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Pea Soup, from Dried Green
Peas.—Proceed as in the above recipe in every
respect, substituting dried green peas for ordinary yellow
split peas. Colour the soup green by adding a large handful
of spinach before it is rubbed through the wire sieve, or
add a small quantity of spinach
extract (vegetable colouring sold by grocers in
bottles); dried mint and fried or toasted bread should be
served with the soup, as with the other.
Pea Soup, Green
(Fresh).—Take half a peck of young peas, shell
them, and throw the peas into cold water. Put all the shells
into a quart or more of stock or
water. Put in also a handful of spinach if possible, a few
sprigs of parsley, a dozen fresh mint-leaves and half a
dozen small, fresh, green onions. Boil these for an hour, or
rather more, and then rub the whole through a wire sieve.
You cannot rub all the shells through; but you will be able
to rub a great part through, that which is left in the sieve
being only strings. Now put on the soup to boil again, and
as soon as it boils throw in the peas; as soon as these are
tender—about twenty minutes—the soup is finished and can be
sent to table. If the soup is thin, a little white
rouxcan be added to thicken it; if of a bad colour, or
if you could not get any spinach, add some spinach extract (vegetable
colouring, sold by all grocers), only take care not to add
too much, and make the soup look like green paint.
Potato Soup.—Potato soup
is a very good method of using up the remains of cold boiled
potatoes. Slice up a large onion and fry it, without letting
it turn colour, with a little butter. Add a little water or
stock to
the frying-pan, and let the onion boil till it is tender.
Boil a quart or more of milk separately with a couple of
bay-leaves; rub the onion with the cold potatoes through a
wire sieve and add it to the milk. You can moisten the
potatoes in the sieve with the milk. When you have rubbed
enough to make the soup thick enough, let it boil up and add
to every quart a saltspoonful of thyme and a brimming
teaspoonful of chopped blanched parsley. This soup should be
rather thicker than most thick soups.
When new potatoes first come into season,
and especially when you have new potatoes from your own garden,
it will often be found that mixed with the ordinary ones there
are many potatoes no bigger than a toy marble, and which are
too small to be boiled and sent to table as an ordinary dish of
new potatoes. Reserve all these little dwarf potatoes, wash
them, and throw them for five or ten minutes into boiling
water, drain them off and throw them into the potato soup
whole. Of course they must boil in the soup till they are
tender. A little cream is a great improvement to the soup, and
dried mint can be served with it, but is not absolutely
necessary.
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