I’m sure you’ve eaten pumpkin countless times in the form of pie? Or perhaps even experimented with pumpkin seed butter on toast? Which by the way has the same amount of protein as peanut butter but a far better mineral profile – yes, more nutritious. But have you ever bought a wee pumpkin and made something savoury with it?
Well my beauties, to roast a pumpkin will feel like a small achievement (my first time roasting a pumpkin was just last year and I was a little intimidated… at first). But I’m thrilled to tell you that this recipe was as easy as pumpkin pie! Ahem, correction.. as easy as eating pumpkin pie. Just look at how beautiful my soup turned out!
And the best part? It tasted like a warm hug feels – comforting and uplifting. So, if you are a pumpkin-cooking virgin, I encourage you to visit your local farmers market this week and get yourself this wonderful Fall vegetable from the squash family. In Ontario (and many other parts of the world) we are so lucky because mama earth has provided us with an incredible superfood grown close to home!
But first, for all you nutritional nerds out there, here are a few amazing health benefits of pumpkin:
Rich in immune-enhancing, cancer preventing carotenes. In fact, the richer the colour, the higher the concentration.
Vitamin C, B vitamins, fibre and trace minerals including potassium and selenium.
It even contains lutein, an important phytochemical for eye health.
Ingredients:
Small pumpkin (remove the seeds and stringy bits, cut into large chunks, peel). You can sub for 2 med size acorn squash if you don’t have pumpkin.
2 sweet onions, chopped
2 sweet potatoes, peeled and chopped
2 cloves garlic, peeled and chopped
2 tbsp organic coconut oil
4 tsp cumin
1 tsp nutmeg
2-3 cups hemp or almond milk (this makes it creamy)
4-6 cups stock or filtered water
Sea salt and freshly cracked black pepper to taste
Method:
Preheat oven to 365F. Place pumpkin chunks, onions and sweet potato into a large baking dish with 1/4 water in dish. See below.
Bake until fork-tender, about 45-60 minutes. Remove them from the oven and set them aside to cool.
Once cooled, place all the roasted ingredients into your food processor and the raw garlic. You may need to do this in batches depending how large your processor is.
Add in some hemp milk or filtered water to help blend. Once blended, move the mixture to a large pot on your stove. Add the remaining hemp milk, water and spices. Allow the soup to simmer for 15 minutes or so, stirring occasionally on low to medium heat.
I sprinkled some raw sheep’s milk cheese and arugula on top. The natural sweetness of the nutmeg was warming and lovely. If you let it sit overnight in the fridge the flavours will mingle and be even more smashingly delicious the next day.
Serves 6-8
Little story for you. So I had some special guests for dinner this weekend – Ma and Pa McCarthy came in from the North country. We had a lovely day, strolled through Cabbagetown, went to Mylk Uncookies for an almond milk drink and then came home to cook.
My menu was stuffed mushrooms (see recipe, but I heated them for 10 minutes in the oven at 350F), this pumpkin soup, marinated organic chicken from Whole Foods and sauteed spicy aspargus. And dessert was out-of-this-world if I do say so myself. I made coconut milk custards in these pretty little ramekins! A student from my Eat Well Feel Well course made the recipe for our potluck and it was SO good I had to re-create it. I will definitely be posting that recipe this week.
So we sit down to dinner, have a toast with our vino and begin to dive in. My mom stops us and says… “wait a minute, aren’t we supposed to put good energy into our food and bless it or something??!!” Note: My parents are not overly religious. What my mom meant was …. let’s take a moment to be thankful for our food and put good energy into it.
She was absolutely right. By taking a moment to be grateful and thankful for our food we calmed our nervous system, infused positivity into the room and allowed time for our digestive signals to tell our gut – LET’S EAT! Taking a moment actually improves your digestion!!
Lasting thought for you: Put love and joy into every morsel you create for your most joyous health ever.
Be joyous,
Joy
21 thoughts on “Roasted pumpkin soup with cumin and nutmeg”
After the tasty sweet potato/parsnip soup, I think this one will be up next on the “to try” list.
Could you do the pumpkin, sweet potato and onion in the crockpot instead of the oven? Sounds delicious and like the perfect food for a blustery fall day. 🙂
The pumpkin cooks pretty fast, this is a nice easy recipe as comforting as the parsnip one 🙂
Absolutely. Let me know how it turns out!
Yum there are a lot of pumpkin recipes surfacing right now but this one sounds the best yet!
[…] Comforting pumpkin soup with nutmeg and cumin […]
[…] from Joyous Health loves to eat locally and seasonally, and it shows in her beautiful Roasted Pumpkin Soup with Cumin and Nutmeg. Yum! […]
This is yummy! Have you ever tried the backed in the oven pumpkin? The taste is amazing and is so easy to prepare.
OH ya? What is that?? A brand?
Another great recipe Joy, thanks! I used some almond milk to deglaze the roasting pan after removing the vegetables as not to loose all that goodness. Also added some turmeric for some anti-inflammatory extra tastiness. Next time I think I will roast the garlic with the vegetables rather than adding it raw. The garlic was a little strong for me. I think I will also add some ginger.
Glad you liked it! Great idea with the almond milk. Roasting the garlic will definitely take the potency out of it – taste wise. Just remember you don’t get the same health benefits when the garlic is roasted 🙂 But I’m sure it would be delicious! Thanks for sharing.
[…] this delicious pumpkin soup recipe – perfect for a chilly October weekend. […]
[…] this delicious pumpkin soup recipe – perfect for a chilly October […]
[…] this delicious pumpkin soup recipe – perfect for a chilly October […]
Another *must make*! Thank you. I’m excited about these soups!
Tried this soup with a friend and it turned out lovely.
We enjoyed it with fresh parsley & graded cheese. Mmm
How much protein do you think per cup?
Made this soup this weekend, it is good, however, just when does the coconut oil go into the recipe??? I’v read and reread the recipe, don’t see it mentioned except in the list of ingredients!!
Oops! sorry, I will fix that right now. it goes in at the very end… thought I put that. But remove it from the heat and then add it 🙂
Ignore my last note! It’s just to prevent the veggies from sticking the pan when you roast it 🙂
This soup was great. I used condensed milk and chicken stock. I will make this again!
[…] Pumpkins: Turn up the heat If you think the only thing to do with a fresh pumpkin is to carve a face into it, make this the year you try something new: roasted pumpkin soup. Joyous Health takes the intimidation out of the roasting process and when you’re done, you may never look at a jack o’ lantern the same way again. Roasted pumpkin soup with cumin and nutmeg […]