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Macaroni Soup
(clear).—Take some macaroni and break it up into
pieces about two inches long. Boil them till they are tender
in some salted water, drain them off and add them to some
clear soup. (See CLEAR
SOUP.)
Macaroni Soup
(thick).—Take an onion, carrot, a small head of
celery and a very small quantity of turnip; cut them up and
boil them in a very small quantity of water for about an
hour. Then rub the whole through a wire sieve, add a quart
or more of boiling milk, throw in the macaroni, after
breaking it up into pieces two inches long, and let the
macaroni simmer in this till it is perfectly tender. The
soup should be thickened with a very little white roux, a bay-leaf can be boiled in the
soup; a small quantity of cream is a great improvement.
Fried or toasted bread should be served with it.
Milk Soup.—Milk soup, as
it is sometimes called in Germany, very much resembles
English custard. It is made by putting a quart of milk on
the fire and thickening it with two yolks of eggs and a
little flour, and sweetening it with sugar. The soup is
flavoured with either vanilla, lemon, laurel leaves, pounded
almonds, cinnamon, chocolate, &c. As a soup, however, it
is not suited to the English palate.
Mock Turtle,
Imitation.—Take an onion, carrot, small head of
celery, and some turnip, and boil them till they are tender
in some stock.
The water in which some rice has been boiled is very well
suited for the purpose. Add also to every quart a brimming
tablespoonful of mixed savoury herbs. Rub the whole through
a wire sieve, thicken it with brown
roux till it is as thick as cream; add a few drops
of Parisian essence—(sold in bottles by all grocers)—to give
it a dark colour. Add a wineglassful of sherry or Madeira,
or, if the use of wine be objected to, the juice of a hard
lemon. Flavour the soup with a little cayenne pepper, and
serve some egg
forcemeat balls in it, about the size of small
marbles.
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