• Home
  • Articles
  • Recipes & How-to’s
  • Ask Paul
  • Videos
  • Media
Gallery
  • 2015
    • March
      • Wednesday, March 11 Brunch, We Love it a Bunch!
  • 2014
    • June
      • Friday, June 27 Beat The Heat With These Summer Treats!
      • Wednesday, June 4 My Review of The Chef Movie
    • May
      • Friday, May 9 Give Your Special Lady the Best Mother's Day Gift!
    • January
      • Tuesday, January 28 Are You Ready For Some Football?
      • Tuesday, January 28 Break The Mealtime Routine Blues
      • Tuesday, January 28 Five Chefs Come Together
      • Saturday, January 11 Embrace The Winter!
  • 2013
    • December
      • Wednesday, December 4 This Holiday Season Give Something Back
    • November
      • Wednesday, November 27 Some Chai Eggnog to Get You in the Holiday Spirit
      • Wednesday, November 20 So You Want to be a Chef?
      • Thursday, November 14 Here We Grow Again!
      • Thursday, November 14 The Perfect Beef Wellington
      • Sunday, November 3 Sweetening the Auction Pot
    • October
      • Tuesday, October 8 Things I'm Thankful For
      • Friday, October 4 Delicious Balls of Goodness
      • Friday, October 4 A Little Motivation from the Market!
      • Friday, October 4 Preserving the Vegetable Garden
      • Friday, October 4 Game Day Snacks!
    • September
      • Saturday, September 7 Save Your Next Dinner Party From Disaster
      • Saturday, September 7 Keep the Family Meal Alive Despite the Chaos of Back to School
      • Saturday, September 7 Great Expectations Unfulfilled
    • August
      • Wednesday, August 21 Hone Your Skills on This Classic Cream of Mushroom
      • Wednesday, August 21 5 Cocktails to Help Toast Summer in Style
      • Wednesday, August 21 The Perfect BLT
      • Wednesday, August 14 Be Inspired by our Great Local & Seasonal Fare!
    • July
      • Saturday, July 27 Corndogs with a Touch of Class
      • Thursday, July 18 You're Sure to Feel at Home on the Range
      • Monday, July 15 Teach Kids Good Eating Habits is Important
      • Wednesday, July 3 Heading to Vancouver? Bring Your Appetite!
    • June
      • Wednesday, June 19 A Salad with Sizzle!
      • Thursday, June 13 Speaking for Those in the Industry Without a Voice
      • Wednesday, June 5 And the Winner Is...
    • May
      • Thursday, May 30 Flatbread on the BBQ? You Bet!
      • Thursday, May 23 Let's Get Smoking!
      • Thursday, May 23 Avoid your Very Own BBQ Disaster!
      • Friday, May 10 Pork and Prawns are a Classic BBQ Pairing
      • Wednesday, May 1 Healthy and Delicious Lamb is a Sure Sign of Spring
    • April
      • Thursday, April 25 Hone Your Skills With This Simple Cream of Mushroom Soup
      • Wednesday, April 17 Cheese Please!
      • Tuesday, April 16 The Perfect Cheese Plate is All About Balance
      • Wednesday, April 10 Fresh Halibut Has Arrived
      • Wednesday, April 3 Quiche: A Great Way to Use Those Holiday Leftovers
      • Monday, April 1 Meeting a Mentor
    • March
      • Thursday, March 14 Guilty Pleasures
      • Friday, March 8 Classic Vanilla Ice Cream
    • February
      • Tuesday, February 26 Explore The Unknown
      • Thursday, February 21 Make Your Party Appetizers Oscar Worthy!
      • Monday, February 11 Avoid a Valentine's Day Disaster!
    • January
      • Tuesday, January 15 Making a great burger
      • Tuesday, January 8 A tasty way to start the new year
      • Tuesday, January 1 Food trends to watch in 2013
  • 2012
    • December
      • Tuesday, December 11 Great borscht soup recipe
      • Tuesday, December 11 Try a classic tourtiere this Christmas
      • Tuesday, December 4 Vegetable recipes that are tough to beet!
    • November
      • Tuesday, November 27 Pork medallions in mushroom sauce a chef favourite
      • Wednesday, November 14 Alberta's about more than beef!
      • Tuesday, November 6 Mom's cooking was always the best
    • October
      • Tuesday, October 30 Pumpkin stew with a Caribbean twist
      • Tuesday, October 23 A healthy dinner in less than an hour
      • Tuesday, October 16 Duck Confit features famous Brome Lake fowl
      • Tuesday, October 9 My beef about the XL Foods fiasco
      • Tuesday, October 2 Chef Paul: My dining out disaster
    • September
      • Tuesday, September 25 Williams-Sonoma cooking store opens in Edmonton
      • Tuesday, September 18 Young chefs to whip up great pork belly recipe
      • Tuesday, September 18 Pickle, pickle: It's canning time
    • August
      • Tuesday, August 28 Young athletes must eat right!
      • Tuesday, August 21 Bacon lovers unite
Paul’s latest column Recipes & How-to’ Ask Paul

Hone Your Skills With This Simple Cream of Mushroom Soup

Thursday, April 25

This past weekend I was invited back to take part in yet another wonderful event hosted by NAIT. I, along with a select group of talented local chefs, was asked to help judge a group of Edmonton’s most talented young cooks during this year’s regional Skills competition.

The Skills Canada National Competition started in 1994 to recognize talented young people in over 40 different trades. It has become the foremost competition of its kind. It brings together over 550 young apprentices and students to test their skills against the best in their trade in the country, while highlighting the talents required to succeed in a trade.

This year’s event will take place in Vancouver in June, but the journey for those who will make it to the national competition began several months ago. In late November the competitors were made aware of the scope of the competition and began training. This past weekend was their first step towards the national competition. Twenty two young cooks were given three hours and two specific recipes they had to follow and were put to task to create a cream of mushroom soup and chicken entrée that included hand made gnocchi, gravy from scratch and, not one, but three different vegetables. They had to butcher the whole chicken. They were also encouraged to use the carcass to enhance their stock to be used in their soup. They were given a small amount of creative freedom when it came to their presentation and garnish. These young cooks, aged 15-17, were truly put to the test. Not only were they measured on taste and presentation, but also they were tested on their timing, temperature of their dishes, and their kitchen management.

I was amazed by how 22 students were given the same recipes to follow and we were looking at 22 very different dishes. Some cooks followed the basics closely, while others tried to take their dish to another level, with unique takes on classic dishes. Some dishes were phenomenal successes while others missed the mark. As we gathered to discuss the results we all agreed the most successful plates were the ones that clearly showed the competencies required. The cooks that focused too much on deconstruction or redefining a dish missed the mark. They failed to understand the basics before attempting the difficult.

I would say to four lucky cooks who have now made it through to the provincial competition next month to practise these skills. Make the soup every chance you get. Eat chicken every day for the next three weeks just so you can butcher them. Roll gnocchi dough out again and again until they look machine made. It is that pursuit of perfection that will take you to the next level and allow you to compete at the national level. Best of luck to all of you!

As for home cooks, I would say the same. Practise techniques until your level of comfort grows. As you begin to understand how a cream of mushroom soup comes together you will see it isn’t all that much different from any other cream-based soup.

This is a simple, classic cream of mushroom soup. Nothing fancy, but once you see just how easy this is to make, maybe you’ll consider making this, rather than reaching for another can of soup. I enjoy my cream soups pureed, nice and smooth. That doesn’t have to be the case though. If you like your soup with some texture in it, then slice the mushrooms evenly and fine dice your onions, rather than slicing them julienne. Don’t be shy about the variety of mushrooms you use. There is nothing wrong with using some oyster mushrooms or shiitakes or portabellas or any other delectable mushroom you enjoy. It can add a real depth of flavour to this already delicious soup.

Cream of Mushroom Soup

Prep Time: 15 minutes

Cooking Time: 20 minutes

Makes: about 5 bowls or 10 cups

Special Tools: Blender or hand mixer (optional)

1.5 lbs. fresh mushrooms, chopped

1 medium onion, julienned

1 Tbsp. minced garlic

¼ cup butter

¼ cup all-purpose flour

½ cup white wine

1.25 lt chicken or vegetable stock

1 cup heavy cream

1 Tbsp. fresh thyme, chopped

Salt and pepper to taste

Place a medium sauce pot on medium high heat, melt the butter

Add the onions and garlic and sauté until translucent, but do not brown

Add the mushrooms and continue to sauté

Remove the pot from the direct heat and add the flour, stirring to combine

Return to the heat and deglaze with white wine, reduce

Once reduced add the stock and bring to a simmer

Allow to simmer to cook the roux (flour and butter) out, meaning, ensure the flour has thickened the soup and the chalky flavor of raw flour has been cooked away, this won’t take much more than 8-10 minutes, you don’t want to overcook the mushrooms

Add cream and fresh chopped thyme and simmer another 2 minutes

Adjust seasoning

If you have a hand wand remove the soup from the heat and puree the soup until smooth, if you would like it super smooth you can even pass it through a strainer

If you are using a blender I highly recommend cooling the soup down before blending it. I have seen far too many people getting burned or making an awful mess trying to blend it

Don’t listen to what the food snobs say. Serve the soup with a drizzle of truffle oil if that’s what you like. It will make any mushroom soup just that much more delicious. You can also finish it off with some sour cream or crème fraiche.

Who’s hungry?

 




Copyright © 2025 Paul Shufelt. All Rights Reserved

Cleantalk Pixel