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Pumpkin Soup.—Take half
or a quarter of a moderate-sized pumpkin, pare it, remove
the seeds, and cut the pumpkin into thin slices. Put these
into a stew-pan, with as much water or milk as will cover
them, and boil gently until they are reduced to a pulp. Rub
this through a fine sieve, mix with it a little salt, and a
piece of butter the size of an egg, and stir it over the
fire until it boils. Thin it with some boiling milk which
has been sweetened and flavoured with lemon-rind, cinnamon,
or orange-flower water. It should be of the consistency of
thick cream. Put toasted bread, cut into the size of dice,
at the bottom of the soup-tureen. Moisten the bread-dice
with a small quantity of the liquor, let them soak a little
while, then pour the rest of the soup over them, and serve
very hot. Or whisk two fresh eggs thoroughly in the tureen,
and pour the soup in over them at the last moment. The
liquor ought to have ceased from boiling for a minute or two
before it is poured over the eggs.
Rhubarb Soup.—This is a
sweet soup, and is simply juice from stewed rhubarb
sweetened and flavoured with lemon-peel and added either to
cream or beaten-up yolks of eggs and a little white wine. It
is rarely met with in this country.
Rice Soup.—Take a quarter
of a pound of rice, and wash it in several waters till the
water ceases to be discoloured. Take an onion, the white
part of a head of celery, and a turnip, and cut them up and
fry them in a little butter. Add a quart of stock,
or water, and boil these vegetables until they are tender,
and then rub them through a wire sieve. Boil the rice in
this soup till it is tender, flavour with pepper and salt,
add a little milk boiled separately, and serve grated
Parmesan cheese with the soup.
Rice Soup à la
Royale.—Take half a pound of rice and wash it
thoroughly in several waters till the water ceases to be
discoloured. Boil this rice in some stock that
has been strongly flavoured with onion, carrot and celery,
and strained off. When the rice is tender rub it through a
wire sieve, then add some boiling milk, in which two or
three bay-leaves have been boiled, and half a pint of cream,
till the soup is a proper consistency. Serve some egg
forcemeat balls with the soup.
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