Fall Flavours
Seasonal Offerings: The Beauty of Fall Flavours
With the fall season right around the corner, we are gearing up to offer new, warm flavours to add to our hot and cold buffets. As the temperature starts to drop, leaves begin to turn from bright emerald greens to rich hues of burnt sienna, buttery ambers, crimson and deep velvety maple browns. We break out our favourite fall sweaters and bundle up in oversized scarves as we sip on mulled wines, hot toddy’s and sinfully sweet hot chocolate. The rhythm of life changes and we turn inward, as we indulge in leisurely lunches complete with seasonal delectations that warm the cockles of our hearts and watch in awe as nature turns over its summery palette to one of autumn at its finest.
Summer proudly boasts flavours of juicy, bright, tangy tropical fruits that quench our thirst and assault our taste buds with sticky sweetness. Meals consist of impossibly green veggies, crunchy textures, grilled meats and are made as light as possible – while Autumn mellows and calms with the deep warmth of root vegetables, blood orange, nuts and apples. While not as overwhelming in flavour as a freshly picked strawberry, or a cherry so plump the red juices run down your chin, Autumn’s offerings rely on building depth of flavours by roasting, searing, baking and braising to transform humble ingredients into show-stopping centrepieces.
Autumn’s romantic pallet of colours include some of those quintessential ingredients like fat Cinderella-esque pumpkins, parsnips white as snow, pale green kohlrabi, dark fuchsia beetroots that stain everything they touch, deep purple eggplant and earthy mushrooms that add umami to your favourite dishes. These ingredients not only last longer but are extremely versatile and easy to transform in your kitchen.
The slowly and beautifully decaying organic life around us and the food being cooked becomes a mirrored reflection and example of “art imitating life”, with big pans of caramelized stone fruits, bursting with juice, and browned root vegetables complete with little burnt bits hiding in pan edges. We instinctively turn our attentions away from cold soups and crunchy blanched veggies and focus rather on retrieving the flavour of brown sugar by sautéing apples in foaming brown butter. Or the intense sweetness brought forth by slow-roasting butternut squash before blending it with a touch of cream for a luxurious soup that satisfies every sense.
This season conjures nostalgic memories of warm apple pies, hearty soups and braised stews that hug the soul and usher away the end-of-summer blues. Here is one of our most-loved recipes to whip-up on a lazy Sunday afternoon in. This velvety smooth soup is bursting with fall flavours like roasted butternut squash, apples, croutons and a veritable treasure trove of warm spices that make this into a winning dish. The beauty of soup prep, is that you can make a big batch and portion it for the freezer so that you always have a meal ready with minimal effort on your part.
Roasted Butternut Squash and Apple Soup
Makes 6 bowls
Ingredients
1 large butternut squash (3 pounds), peeled, seeded and cut into large cubes
3 Granny Smith apples, cored and chopped into quarters
2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
1 large yellow onion, peeled and quartered
4 garlic cloves, whole
1 teaspoon kosher salt
1/8 teaspoon nutmeg
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1/8 teaspoon dried sage
1 teaspoon dried thyme
freshly ground black pepper, to taste
4 cups vegetable stock
1 bay leaf
1 cup croutons, toasted
Instructions
1.Preheat oven to 425 degrees Fahrenheit, line two large baking sheets with parchment paper.
2.Toss the squash, apples, onion, garlic, spices and herbs with olive oil, salt and pepper.
3.Roast the veggies for 40-50 minutes, stirring them after 20 minutes to get them evenly golden brown.
4.Meanwhile, pour the vegetable broth into a large soup pot and bring to a simmer and drop in the bay leaf.
5.When the veggies are nicely caramelized and roasted, scrape them from the pan into the simmering stock and bring to a boil. Cook for 5 minutes until the veggies are very soft.
6.Remove the bay leaf.
7.Pour the soup into a blender and slowly turn the blender on, increasing the speed slowly. Blend the soup until it is completely smooth and silky. Taste for seasoning and adjust accordingly.
8.Serve the soup piping hot with toasted croutons sprinkled over top.







