Swedabilly Pea Soup and Cornbread

Swedabilly Pea Soup and Cornbread
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Swedes are pretty serious about their pea soup. It is almost like their version of a good old pot of pinto beans back home.

You can easily find canned versions, like this “Soldier’s Pea Soup” from Knorr. (Which is pretty good.)

Also refrigerated versions in a chub, like this store brand in meaty and vegetarian takes.

I have absolutely no commercial interest in any of this, btw. I just still find it interesting, and have also gotten pretty hooked on the stuff over the past 20-odd years living with a Swede. Ärtsoppa is a wonderful cool weather comfort food, in a very similar way to my own beloved soupy brown beans.

(Which incidentally have not grown on the Household Swede the same way. He will strain a spoonful out of the juices and push them around on a plate with a fork. Cornbread is a more popular addition around here, however, usually sandwiching plenty of sliced cheese.)

I was actually reminded last night that it had been too long since I did put together a pot of pea soup. I quipped about the Swedabilly nature of that quickbread I’d just made, and he suggested that the ultimate Swedabilly meal he could think of had to be ärtsoppa and cornbread.

So, what did I have to fix?

“And what’s the time? It’s…”

This version is probably plenty fusion enough by itself, but it sure was good.

Ham hocks/cured pork knuckle are very classic here. So are larger pieces of cured side meat (rimmat sidfläsk), very much like with beans and longer-cooked vegetables back home. Only here, more people seem to like to chop it up and add the meat back into the soup like with a ham hock. I have also used leftover ham and fatty ham rind before in ärtsoppa.

Somehow, I imagine that the most traditional Swedish version is also likely to be “Gee, I sure do hope we’ll have some type of cured meat to help give the peas some extra flavor.” Maybe especially in the days before storebought flavor enhancers like bouillon cubes were a thing.

Today we’re getting half a (small) local standard sized pack of thin sliced bacon, which was actually left from the last pinto beans I cooked recently. That’s why it’s cut like it was below. Easier to work with, and you don’t need nice full slices if you’re going to break it up and use in another dish anyway.

This is more for a little extra flavor than any real meatiness. It would be equally tasty made vegetarian, maybe with a little more onion.

For the cornbread:

Swedabilly Ärtsoppa

My own take on a classic Swedish yellow pea soup, made in the Instant Pot.
Prep Time30 minutes
Active Time45 minutes
Soaking Time10 hours
Course: Main Course, Soup
Cuisine: Scandinavian, Swedish
Keyword: Instant Pot, Pressure Cooking
Yield: 4 people

Materials

Advance Soaking

  • 500 g dried whole yellow peas (600ml/2½ cups/one British pint, or just use a pound)
  • 0.5 teaspoon baking soda sodium bicarbonate, for soaking
  • 2 liters water

For Initial Cooking

  • 4-6 slices bacon, crumbled
  • 2 medium onions chopped, or one large
  • 2-3 cloves garlic chopped
  • 1-2 tablespoons neutral oil of choice depending on how much bacon grease it made
  • peas soaked and rinsed
  • 200 ml hot water (¾ cup) for rinsing out the bacon and onion pan
  • 1 liter water (just over a quart) for the main soup cooking
  • 2 Knorr vegetable bouillon cubes (or enough bouillon of your choice to make 1 liter or quart)
  • 1 large bay leaf or 2 small
  • 6 allspice berries
  • 0.5 teaspoon coarsely ground pepper white is probably more traditional here, but I used black

Final Seasoning

  • 0.75 teaspoon dried savory or ½ tsp. thyme
  • 0.5 teaspoon dried marjoram
  • salt and pepper to taste

To Serve, Per Bowl

  • optional mustard, to taste Preferably Swedish sweet hot mustard, but German or Polish mustards with a little sweetness work great. A teaspoon or so stirred through your bowl is a good place to start.

Instructions

Pea Preparation

  • The night before, or at least 8-10 hours in advance, get out your peas.
    If you can only find split peas where you are, this method won't work for them. You'll be better off following another recipe's cooking instructions like these from Savor The Best, and laying off the pressure cooking.
    A box of dried whole Swedish yellow peas, next to a Pyrex measuring cup filled with peas
  • The quality control on the Swedish-grown peas like these tends to be very good. But, like with any other dry bean? You will still want to look over them carefully by the handful to remove any broken or unsavory-looking individuals as you transfer them over into a large pan or bowl.
    Once they're sorted into the soaking container, cover them over well with cool water, and swirl them around in the container with your hand to rinse off any surface dirt. Wash them several times like this until the water stays clear, and drain the pan.
  • Cover the peas with a good few inches of fresh water for soaking, and add the baking soda.
    This was probably slight overkill on both the pot size and level of water,
    Dry peas soaking in a pot of water, with a jar of sodium bicarbonate laid on one of the handles.
  • Cover the container, and set aside for 8-12 hours until you're ready to cook the soup.
    Soaking at room temperature is much quicker. Unless it's, say, the worst of the summer in a hot area with no air conditioning? The worst soaking beans or peas might do left at room temperature is to start the sprouting process, which some people like to do on purpose with longer soaks. It is extremely unlikely to happen within 8-12 hours at normal room temperatures.
    (If it is beastly hot weather with no AC, like I grew up with? Transfer into the fridge after 3-4 hours, and let them finish their soaking time there. We did have the occasional mess of beans start fermenting in an undesirable way before my mother started doing that during particularly hot spells, back in Virginia.)
    if you want to soak overnight but need to be somewhere in the morning? Drain the soaking water then, and place in the refrigerator until it's time to cook.
  • Drain the soaking water off the peas when you're ready to cook them, and rinse with fresh water.
    Mr. Sweden insists that they must be soaked and cooked in the same water, for maximal flavor. (He also grew up in a much softer water area, and doesn't include the soda for soaking.) My own position is that not changing the water would mainly maximize the gas factor, and he has never noticed the difference.
    Most Swedish recipes I have seen do call for a water change.

Assembling The Soup

  • Cover the now soaked, rinsed peas with another liter of fresh water in the inner pot for your Instant Pot. This will be your main cooking liquid. Set aside.
  • Assemble your main ingredients, and chop the onion and garlic.
    A collection of ingredients, including packaged bacon, a box of vegetable bouillon cubes, two onions, a small head of garlic, and containers of dried summer savory, marjoram, and whole allspice.
  • Get your longer-cooking seasonings ready for the soup.
    A small shallow ceramic dish holds bay leaves, whole allspice, and a pile of ground pepper
  • Fry the bacon until it's brown and starting to crisp up. Unless you're using remarkably more bacon than I am, we're going to want all the grease and browned bits for flavor.
    Raw bacon arranged ready to cook in a frying pan, with the rest laid out waiting on top of the package nearby
  • What we're left with: some cooling crispy bacon with most of the fat rendered out, and some browned bacony goodness plus maybe a tablespoon and a half of flavorful grease.
    A small plate of freshly cooked crispy streaky bacon slices with the turning fork resting on the edge. To the right of this, I tilt the bacon cooking skillet to show the browned residue and grease left in there from it.
  • Now, you'll want to turn the heat up to the higher side of medium, and throw your chopped onion in there to fry a little and help deglaze the pan. Add the extra neutral oil to help things along, with no more fat than will come out of this amount of bacon.
    Chopped onion just added into the bacon pan
  • Crumble the bacon while the onions cook.
  • We're not really looking to soften the onion up; that should happen in the soup. We're just wanting to capture the rest of the bacon flavor, and get a little browning around the edges for more yum.
    When the onion is starting to brown a little, add the chopped garlic and stir it around for a minute or so until you're really starting to smell the garlic too. You really don't want that to burn. Remove from the heat.
    The finished fried onion and garlic in the pan.
  • Time for other ingredients to join the peas!
    You can crumble the bouillon cubes, but these are both hard and sticky to the touch enough that I prefer to chop them with a knife instead. They will dissolve much better through your soup if you do break them up in some way, though.
    These Knorr cubes are going to be doing some pretty heavy flavor lifting here.
    The Instant Pot inner pot with peas and cooking water, next to the crumbled bacon and the fried onion and garlic. Two bouillon cubes chopped into small pieces sit on their wrappers to one side of the bacon plate.
  • Add all the starting ingredients into the pot with the peas.
    Rinse the onion skillet out with the little additional hot water, and pour that into the soup pot too. We want all that flavor, and it will also help make cleanup easier later.
    Stir everything to combine.
    The soup pot with onions, bacon, and seasonings sitting on top of the peas before stirring them together.

Pressure Cooking

  • If you prefer to cook this entirely on the stovetop or in a slow cooker, please scroll down to the notes section. I will add instructions there.
  • Place the inner pot with soup fixings into the Instant Pot base. Seal the lid and set the program to "Manual – High" for 15 minutes.
    If you're using a stovetop pressure cooker model operating at 15psi, I would cut the time under pressure back to probably 10 minutes and check from there.
  • IMPORTANT: Let the pressure come down on its own ("natural release") for 15-20 minutes before touching the valve to open the lid. Even whole peas with skins are rather prone to foaming up.
  • If you open it up and see something like this, don't be alarmed. It's fine.
    A lot of pea skins will come off and float to the top as it cooks. You can either stir it all back down into the soup to get all the fiber and more texture, or carefully skim that layer off with your spoon.
    A layer of loose pea skins, the bay leaves, and several allspice berries sit on top of the soup. A few undercooked peas were also pushed up by the floating skins. All of the cooking liquid is hidden underneath the layer of pea skins and spices.
  • What it looks like after stirring everything back together. Much better!
    However, as you could probably see? In this case, a few undercooked peas were also pushed up out of the liquid by the floating skins. From past experience, I suspected this might happen.
    You could just skim those off too, but I decided to stir it all back in and pressure cook for another 10 minutes on the same "Manual – High". (With another resting period to depressurize after.) I wasn't in a hurry, and we are aiming for soft, soupy results anyway.
    A more normal-looking pot of soup in progress, with liquid actually visible

Finishing The Soup

  • Once everything is pressure cooked to your satisfaction, set the unit to "Brown/Saute – Low" and let it simmer uncovered for a little while with the occasional stir.
    If you want it thicker, simmer it longer. Add a little more water to thin, if you think it needs it. Classically, we're looking for a thick soup, but make it whatever consistency you prefer.
    At this stage, if you're using a stainless steel inner pot rather than the nonstick like mine? Be extra careful about stirring, or it will want to stick and burn as it simmers down.
    The liquid ratios called for here turned out just about perfect to Mr. Sweden's taste, after just a short simmer with the herbs and a covered rest off the heat while I baked the cornbread. He likes his soup thicc. I needed to thin my bowl out with a little hot water from the kettle, and it was still pretty thick.
    The finished soup, just off the heat.
  • Stir in the herbs, and simmer for a final 10 minutes or so. Adjust seasonings with more salt and pepper as required.
    A small shallow ceramic dish with piles of dried savory and marjoram
  • Enjoy! In this case, with fresh buttered cornbread.
    Add a dollop of mustard if you like.
    A bowl of yellow pea soup topped with a dollop of brown mustard in the center sits to the left of a side plate holding a piece of cornbread.

Notes

For Stovetop: Use a suitable heavy-bottomed soup pot, and proceed the same up to the point of the main cooking. Add at least 750ml / 3 cups of extra water. Bring to a boil on the stove, and simmer covered while stirring occasionally for probably an hour and a half until it’s done. Add more water as required. Do the herb addition and final seasoning adjustment as above.
For Slow Cooker: Proceed the same up to the point of the main cooking. Put everything in your crock. Cook on “High” for 4 hours or “Low” for 7-8. You’ll probably want to stir at least once around halfway through, to avoid the floating skins issue. Do the herb addition and final seasoning adjustment 30 minutes or so before you want to eat it.


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