
Split pea soup is something you either really like or you want no part of. It’s a soup I really like. I usually make mine with pork hocks but have made it with a ham bone. I remember my mother making pea soup and it remains one of my dad’s favorites. I’ve ordered pea soup in restaurants and been disappointed…either the soup is so thick you can eat it with a fork or watered down and tasteless. I also like mine with croutons or a slice of good bread. I’ve never been a soup and crackers person and especially am not a crackers in my soup person. Split pea soup. It’s what was for dinner tonight.
Ingredients
Pork hock or ham bone
8 cups water
16 oz package split green peas (sorted and rinsed well)
3-4 cloves of garlic minced
1 large onion diced
3-4 carrots peeled and diced
2-3 stalks of celery diced
1/2 sweet red pepper diced
4-5 small gold potatoes diced
3 cups diced tomatoes
salt and pepper to taste


In a large heavy kettle put your pork hock (or ham bone) and water over high heat and bring to a boil. Once it starts to boil turn heat down to low and simmer for about 2 hours. Add the split peas and minced garlic and simmer for 1 hour. Remove the hock to a platter and add all of the diced vegetables.

I had orange, purple and yellow carrots so I used one of each. But ordinary orange carrots would be fine.


Remove the meat from the bone. My organic farm has awesome, meaty pork hocks.


Stir the meat and the tomatoes into the soup and continue to simmer for 30 minutes until all of the vegetables are tender. Season with salt and pepper to taste.

I made some croutons for our soup with some day or two old sour dough bread that I had. I lightly buttered a few slices, sprinkled on a little garlic salt, and grated a little Parmesan cheese on top.

Cube and spread out on a baking sheet. Bake at 350 for 15-20 minutes. Turn off the heat and leave the croutons in the oven another 15-20 minutes.
Ladle some soup into a bowl and enjoy.

This soup is like many soups that taste better the second day. This soup will also thicken up. If it becomes too thick thin it out with a little chicken or vegetable broth.
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