of milk and then stir that mixture into the soup. Secure the lid once more and let cook on high for another 30 minutes.

STEP 4: After 30 minutes, the soup should once again be bubbling. It needs to be bubbling for the flour to have it's full thickening power. Use a potato masher, immersion blender, or a hand mixer to "mash" the potatoes. Or, you can transfer half of the soup to a blender and puree (be careful, it's HOT) until smooth and then stir it back in to the rest. Taste the soup and add salt as needed (about one teaspoon). Serve hot.

slow cooker potato soup


Step By Step Photos

vegetables
Start by preparing your vegetables. Obviously, you can't buy just two carrots and two stalks of celery, but that doesn't mean that you have to waste a whole bag just to get what you need for this soup. I always dice up the rest of the bag and freeze it to use in a soup later. Many, many soups start with onion, celery, and carrot, so I often have what I need in my freezer and don't have to buy them! See an example in this post (scroll down to the step by step photos).

dice small
Dice the vegetables very small so that there aren't huge chunks in your potato soup. Carrit can be difficult to dice because it's round, so I just grated it on a cheese grater. Also, carrots don't get as soft as the rest so it was nice to have very small pieces.

red potatoes
I used red potatoes because I love them. I left the skins on and just cleaned them really well (I love potato skin, call me crazy). I would stay away from using yukon gold potatoes because they tend to be more "waxy" and will not mash into the soup as easily. Also, I bought four potatoes, but they were huge so I ended up only using three, which was about 3 lbs. total.

cube potatoes
Cut the potatoes into small cubes - one inch or smaller. The smaller you cut them now, the easier it will be to mash them up later. Add all of the vegetables to the slow cooker (onion, celery, carrot, garlic, potatoes).

broth pepper
Make 6 cups of chicken broth with the chicken base (I use Better Than Bouillon brand) and add it to the slow cooker. Also add some freshly cracked pepper. Secure the lid on the pot, turn the heat onto high, and let 'er rip. Cook for about 8 hours (a little more or less is okay).

cooked soup
And then when you come back later (or wake up in the morning, in my case) you've got a nicely cooked "soup" of a mixture. All of the vegetables are very soft and will mash up easily.

flour and milk
And here comes the "creamy" part. Whisk the all-purpose flour into the milk, trying not to let any big lumps remain.

thicken
Pour the flour/milk mixture into the soup, put the lid back on top and let it cook on high for another 30 minutes or so. It needs to come back up to a bubble for the flour to actually thicken the soup.

mash
And then the soup is ready to be mashed. Lucky me, I don't have a potato masher so I had to improvise. First I used a whisk, which didn't work so well. So then I mashed some with a large spatula, and then I finally pulled out my hand mixer and "mixed" on low speed (to prevent hot splashes) for a few minutes until it was somewhat mashed. I still had some potato pieces, but I like a slightly chunky texture. Mashing the potatoes releases some starch into the soup which will help thicken it further. Give the soup a taste and add salt as needed. I added about a teaspoon of salt. This pic is pre-mashing.

slow cooker potato soup
And then, if you must, add some delicious toppings... but I'm telling you, I tore this soup up all on its own. The potato skins in the picture kind of look like ham... I bet ham would be another yummy topping! Too many options. :P
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Beth M at 6:05 PM
easy, potato, slow cooker, soup, vegetables
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