|
||||||
| Soup Soup and chowder recipes |
|
Welcome to the Cooking Forum. You are currently viewing our cooking boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most cooking discussions and access our other features. By joining our free cooking community you can share your cooking skills, and learn from other skilled cooks, You will be able to interact, post topics, communicate privately with other cooks (PM), respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration in this cooking forum is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our cooking community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact us. |
![]() |
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
|||
|
Here's a light soup, ideal for the summertime, particularly when you're entertaining dinner guests:
Essence of Celery Consomme 11 cups chicken stock 1 cup dry white wine 12 cups chopped celery, divided 1 cup thinly sliced celery 2 onions, sliced thin 1 tbls celery seed 2 tsp dried thyme 4 large egg whites, beaten Shells from the eggs In a kettle combine the stock, wine, 6 cups of the chopped celery, and onion. Bring to boil and simmer, covered, 30 minutes. Strain through a fine sieve set over a large bowl, pressing hard on the solids, and return liquid to the kettle. Add the remaining 6 cups celery, celery seed, thyme, egg whites and shells, bring to a boil, stirring, and cook the mixture at a bare simmer, undisturbed, 20 minutes. Ladle the mixture into a fine sieve lined with dampened paper towels set over a large bowl. Discard the solids. Can be made 2 days in advance, kept chilled, and reheated without boiling. To serve, put the sliced celery in a heated tureen and ladle the soup over it. As a classy alternative: Dissolve 4 envelopes gelatine in a cup of cold consomme. Pour in 3 cups of consomme heated just to the boiling point. Stir well to fully dissolve and incorporate the gelatine. Pour the mixture into a sheet pan, and refrigerate until solid. Cut into a fine dice, and serve in martini glasses, with a bit of celery leaf as garnish. |
|
|||
|
I've never tried the food processor & strain approach, Old Bay. I'd be afraid that it would make the consomme cloudy. But it's certainly worth trying.
Pressing by hand just assures the full flavor is recaptured. But it's likely not necessary, not with that double-brewing, as it were. Yes, the result is a clear consomme, pale green in color. FWIW, a broth, technically, is made with meat (as opposed to a stock, which is made with bones). The full recipe does make a bunch, but it freezes well. If you're going to make the aspic, I would cut it in half unless you're having a party. And don't use the sliced celery for that approach. It just gets in the way. |
|
||||
|
I've read a recipe for making Vietnamese pho soup that called for adding egg whites, mixing them in and then straining them out in order to clarify. I've never tried that in my homemade Pho, but know that if I eat at a Vietnamese restaurant that their soup is clear. I thought that they strained the broth. Now I think it's not possible to get clear broth without a trick.
|