2GourManiacs Best Food Writing & Food Presentation Pictures
  • About Robert & Rosaria
  • Recipes
  • About Robert & Rosaria
  • Recipes

2GourManiacs Best Food Writing & Food Presentation Pictures

Fine Food & Food PhotographyFood & Travel StoriesFood writingSoups / Stews

Ham and Green Pea Soup – a quick food story

written by 2gourmaniacs December 11, 2009

peasoup_reshootsmWhen I was six or seven, I accidentally fell head first through the lower glass panel of an aluminum storm door at my friend Philip’s summer house.  This was at the Jersey shore, on Long Beach Island, way back at the end of the fifties.  My mom, who had been sitting right by the door, screamed in horror as I was lodged half in and half out of the door with my belly laying on a jagged shard of glass still in the door.  Philip’s father and my mom lifted me off the glass and they rushed me into our car. My mom then drove the ninety miles back to our hometown in northern New Jersey, where our family physician was waiting for our arrival.  Doctors did that back then.  I was lucky, I only needed a couple of stitches along my hairline and some bandages across my stomach.

I have no idea why I was rushing out the door that summer afternoon when I missed the door handle and I went through the glass instead.  Kids are like that.  I know that they re-glazed the door panel with plastic after that incident.  But I have a very clear recollection of where the storm door led to: it opened onto a deck that overlooked the beach and the ocean in Harvey Cedars.  My mother had rented the house a couple of summers earlier, so I was very familiar with it.  It was an upside down house, meaning that the living space, kitchen and dining area were on the second floor so you could see the ocean, and the bedrooms and baths were downstairs.  The deck was two stories high and came off of the kitchen/dining area.

This deck holds some pretty significant moments for me.  It’s where I took my first photograph (of my Mom of course).  margeIt’s where I learned to play canasta under the deck table with a blanket draped over it.  It’s where I watched in disbelief when Philip’s older brother, Bill, jumped off the deck into the sand and ran down the beach as if he had just dropped to the ground like a bird hopping off a branch and onto a lawn.  It’s also where I first had my first bowl of ham and green pea soup.

I don’t why, but ham and pea soup came up the other day.  Wait …  Rosaria and I were talking about Quakers while she was making a soup with potatoes and chick peas.  We got onto ham and pea soup because my friend Philip and his family were Quakers and we were talking about the Quaker school that our son attends.  They were the first Quakers I ever knew.  Philip would tell me about going to Sunday meeting, and how they just sat there until someone got up and started talking; talking about whatever they wanted to talk about.  It sure sounded a lot different from my Sunday morning spiritual experiences.  My mother was a dyed-in-the-wool Baptist, originally from Kentucky.  During the summers, she made me go to the only Sunday school in Harvey Cedars which was held at the fire house every Sunday morning.  The Harvey Cedars’ firehouse was the community center for most things of importance, from Santa at Christmas to block parties in the summer, and where a lot of dads hung out on hot summer Saturday nights drinking beer and talking war stories from WW2 and Korea.  Even in the summer on Sunday mornings, it smelled of heating oil and the single red fire truck.  I know there were no Quaker meetings at the Harvey Cedars’ firehouse.  I have no idea where the Quakers met every Sunday.  I can’t imagine there was a meetinghouse anywhere on Long Beach Island.  But it seemed like an enviable alternative to a little wizened faced woman telling us few kids who were forced to show up about Joseph and his amazing technicolor coat.

I don’t remember too much about what we ate down at the shore.  Well, that’s not exactly true, but I don’t want to digress too much from ham and green pea soup.  For some reason, one weekend I was staying at Philip’s house.  He, his two brothers, his sister and I were playing in the crawl space under the house.  It was a magical place in the cool sand, totally dark except for the access panel on one side of the house.  The house was built on pilings and the space between the sand and the first floor was sheathed by the building material of choice back then, asbestos panels.  You couldn’t stand up in the crawl space.  We’d play hide and seek under there for hours.  You had to be careful when you scurried around like mice in the pitch black darkness not to bash your head into the wooden girders overhead.  As you lay in hushed silence in a sand bunker trying to avoid being tagged, you could hear anyone overhead walking around, talking, or using the bathroom.  During our various sessions of playing hide and seek, we got an earful of Philip’s parents personal life.  On this particular occasion, however, only Philip’s dad and his siblings and I were at the house.  We were all going to have lunch and then pile into their car and drive back to Northern New Jersey where we all lived in the same town during the winter.  It was a grey, cool day with the wind coming off the ocean.  When we came up from the crawl space we shook ourselves off out on the deck and tumbled inside.  The big windows overlooking the ocean were steamed up, and I smelled the delicious aroma of some kind of soup.  All of us plopped down at the well worn dining table and Philip’s father, who was a gruff ex-navy dentist, dealt out orange plastic bowls of green pea soup and ham.  I have no idea whether he made the soup from stock or if it was out of a Campbell’s can.  I suspect the latter, with chunks of leftover ham thrown in.  It was my first comfort food moment.  I was enthralled by the taste, the color (pea green) and the its thickness and texture.  I’m sure there were plenty of slices of Wonderbread and margarine to go around.  Philip and I took our bowls cupped in our hands and went out on the deck.  The smell of the ham and green pea soup laced with the briny saltiness blowing off the ocean was intoxicating.  It was wonderful.  It was some sort of defining moment for me and a benchmark for how I looked at and tasted soup for along time.

Back home, I started pestering my mother for ham and green pea soup.  She made it a couple of times from a can without it resembling the mysterious taste and satisfaction of Philip’s dad’s ham and green pea soup. Not even close.  She’d mutter that she didn’t see what the big deal was about pea soup.  Later, much later, when I was a teenager in college, much to my amazement she’d say the same thing about takeout pizza from a brick oven pizzeria which I brought home one evening after work.  “What’s so great about this?” she asked.  I opened my mouth to remind her about ham and green pea soup of earlier years, but I knew she’d long forgotten about it.

Prompted by my recollection of ham and green pea soup at Harvey Cedars, I recently made homemade pea soup.  Here’s what I did.

2 cups dried split green peas
1 medium onion chopped
2 cloves garlic chopped
4 cups chicken stock (preferably homemade)
2 smoked ham hocks (or a ham bone, or chopped up leftover ham)
2 oz. pancetta
2 T olive oil
salt and pepper to taste

Soak the green beans in cold water for at least 30 minutes, changing the water once or twice.  Bring the chicken stock to a boil in a sauce pan, then set aside.  Get a small stock pot, large sauce pan or a marmite, heat up the olive oil, and add the onions.  Sauté over medium heat until translucent, then add the garlic. Drain the the peas, and throw them with the onions and the garlic.  Add the hot chicken stock and the smoked ham hocks.  Bring to a simmer and cook for an hour-and-a-half, until the peas have almost dissolved, and the soup is thick.  Stir every once in a while to make sure nothing is sticking to the bottom of the pan.  Add salt and pepper to taste.

When ready, remove the ham hock, gently pan sauté the chopped pancetta for a couple of minutes until tender.  Pour the pea soup into bowls and sprinkle a pinch of the pancetta on top.  Serve immediately.

Share on Facebook

Fine foodFood photographyFood short storyFood writingGreen pea soupGreen pea soup and hamPea soup
0 comment
0
Facebook Twitter Google + Pinterest
2gourmaniacs

previous post
The Eggplant Factor and my “Parmigiana” Recipe
next post
A Wine Tasting Experience in the Hamptons. Wine not?

You may also like

You Can Never Have Too Many Dinner Parties

November 29, 2009

Versatility is a Key Ingredient: Tarragon Sauce

December 4, 2009

People are Ingredients too! Musings on Food and...

December 18, 2009

Sablefish & Oysters

February 14, 2010

Occupy Our Food Supply

February 27, 2012

Our favorite Easter critters

March 22, 2010

Escolar & Maitake Food Writing and Recipe

March 23, 2010

Swiss Chard, Shrimp & Tofu Soup for a...

December 16, 2010

Putting Our Best Plate Forward

January 13, 2010

The Eggplant Factor and my “Parmigiana” Recipe

December 9, 2009

Leave a Comment

Categories

  • Appetizers / Starters
  • Baking
  • Best Food Writing
  • Breakfast / Day Time
  • Christmas Dinner
  • Desserts
  • Dinner party
  • Dinner Party Menu
  • Dinner recipes
  • Fine Food & Food Photography
  • Fish / Seafood / Shellfish
  • Focaccia
  • Food & Travel Stories
  • Food Presentation Pictures
  • Food writing
  • Grilling
  • Holidays
  • Ingredients
  • Lamb chops
  • Libations
  • Lobster
  • Lunch recipes
  • Meats
  • Mexican
  • Pasta
  • Pasta / Noodles
  • Pizza
  • Poultry
  • Preserved tomatoes
  • Ravioli
  • Rice / Grains
  • Risotto
  • Salads
  • Sauces / Stocks
  • Seafood
  • Soups / Stews
  • Veal
  • Vegetables
  • Wine
  • Wine Tasting
  • World Cuisine
  • Xtras / Random Cool Stuff
My site was nominated for Best Food Blog!

Recent Comments

  • Melvin on Salmon Stuffed Ravioli
  • janet shields on A Spectacular Christmas First Course: Poached Salmon with Cucumber “Scales”
  • 2gourmaniacs on Plum Tart
  • Rosanne on Plum Tart
  • Marnie on Robert’s “Best Chocolate Cake Ever”

Recent Posts

  • Curried Sea Scallops and Udon Noodles
  • Salad Niçoise with pan-seared Ahi tuna
  • Grilled Lobster and fine Rosé (for “end of summer blues”)
  • Boneless kidney lamb chop with celeriac puree and aerated Hollandaise sauce
  • Figs with Goat Cheese & Caramelized Pecans

Archives

  • March 2020
  • May 2018
  • September 2017
  • January 2016
  • September 2015
  • April 2015
  • February 2015
  • January 2015
  • December 2014
  • October 2014
  • May 2014
  • April 2014
  • October 2013
  • April 2013
  • March 2013
  • February 2013
  • January 2013
  • December 2012
  • November 2012
  • October 2012
  • September 2012
  • May 2012
  • March 2012
  • February 2012
  • January 2012
  • December 2011
  • October 2011
  • August 2011
  • July 2011
  • June 2011
  • May 2011
  • April 2011
  • March 2011
  • February 2011
  • January 2011
  • December 2010
  • November 2010
  • October 2010
  • September 2010
  • August 2010
  • July 2010
  • June 2010
  • May 2010
  • April 2010
  • March 2010
  • February 2010
  • January 2010
  • December 2009
  • November 2009

Subscribe

Subscribe my Newsletter for new blog posts, tips & new photos. Let's stay updated!

Categories

  • Appetizers / Starters (17)
  • Baking (20)
  • Best Food Writing (11)
  • Breakfast / Day Time (23)
  • Christmas Dinner (6)
  • Desserts (15)
  • Dinner party (11)
  • Dinner Party Menu (5)
  • Dinner recipes (16)
  • Fine Food & Food Photography (188)
  • Fish / Seafood / Shellfish (65)
  • Focaccia (3)
  • Food & Travel Stories (12)
  • Food Presentation Pictures (10)
  • Food writing (46)
  • Grilling (15)
  • Holidays (1)
  • Ingredients (8)
  • Lamb chops (2)
  • Libations (5)
  • Lobster (2)
  • Lunch recipes (12)
  • Meats (12)
  • Mexican (6)
  • Pasta (5)
  • Pasta / Noodles (24)
  • Pizza (5)
  • Poultry (15)
  • Preserved tomatoes (1)
  • Ravioli (2)
  • Rice / Grains (5)
  • Risotto (1)
  • Salads (10)
  • Sauces / Stocks (9)
  • Seafood (20)
  • Soups / Stews (9)
  • Veal (3)
  • Vegetables (24)
  • Wine (1)
  • Wine Tasting (1)
  • World Cuisine (13)
  • Xtras / Random Cool Stuff (11)
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Google +
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Tumblr
  • Youtube
  • Bloglovin
  • Snapchat
  • Vimeo

@2018 - PenciDesign. All Right Reserved. Designed and Developed by PenciDesign


Back To Top