I really like Olive Garden’s Zuppa Toscana, however I find it a little too salty, with not enough sausage or potato, and I didn’t really like the big chunk of Kale with the rib still attached sitting in the bowl, looking like garnish that fell off somebody’s lunch plate.
So . . . Here’s my take on it.
The half and half give it a light creamy taste, while still letting the sausage shine though. The red pepper gives it a nice bite, and the kale gives it a light touch of brightness and bitterness to balance the sausage and dairy. And although from the ingredients list it looks like a rich soup, it’s actually quite light, since there are 10 cups of stock & water, and only one cup of half and half.
| Ingredients: | ||
| 2 | Pounds | Low-starch potatoes, washed, eyes removed and sliced into 1/4 inch disks. Peeling is optional. |
| 2 | Pounds | Hot and/or Sweet Italian Sausage Links |
| 1 | Large Bunch | Kale (it looks like a lot but will cook down) |
| 1 | Large | Yellow Onion, diced small |
| 2 | T | Garlic, mashed. Approx 8 cloves (see instructions) |
| 8 | Ounces | Half and Half |
| 4 | Cups | Reduced Sodium Chicken Stock |
| 6 | Cups | Water |
| 1 | Teaspoon | Ground Red Pepper (to taste) |
| 3/4 | Teaspoon | Kosher Salt (to taste) |
A quick potato primer:
Potatoes come in three basic styles, “high starch,” “medium starch,” and “low starch.”
- “Baking Potatoes”, Russet, White & “General Purpose” are all high starch and great for baking, mashing and frying. But not for this soup.
- “All Purpose” potatoes are somewhere in the middle and like “One Size Fits All” clothing, aren’t really the best choice for any purpose.
- “Boiling Potatoes”, “Round White” or Red Potatoes are low starch and will cook beautifully in soup. They’ll keep their shape and texture, even when reheated and not turn the soup into a grainy mess.
Note: I’m always disappointed when a pot of soup runs out the interesting stuff before the broth is gone, so this recipe includes quite a bit of sausage and potato and kale as well as additional spice and seasoning to handle the extra ingredients.
If made as shown above, you’ll get a pot full of soup with “good stuff” all the way from the top to the bottom.
If you’re looking for something lighter, feel free to reduce the potato, sausage, garlic, salt and ground red pepper by one-half, which will give you something closer to the proportions that OG uses.
Directions:
- Kale tends to have dirt, sand, etc. stuck in it, so it needs a good washing. Cut the base off the bunch and drop all the leaves into a large bowl of cold water. Swish around to loosen and remove any dirt. Discard any very tough or discolored leaves. Roughly tear into 2″ pieces, discarding the hard portion of the rib. Olive Garden leaves it in, but I think the rib is too big and hard to put on a soup spoon.
- Place the garlic in a mortar and pestle with a heavy pinch of kosher salt and mash until liquidy, or finely mince, then grind with the back edge of a knife. You need at least two heaping Tablespoons of mashed garlic when you’re done.
- Cut the raw sausage into 1/2 inch chunks with shears or a knife. Add a little oil to the bottom of a large pot. Add the sausage. Sauté on medium until fully cooked and you have developed a good deal of fond (brown stuff) on the bottom of the pot.
- Pour off grease as necessary and build as much fond as possible without burning or drying out the sausage.
- Remove the sausage and save. Pour off the excess fat, leaving just enough to coat the bottom of the pot.
- Add the finely diced onions and sauté on medium until soft, nicely browned, and more fond devlops.
- Add the garlic and continue stirring until just fragrant and soft (probably about a minute). Be careful to not to burn or brown the garlic. Add the ground red pepper and mix.
- Add a small amount of water and deglaze the bottom of the pot (scrape up all the yummy brown bits).
- Add the rest of the water, the chicken stock, the potatoes and sausage.
- Bring to a slow simmer and continue simmering until the potatoes are soft.
- Add the kale (see below), return to a simmer and cook for another minute, then turn off the heat.
- Immediately before serving, add the half and half, and serve with some nice home-baked Ciabatta bread.
Presentation: If you want the soup to look it’s absolute best, don’t add the kale during cooking; just blanch it in boiling salted water until it turns bright green then shock it in ice water to stop the cooking process. You can then add it to the soup right before serving.
This really isn’t necessary unless you want to take pictures or really impress someone.