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200 Soups
Well, it’s the season for it. Heathrow has been fog-bound
and we have moved the garden pot-plants nearer the house. The central
heating is now on full-time and the hot-water bottles have been brought
out of mothballs. It’s nearly winter.
That came around quick! We are musing on hearty meals and hot comfort
foods;
saving a few bob seems like a good idea. We don’t want to spend
ages in the kitchen even if it is the warmest spot in the house, so
home-made soup will be high on the list of craved lunches or suppers.
200 Soups is an American book and so offers a few things that we might
not have seen between the covers of cookbooks hailing from these
shores. Chowder of various hues has long been popular in the US. There
are several versions and each has its followers who would not dream of
being seen with a bowl of the competition. The two clam chowders are
the ones that seem to excite the most partisan of passions. Manhattan
Clam Chowder will be the one familiar to those of us who have visited
that classy peninsula. This is a tomato-based recipe, in contrast to
the New England Clam Chowder which is rich and creamy and my personal
favourite. This book suggests cans of clams, a common ingredient in the
US, but please use fresh clams in the UK.
I have noticed that the book takes advantage of a few more convenience
foods than many UK cookbooks. I don’t mention that as a criticism, and
it will indeed be a departure welcomed by those strapped for time
...and by me. Nothing wrong with a stock cube as long as it’s a good
quality one. There are lots of potato soups here and those vegetables,
although economic, will need a good can/cube/plastic bottle of
flavourful stock to assist their natural starchy blandness.
My favourite recipe is that for Curry Soup. This has vibrant flavours
of Indian spices. Use a pressure cooker for the lentils and that will
cut down on cooking time. This is a great make-ahead soup and this
recipe serves 6, so enough to last for a couple of meals for a small
family. Delicious with just some crusty bread.
200 Soups is hard-cover and ring-bound for practical
flat-on-the-counter reading, and it offers some American classics to
enjoy till the weather takes a turn for the better.
Cookbook review: 200 Soups
Author: Madge Baird
Published by: Gibbs Smith
Price: $12.99
ISBN 978-1-4236-2331-1
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