So my mom turns to me yesterday and says "Uh-oh, Tan. We have no meat for dinner. What do we do?"
When I cooked for the college students there was one meal I made that had everyone talking and no one complaining over the lack of meat. Soup and bread bowls.
I don't mean to brag, but I've actually had my soup and bread bowls mentioned in two songs. Just sayin'.
The secret is out though...I used store bought dough. *gasp*
Rich's frozen bread dough to be exact.
However, yesterday, when we had hungry people coming home from work I had no store bought dough.
My mom made the most amazing broccoli and cheddar soup to dip the bread into.
Now you could make your own bread bowls instead. I just find the baguette easier.
When I made them at the school, I would first thaw the frozen dough. You want to spray a baking sheet with a food release spray, place the dough on sheet and spray the dough as well. Cover (plastic wrap works fine) and let room temperature do its job.
When the dough has thawed out but not began to rise, I would cut (if needed) the dough and roll into balls similar to the size of a baseball or maybe a little larger.
(If you use the baguette recipe, you'll want to make them larger like a grapefruit. It didn't seem to rise as much as Rich's frozen dough did.)
Place on baking sheet again. Make sure they are well coated with spray and cover. I always found the longer you wait, the larger they rise.
Bake as instructed...until golden brown. Sometimes, when they first start turning golden I would brush them with butter, honey butter, or garlic butter, then let them finish baking. You're choice. Not necessary.
Now the difficult part is cutting the hole for the soup. I prefer to do it while the bowls are hot, so I can serve immediately. Some places serve them room temperature. It's up to you. If you do it while its hot, just know you're hands won't be happy with you. But if you decide to wait, it is much easier to do.
I always just cut a circle in the top, then when it's time to serve I would tear out the top and make room for the soup with my hands (I used gloves at the school of course).
This can all be done with the baguette recipe above as well. Just skip the thawing stage.
Here's a pic of how my baguettes turned out last night. Sorry about the poor mobile phone quality.
This meal went so fast once everyone was home. And not one of our meat-lover family members commented on the lack of meat.
A great, CHEAP meal idea! Enjoy!