Monday, February 06, 2012

Toppings of the morning to you!

 A modern re-imagining of Goldilocks and the three Bears...

Once upon a time, there were three bears. Let’s call them Mummy Bear, Daddy Bear and Baby Bear. They had a happy little dwelling in a soup café, on Forrest Road. Perhaps you’ve heard of it? Union of Genius. Charming place. You should pop in some time.

Anyway, the three bears liked porridge. They needed oats, shall we say, especially around Oat O’clock, which is approximately 9am, human time.

Now, these bears were very particular about their porridge. Each bear had his or her own preference when it came to toppings. None of the bears was interested in honey. ‘Pooh to honey,’ they chorused, acknowledging the wry pun.

Daddy Bear liked his porridge with dried fruit, like cranberries and sultanas, a splash of cream and a sprinkling of Splenda. Baby Bear turned her nose up at the Splenda. ‘Yuck,’ she said, ‘fake sugar. Yuck.’
Mummy Bear liked her porridge drowning in cream and sporting a deep golden brown tan from a truckload of muscovado sugar. Some would have commented that there was more of an emphasis on the cream and sugar, with a hint of porridge on the side, than the other way round. But not Baby Bear. Baby Bear wholeheartedly approved of the liberal use of cream and sugar. ‘Yum,’ she said, patting her little bear paws together, ‘yum yum yum.’

Baby Bear liked her porridge with a little blob of raspberry jam, ‘for the colour.’ Secretly though, Baby Bear resented the lack of bacon available for her porridge. But sometimes, if she was a good bear, Mummy Bear would let her have bacon – as well as porridge – on a Friday. Let’s just say, it worked very well as an incentive for good behaviour during the week.

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Shall I put the kettle on?

 Swede is one of those vegetables. Yes, it’s a root vegetable, obviously, but that’s not what I mean. What I mean is it’s not one of those popular vegetables. Like your carrot. Or your parsnip. No, swede is one of those vegetables that people always sneer at a little. I think they think your average swede is a bit ugly. A bit pale, a bit chunky and a beast to tackle. Poor swede.

But at Union of Genius we’re not so judgemental. After all, who couldn’t love a vegetable with a purple bum?* Anyway, we embrace all veg equally (figuratively, of course). No veg is too big, or small, pretty or ugly to be hacked in to inch-size cubes and blended in to a sea of edible bliss. And this week it was the turn of lilac-bottomed Mr Swede.

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

One pound porridge pot


Until the end of January, come into Union of Genius before 11am and say "I need oats", to get our One Pound Porridge Breakfast.* This is a pot of our own blend of organic porridge with two free toppings - choose from: maple syrup, cream, honey, mixed fruit, blueberry jus, pear jus or raspberry jam.

Or, you can have the offer above plus a standard Americano for just £2.

Delicious, healthy, happy-making and cheap.

You need oats.


*That is of course a pot of porridge for £1, not an actual pound of porridge. That said, we do make about 10 lbs of porridge at a time so if you're really, really hungry you could just stick your head in the kettle and go for it.

Monday, January 09, 2012

Diet soup

January.

Oh, January. The month where we look back on December and regret the over-eating, over-spending and general over-indulgence. And of course, every newspaper and website is promising you a thinner body in  three minutes flat by sticking to the latest miracle diet/superfood/vitamin regime.

So, every January we say no to treats, no to fun and yes to hair shirts, the scratchier the better. At Union of Genius, we try to approach life from a kindlier direction, and we want  to make the hair shirt a little less scratchy and a bit easier to cope with.

What we don't do here is push the latest fad diet (soupy or not) or pretend that some foods are magically good for you. The phrase "super food" is something we think is over-used, and should be approached with caution. That said, we think that soup for lunch offers advantages to those who want to recover from the holiday excesses without too much self-flagellation.

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

What's in the soup?

What's the soup have very kindly put up a post about the Christmas Dinner Soup. I'm a big fan of the line (not written by us) that says "rumored to have some of the finest soup in Scotland."

We'll be putting up recipes from time to time here too so do keep checking back. Meanwhile, read on. Oh, and if your name is Amy (or even if it isn't) follow the link to Theories of Bacon.

Friday, December 02, 2011

Show me the mo-money

Congratulations to The Alibis for raising £600 for Movember. We're proud to have been a sponsor and liked the pumpkin and bacon soup we created for Mogasm so much that it's going to be back at Union on a regular basis.

Thursday, December 01, 2011

Bowling for soup

‘Soup, glorious soup!’ trills Louise C after a hearty lunch at Union of Genius. She's ladling out plenty of compliments about this soup café and their 'six flavours, most of which are gluten-free and scrumdiddlyumptious!' Their Caldo Verde is laced with chorizo, potato and kale, and she's positive it will be a popular 'little winter warmer!’
Read more about Edinburgh's soup scene on Yelp here...