We all love shortcuts to a good soup – and by “good,” I mostly mean one that has well-developed flavor, the kind that can sometimes take a little time. That’s why we buy bouillon cubes, why we make our own stocks and broths and freeze them, why we sock soup away in the freezer to be eaten another day.

For years, I’ve been making my own soup bases: concentrated versions of soups that take up less space in the freezer than a finished batch and can be defrosted, thinned out and finessed in a few different directions. I got the idea from Italian cooking maven Lidia Bastianich, making one base that features roasted sweet potato and another that uses white beans.

Recently, another great idea for a soup base entered my kitchen, from Miyoko Schinner, the vegan author and “cheese” maker. In her book The Homemade Vegan Pantry, she writes about a cream of broccoli soup concentrate that employs rice and cashews to give it that creamy mouth feel without any dairy products. And here’s what I love about it most: It cooks in under a half-hour.

It’s a one-pot affair: The rice and cashews go in with the water, broccoli stems and other ingredients and cook until the rice is done. Broccoli florets go on top of the pot and get steamed for another few minutes. You take the florets out, puree the rest of the ingredients, and fold the vegetable back in. The result has the consistency of – it’s true! – good old Campbell’s cream of whatever, and when you thin it out with a little water, you’ve got a pure bowl of comfort, with the silky-smooth texture of the soup offset by little bursts of crunch from the florets. I made it the day before I started to feel under the weather, and guess what I was so glad to have to eat for three meals in a row?

Schinner offers a bonus recipe, for a vegan bouillon that might just come in even handier. With a handful of pantry ingredients (admitting that my pantry might be better – or at least differently – stocked than yours, with white miso and nutritional yeast always around), I mashed together a cup of paste that looks a little like Mexican mole and packs just as much flavor. Two tablespoons of this went into that broccoli soup concentrate before it cooked, but I can imagine stirring it into all manner of broths, sauces, stews – even casseroles and the like.

For the next few weeks, though, it will probably power nothing but soupmaking. As we dig out from a blizzard, nothing could make me happier.