This is How a Friendship Ends: A Recipe for Miso Ginger Carrot Bisque
This is an essay about soup, but it is also about friendship. Or rather, this is an essay about soup and how a friendship ends.
Finally, the carrots had cooked through. She began to search in the drawers of her kitchen for her roommate’s immersion blender—the last, and in my mind most crucial, step to making the soup. Y was an organized person, her roommate a little less so. The immersion blender was not in its place, and Y grew more and more frustrated as she searched for it. Finally, she turned to me and suggested we eat the soup without blending it.
I balked. The soup isn’t inedible unblended, but it would be exceedingly unappetizing. Chunks of soft carrot float in a briny broth, leathery skin peeling away with each bite. The flavors would be disparate, the texture strange. I insisted we look a little more. Eventually, the immersion blender presented itself and we were able to eat the soup as intended. But I found myself returning to the incident over and over again.
Y was a perfectionist in everything she did, including in the kitchen. One Christmas she sent me a box of cookies decorated with such intense precision they looked like jewels, each flavor and type neatly annotated on a card. Another year, she stayed up hours into the night making multiple cakes, one for my birthday, another for her sister’s, and she’d been nearly reduced to tears when her first ganache didn’t turn out. Could it truly be that she was exhausted by the hunt for the blender and didn’t care if the soup was less than perfect? Or was it more because the meal itself was an afterthought, an attempt to salvage a friendship that was already on its last legs?
7. When the carrots are soft, turn off the heat and add white miso. Use an immersion blender to blend the carrot-broth-miso mixture into a thick puree. In college, I would add water at this step until the texture was soup-like, turn the heat back on until the soup was acceptably hot, and serve as is. But in adulthood, I have started adding a can of full-fat coconut milk. It turns the carrot soup into something creamy and bisque-like, gentle on the tongue followed by a blossom of latent heat from the ginger. I think of the addition of the coconut milk, turning the bright orange soup into a lighter, softer color, as a kindness to myself.
8. I should clarify: We did not break up over the soup. I can also admit that maybe, at the time, I was overthinking the immersion blender. Instead, the friendship continued for more than a year afterward. I found a job and moved, as did she. In retrospect, we both were growing out of our old selves, slowly becoming adults. I can’t give you an exact date or dramatic dinner where we stopped being friends. I can only say that it was a slow fading, a gradual and at times painful transition from being in communication every day, to every week, to every few months, to once a year and, now, not at all. My twenty-eight-year-old self tells my twenty-year-old self that the intense, girlish friendship we’d sustained while we were students didn’t fit our new lives. Not all relationships are built for transition. Some need to end.
For years afterward, thinking about it hurt. If I’m being honest, I still can’t really look the friendship straight in the eye. I’m not like this about other relationships. If I were to see a romantic ex on the street, I would probably laugh or be bemused, if anything. With this friendship, I glance at it sideways. I remember fragments of memories, half closing my eyes as I look through old emails to find a certain fact, trying not to read my fawning prose, still somewhat convinced I was too much. Here was a relationship in which I experienced some of the highest, fizzling champagne delight of my early twenties, as well as my lowest, gut-swirling sadness.
9. I don’t have a neat end with a moral to this story. I only have this soup, which I still make all the time. I make it for myself on days where I have drafts due and chapters to read, where the best lunch is something that will take a long time on the stove, filling the house with the golden fragrance of ginger and turmeric. I make it when I find myself with bits of sweet potato and pumpkin that need using, or other orange vegetables that can be quickly thrown in and blended with the carrot. I make it because I want a vehicle to eat a package of freshly baked pita from the market, pillowy with steam.
Mostly though, I make this soup for my friends. I made it for M and N when they came to discuss the petty trials of being writers and thrilled when they asked to take home leftovers, grinning as I spooned it into mason jars. I made it for T and A last winter as we shivered around a fire pit in the unromantic cement of my apartment complex’s backyard, handing out mugs of it to try to keep us warm during our pandemic-safe hang. I made it for C when she visited from California, an unexpected and precious friend who was first my sworn enemy in high school, who I now see was somehow too similar to me, causing me to display my worst, cattiest teenage behavior. Whoever it is for, however it is eaten, and however the friendship may end, it has been, is, and always will be a soup I make for friends.
10. Ladle soup into bowls. Garnish with thinly sliced scallions, a few pieces of cilantro, a shake of black sesame seeds—whatever best suits the beloved friend you are serving. When you begin to hear them scraping the sides of their bowl with their spoon, offer them more.
Nina Li Coomes is a Japanese and American writer, currently living in Chicago, IL. Her writing has appeared in EATER, The Collapsar, and RHINO Poetry among other places. Her debut chapbook haircut poems was published by Dancing Girl Press in 2017.