Friday, January 9, 2009

Persian Lentil and Tomato Soup


Most Chicagoans know of this wonderful Persian restaurant called "Reza's". Russians looove this Middle-Eastern cuisine. Partially because of the influence of the Georgians and the Armenians. Besides, what can be bad about char grilled meat and fragrant basmati rice?

For as long as I can remember my family went to Reza's. I always had this gitty feeling when I knew we were going to there. I would day dream about it in school and look forward to it all day. The food was always great, inexpensive and filling. They have HUGE portions...HUGE! Mostly everyone at our table always left most of the meal on their plates...except my dad, my uncle and myself, we put away the entire meal! My mom warned me each time to stop, that I will feel sick ...but I never listened and every time I would slouch on the chair, slowly making my way under the table to take a much-needed nap, growning from my full tummy. My mom would say, "Why would you do that? Look at your stomach, look!! This is more food than you have eaten all month! You cannot do this to yourself." I would look up at her, with a miserable smile and say, "But once I start, I cannot stop. I have to eat it all. How would dad and my uncle look at me if I didn't eat it all?" My mom would throw her hands in the air and say that one day I would learn. I can still put away an entire plate of food today but I choose not to and instead take it home. To this day I still crave to go there and get excited about eating their food.

I have duplicated almost every recipe they have at the restaurant, except one. Their soup. It's this delicious lentil and tomato soup that I absolutely love. It's totally vegetarian and has a ton of flavor in it. It has that unique combination of eccentric spices known to the middle eastern world.

I made it yesterday in an attempt to continue my vegetarian style diet. (I say style, because I am eating meat, just not every day.) It was almost identical to the one in Reza's. My fiance' was very against tasting it because I told him that it was vegetarian. I put it out for him when I went upstairs to blog last night. I came down...the bowl was licked clean!
"I liked, even better than Reza's!" He said.
Ahhh music to my ears, my recipe is better than Reza's brilliant!

I based it off of a recipe I found on recipezaar.com, funny enough a woman was looking for the same soup recipe. The recipe definitely needed a bit of tweaking. I added a lot of my own spices that I know are traditionally used in Persian and middle eastern cuisine in general. It was filling and absolutely delicious!
I placed a dollop of middle eastern yogurt on top and it finished it of nicely.

*You can find the original recipe here *


Persian Lentil and Tomato Soup



1 cup lentils, rinsed
7 cups vegetable stock (I used Trader Joes, which was very flavorful)
1 tablespoon olive oil
2 medium onions, chopped
4 garlic cloves, crushed
2 cups stewed tomatoes, crushed
2 teaspoons salt
1 bunch of parsley, finely chopped
1/2 teaspoon pepper
1/4 teaspoon cayenne
2 tsp sumac
3 tsp 7-spice
1/4 cup brown basmati rice, uncooked
juice of 1 lemon

*If you have never seen sumac, I recommend that you try using it in all your middle eastern recipes. It is regularly used in that region of the world. It has a tart flavor to it and was originally used in food before the Romans introduced lemons. It goes well with chicken, beef, hummus almost anything. In fact, you will usually see it sitting on tables next to the salt in pepper in most good middle eastern restaurants. 7-Spice is also very popular and frequently used. It's a spice blend with cumin, ground coriander, paprika, nutmeg, cinnamon and cardamon. It really gives that middle eastern flare to the dish.*


1. Add lentils to stock and bring up to a boil. Cover and continue cooking on medium low for 25 minutes.
2. Sautee onions and garlic together and let them sweat. You do not want any color.
3. Add tomatoes, parsley and all seasoning and cook for 5 minutes.
4. Add onion mixture and rice to the lentils and stock. Turn down the heat and let it cook for about 25-30 minutes on medium heat, until the lentils and rice are tender. At this point, add lemon juice.
5. Pour into a bowl and add a dollop of middle eastern yogurt called "Labne".


*I think next time I do this dish I may do it a bit differently. It came out a bit chunky which is OK, but I am going to puree the tomatoes and onions next time and then add it to the soup. The color actually looks nicer that way and you get a more homogeneous consistency.*

14 comments:

Anonymous said...

Thank you Mila,
I like this soup...now you made me hungry!!!
XO, Nina

Peter M said...

Ahh, I just had some Greek lentil soup...good for ya too!

Mila said...

Thanks guys!

Christo Gonzales said...

this soup made my stomach growl - and I love labaneh...

Proud Italian Cook said...

Mila, Next week temp's are suppose to be 0 degrees! This soup would be perfect! Warm and comforting!
Thanks for visiting my blog, I'll be back to check out all your good food!
Marie

L'Chicken said...

Hey Mila,

I'm SUCH a Reza's fan. Do you know how to make those insanely delicious kabobs...Kitfi? Kifta? The ones made with ground chicken, I love those things. I love your blog...you've got some great recipes going on.

-Josie (The Chicken Contests)

Jacqueline Meldrum said...

That sounds really good and what better compliment could you have?

~~louise~~ said...

Another comforting soup for National Soup Month.

Thank you so much for sharing...

The Blonde Duck said...

I stopped into say hi! What a fun story about Reza's!

Mary Bergfeld said...

You've convinced me that I have to give this a try. I loved your story.

Pam said...

It's pouring rain right now - this soup would be perfect for lunch.

Maria said...

I love lentil soup! So filling and delicious!

Lauren said...

that's great that you replicated a restaurant fave! where do you find 7 spice? I've never heard of it before.

Too busy to be blogging said...

Hey, THANK YOU FOR posting this!!!
I have been looking for this soup recipe since 1995. My husband's Persian and he had no clue how to make it. The sumac was Great in it. But I used jalapenos for the Cayenne. I also used fresh tomatoes from the garden and tomato paste, b/c I didn't have canned. Also, I put in chicken stock not veggie. I also put in 1/2 cup of split yellow peas. 7 spice (? what's that?) I just put in the Iranian standard Turmac for that! YUMMY it was awesome for my husband's fever! THANK YOU!!!!!!!