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Creamiest Tomato Soup (Without Any Cream)

Annie Montesano & Dan Scheibe

Serves Six

Ingredients

1½ cups (185g) raw cashews

5 tablespoons (75ml) extra-virgin olive oil

2 pounds (910g) yellow onions, halved and roughly chopped

Kosher salt

1 {6-ounce/170g) can tomato paste

2 (28-ouncell95g) cans whole peeled tomatoes

Instructions

• Pour the cashews and 1½ cups (360ml) water into a blender to soak while you start the soup.

• Set a stockpot over medium heat and add 4 tablespoons (60ml) of the oil. When the oil is hot, add the onions and 1 teaspoon salt.

• Cook, stirring occasionally, for 10 to 12 minutes, until the onions are translucent and softlower the heat as needed; we don't want them to brown.

• Stir in the remaining 1tablespoon oil and the tomato paste and cook, stirring frequently, for about 5 minutes, until the tomato paste is super fragrant and a rustier, deeper shade of red. (This means bigger, better tomato flavor.)

• Deglaze the pot with 1 cup (240ml) water, scraping the bottom to release any caramelized bits.

• Add the whole peeled tomatoes, their juices, and 2 teaspoons salt.

• Simmer uncovered, stirring occasionally, for about 40 minutes, until the soup has thickened a bit and tastes very flavorful. Turn off the heat and use an immersion blender to blend until smooth.

• Blend the cashews and water until smooth, then pour into the soup. Blend with the immersion blender again. Taste and just add the salt if needed and stir in more water if you want it thinner. This freezes beautifully.

“The answer to the creamiest tomato soup? Skip the cream. From a distance, this seems counterintuitive, illogical, unbelievable. But the answer comes by way of two other ingredients that just happen to be dairy-free: cashews and onions.

You've probably already heard of cashew cream, a.k.a. the easiest nut milk ever. Unlike almonds, cashews are soft enough that you don't need to soak them overnight. And while something like coconut milk tastes unavoidably coconutty, cashew cream just tastes creamy.

And so do onions. I first learned of onion cream thanks to chef Grant Lee Crilly via our Genius Recipes column. The idea being: If you puree cooked onions, you end up with a cream look-a-like, ready to take dinner by storm. In this case, we simply saute a lot of onions to start the soup. By the time everything gets buzzed together, you achieve a vegan cream of tomato that's even creamier and more savory than the original-though no one will quite know why.”

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