Rob’s Autumn Soup

That’s Rob Krawczyk – our own Ballydehob Michelin starred Chef and owner of Restaurant Chestnut here in Ballydehob. He’s showing us how to make soup? I’m in!

The occasion was a fundraiser for the marvellous West Cork Feel Good Festival – a festival that’s dedicated to experiential workshops that offer moments of exploration, discovery and connection. There are events taking place all over West Cork, and the underlying theme is that of good mental health and wellbeing for all of us. This one was in the fabulous Levis’s where so much of the heart of Ballydehob is nurtured. (See my post about their famous shop counter, here.)

Rob is genial and casual – no hint of Master-Cheffy uppityness and not a tweezer in sight. West Cork is a foodie paradise and there’s a mantra that local cooks like to use – fresh food, simply prepared. And this was a masterclass in exactly that. There were 4 ingredients – tomatoes, oil, garlic and salt. That’s it.

What did I learn that I didn’t know before? First, and most surprising to me – roast the tomatoes, vine and all! Roasting brings out the flavour, and apparently the vine itself also contains buckets of flavour too. Chuck in a couple of cloves of garlic – no need to peel or cut them up. He buys his tomatoes from Lisheen Greens – one of our local producers of vegetables.  

How about seasoning? Rob used two kinds of salt, coarse and fine, and a generous amount of each. He also told us it was important to season at the end as well. I asked him about pepper – every video I watch on the internet has copious amount of salt and pepper added, and the Master Chef guys are always bleating on about seasoning. I personally use pepper very sparingly and in very few recipes, so I was curious. Rob made my day when he told me he doesn’t often use pepper, and when he does he adds it at the end. 

I said that one of the ingredients was tomatoes, and that’s correct. But there were two kinds – one kind was the fresh tomatoes on the vine that Rob roasted, the other was – canned! It’s important, he said, to look for good quality canned tomatoes that have been peeled – unpeeled can leave unpleasant bits in the soup. This one is available in Fields of Skibbereen.

Once the tomatoes have roasted, the canned tomatoes are added, everything is mixed and cooked in a big pot, and then processed in a blender or food processor to chop up the vine stalks and the garlic. Finally, it’s all strained through a sieve, tasted, and a last seasoning added. 

To serve it, Rob showed us how to make a brown soda bread. His tip – handle it as little as possible, only as much as you need to, to get all the dry and wet ingredients to come together. 

Of course, in the best tradition of here’s one I made earlier there was a big pot of soup on the hob, and lots of little loaves of brown bread with herbed butter. 

Delicious!!!

Feasts and Festivals

It’s August in West Cork and we’re going to need a holiday to recover! July was a blast – here are a few highlights – The West Cork Literary Festival (I was on stage at Future Forests as part of a joint Lit Fest and Ellen Hutchins Fest Seaweed and Sealing Wax presentation, to a large and enthusiastic audience; A Fusion Feast at Levis’s with good friends and cooked by Rob Krawczyk and, both with their own Award Winning Restaurants; the Launch of Holy Wells of Cork by Amanda Clarke; and a continuation of the high standards of exhibitions at The Blue House Gallery in Schull, with Oonagh Hurley, Catherine Weld and Shane O’Driscoll – including this rug designed by Shane and made by Ceadogán Rugmakers.

The wonderful Kilcoe Studios also organised an innovative series of events titled The Fibre of Our Being, “exploring contemporary textiles which draw on tradition to reinvigorate their process” and involving several different artists, including our friend and neighbour Liadain Aiken – see here for our post on Robert’s sweater.

August started with the 10 Hands Exhibition at the Working Artists Studios. 10 Hands is the brainchild of Angela Brady, architect, film maker and craft historian. This year, the ten artists and makers have been joined by 6 more from the Working Artists Studios team, and the result is very impressive. Lots of variety here, and an exceptionally high calibre of vision and execution. I am craving one of the incredible standards lamps by Ania Surazynska – here’s one example. This artist is new to me, but I see a very, er, bright future for her. You heard it here first.

While we weren’t able to get to the opening last night, we are planning a trip out to Union Hall tomorrow for the annual and always-outstanding West Cork Creates Exhibition. This show has now moved to a marvellous new establishment, the Cnoc Buí Arts Centre. We visited last month and were delighted by the exhibition we found there, of sculptures, paintings and books by Nathalie Vessié-Hodges. Here she is signing one of her books for me (it was published by the Louvre!). A fairly recent blow-in to West Cork, I predict we will be seeing more of Nathalie.

Also on our list for tomorrow is the West Cork Rare Book Fair – we attended last year at the lush Inish Beg Estate and this year it is being held at the home of Innana Rare Books just outside Skibbereen. Doesn’t this look inviting? (It’s a screenshot from the Innana website – thank you, Holger and Nicola!)

And then it’s right into the West Cork History Festival. Robert and I have organised the field trips, and we are looking forward to our own contribution to those – a tour of the historic Church of St Barrahane in Castletownshend. There are several other options – including walks and swims with Gormú, a walking tour of Ballydehob (oops -sold out!) and an historical Kayak trip through Castlehaven. The Program of Talks features leading academics and writers, and there’s a hot rumour that Micheál Martin will do the opening honours. I’m particularly looking forward to Friday night’s opening session with writer Glenn Patterson who will be in conversation about his latest book The Last Irish Question: Will Six into Twenty Six Ever Go? followed by a panel ruminating on what we have learned from the Decade of Centenaries about our past and our future.

For history buffs, you just can’t beat this Festival, this year in the magical surroundings of Inish Beg Estate. As soon as it’s over I will be hot-footing it to the events of the Ellen Hutchins Festival – a feast of delights for anyone even vaguely interested in the natural world, inspired by the life and work of Ireland’s first female botanist. I’ve signed up for several events – lots of them are free and many are suitable for children.

And once all that is over, I might just have to retire. Wait, what? I AM retired, I hear you say? Ah – so no excuse needed to do more of this – having leisurely lunches overlooking Roaringwater Bay?

Oh – you have another question? What’s Graham Norton doing in the top photo? That’s easy – he lives part time in Ahakista on the Sheep’s Head, and there he is, doing his stint as Quizmaster at the annual Ahakista Festival this weekend. We attended one year and it was predictably hilarious.