Progresso Pea Soups

The ultimate show-down! Which pea soup will reign victorious?

I enjoy pea soup. Nothing is quite like my mother’s, but I’m willing to eat the canned stuff when I’ve got a hankering for it. When I go searching for it, I find it made a few different ways; sometimes a company will make multiple recipes, and I’m not sure which one to get, so I get both and decide to figure it out later. Well, I don’t buy soup that often, so by the next time I go to pick some up, the same thing happens: I can’t remember the qualities of each, so I pick up both with the intent of figuring it out later.

Today, this cycle ends: I’m taste tasting Progresso’s two pea soup recipes and leaving a review of each in this post.

The contenders: vegetable classic on the left, traditional on the right, and separated by a referee roll!

How I prefer my pea soup: with a thickness of burbled, broken, and smashed peas soaking delicious spices and a ham bone with chunks still on it, maybe even some ham carved and set aside specifically to be added into the soup.

Aside: neither of these soups are vegetarian. I didn’t see any vegetarian pea soups while I was in the store, so if you’re a vegetarian, be wary of pea soup generally.

Green Split Pea – a Vegetable Classic Flavored with Bacon

The bacon-flavored soup has the consistency I think of when I think of pea soup. The focus is clearly on the peas: there are no additional vegetables and only small pieces of bacon for flavoring.

It’s a little smoky, and it has a subtle but distinct pepper flavor. The mashed-up peas are all nice and smooth, giving the soup a nice creamy texture. I’m not so wild about the peas that are in tact in the soup; despite soaking in this concoction for at least weeks (if not months), they’re sturdy, even dry when you bite into them.

Yeah, the peas feel hard against the roof of the mouth, as though no moisture made it through the surface of the pea into its core. It’s weird; I’m not a fan.

I toasted a roll for dipping. Meh; this soup is not the bread-dipping kind. (This is a good thing in my book; pea soup should be too thick to properly soak toast with a dip.) I can actually make small peaks in the soup because of its consistency: spot-on!

What I do like about this soup is the concentration on the peas. I don’t like peas, but pea soup is the exception, and I want the focus to be on the peas. They make an excellent vegetable cream base, if you will, and a few added spices can turn this paste into a real treat. Excellent work focusing on the backdrop; however, the hard peas suspended in the soup make this a pass for me.

Split Pea – Traditional Soup with Ham

Unlike the other soup, this one has potato and carrot chunks suspended in it, and the ham isn’t just tiny pieces. (I think there’s also celery, but it isn’t as prominent as any other ingredient.) The mashed peas are essentially a canvas for the painting of chunks of other stuff. This doesn’t have the smokiness of the other, rather carrying an almost sweet flavor. The whole peas in this one are soft – the way vegetables in soup should generally be.

I prefer not having chunks of other vegetables in my pea soup. In particular, I’m not a fan of potato chunks. The carrots and celery are actually so tender that they melt in the mouth without effort, and they don’t overpower the focus of the dish, so they make a good addition to the soup. Whereas I can easily squish the carrots against the roof of my mouth with my tongue, the potato chunks require dedicated chewing. Also, they feel a little plastic-y, and some of them make me furrow my brow because they have brown spots. These are clearly not the highest quality potatoes.

As for the toast test, this soup was better absorbed by the toast, but not much better.

Winner?

Neither is exactly how I like my pea soup, but nothing will be perfect straight from a can. I’ll keep my eyes open for other options. After this exercise, I think I’ll be investing the research time into making my own and hope it freezes well.

Due to the crunchiness of the peas in the first instance, I favor the traditional soup – the one with the ham chunks. Also – it’s been several hours since I finished the soups, and the smell of the bacon/vegetable classic is pervasive; I went outside twice to see if someone was smoking under my window before realizing it’s the soup. Thankfully, my air purifier is hard at work!

What do you think? Do you prefer a smooth or a chunky texture for your pea soup? What’s your thought on flavor – should it be smoky or taste like vegetables? Let me know in the comments!

Me and Tea

I love tea. Tea comes in a wide variety of flavors. Tea may be loaded with complexities or instead be simple yet satisfying. Tea may be sweet or savory, served hot or cold, and comes in varieties suitable for any flavor palate. There’s a lot one can do with tea – warm up a chilly day, invite friendship and discussion, and (my favorite) enjoy parties with dainty little finger foods that make you feel prim and proper regardless of how many times you double-back for more.

Including the classic: cucumber sandwiches! Delicious!

Some teas I’ve been drinking since I was a child. Some I prefer without additives, others might get a cube of sweetener, others get a splash of dairy for smoothness, and others may get both sweetener and smoothener (applying for that to be added to the dictionary…). I still candy my orange pekoe: extra sweetener and a hefty splash of cream. I enjoy trying new tea, but I also have standard teas that I drink on the daily.

Everyone with a take on anything has preferences, so before I launch into tea reviews, I’m providing a baseline. This will help you to select your teas with reference to my reviews: if you have similar taste preferences, you can look for the same sorts of teas I jump for; if our palettes differ, you can pick out the ones I highlight as not being my type. I’ll give guidance on the flavor profiles of each to help you select some new stuff to try.

Here are some of the teas I’ve been enjoying recently.

Most of my tea gets sweetened. I typically use two travel mugs (simultaneously, each with different teas), one 16 oz and one 20 oz. I use about a teaspoon or two of stevia (In the Raw – maltodextrin mixed with stevia for an equal sweetness with sugar) per mug. That’s about 1-2 sugar packets per mug (in the United States). If I’m traveling and at the mercy of hosts as far as sweeteners is concerned, I may reach for sugar, a Splenda packet, or go black. (If using a Splenda-type sweetener, I use a maximum of a half packet per mug. The times I’ve forgotten to halve it have been unpleasant – that stuff is so much sweeter than sugar.)

One of my mugs is for caffeinated teas and the other is for non-caffeinated teas. I don’t do decaf; it doesn’t make sense to me. I want the tea as a whole, not crafted then torn apart to take out most of the component that people often drink coffee for. (I understand some people avoid caffeine due to sensitivity or religious reasons. Decaf is not the answer: some of the caffeine remains in the stuff.)

Vanilla chai – my go-to. I order the boxes in six packs on Amazon.

My favorite and go-to tea is Bigelow’s Vanilla Chai tea. It has an edge of inherent sweetness, and more than the complex hearth-welcoming flavors, it’s a great tea for if I don’t want to have to think about sweetening it. A little stevia brings out a variety of notes that are otherwise very subtle, but some days I prefer the subtlety. Bigelow makes their tea available both in the standard tea bag form as well as K-Cup pod form for Keurig users (also available in a party pack).

I often drink a calming, de-stress kind of tea, too. I’m still looking for a true go-to in this category. For me, this type of tea has valerian or valerian root in it; this was used to help with anxiety during the air raids of World War II, so I figure it’s good enough to fight against my everyday concerns.

Some of my de-stress tea varieties.

The tea that best reminds me of home is Salada’s original blend black tea. It’s my standard orange pekoe and my mother’s go-to tea. The aroma reminds me of a calm afternoon with her flipping through sheet music at the dinner table. It’s available from Amazon in multi-packs, including this one probably ordered most by hotels and entertainment venues, and they do make decaf as well.

The tea I’ve been looking for the longest to restock on is Red Rose’s Sunset Spice blend. It seems they stopped making it – a pity as it has a robust hearth-welcome flavor. This is something I highly prize in tea: a sit-down-by-the-fire-to-chat feeling emanating from a warm cup, something that convinces you that you’re amongst friends who enjoy your company.

Red Rose Sunset Spice tea packet – one of the very few I have left.

Armed with a baseline, we can charge forward to tea reviews. Onward and upward!