Items
Tag
celery
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Your Basic Tomato Soup Your Basic Tomato Soup Plain: Heat stock. Add tomato sauce. Tamari to taste. Pinch of Basil, Garlic, oregano. Cook all together for at least thirty minutes then it is ready to go. Dressed: You can put anything in a good tomato soup. Rice-Barley-Alphabets-Noodles. Simply add 1 cup of whatever to a boiling stock before you've added the tomato sauce and spices, lower the heat and let simmer for an hour. Then, if you like, add vegetables -> onions, carrots, celery, zucchini, spinach, green beans.... Cook all together until tender. Tamari to taste. Serve.
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Jane's Infamous Mushroom Barley Jane's Infamous Mushroom Barley Boil 8 cups of stock. Lower the heat to simmer and add 1 cup uncooked barley. Chop up 1 rib celery, 1 large carrot, 2 onions, and 1 pound of mushrooms. Add this, along with 1 bay leaf, 1 clove chopped garlic, oregano and thyme to the cooking barley. Cook at least another hour or two. Add tamari to taste. The longer this soup cooks, the thicker it gets.
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Creamy Broccoli Soup Creamy Broccoli Soup Serve with croutons for a festive touch. 2 ½ pounds broccoli ½ cup chopped onion ¾ cup chopped celery ¾ teaspoon salt ½ teaspoon pepper ½ teaspoon nutmeg 2 bay leaves 1 ½ cups water 5 cups chicken broth ¼ cup butter 4 tablespoons flour 2 cups milk 1 cup light cream Cut stems from broccoli. Combine broccoli florets, onion, celery, seasonings, water, and broth in a large stockpot. Bring to a boil and simmer about 30 minutes. Strain soup, reserving broth. Remove bay leaves, and puree vegetables with 1 cup of reserved broth. In same stockpot, melt butter. Add flour, stir until smooth. Add reserved broth, pureed vegetables, milk, and light cream; stir until thickened. Garnish with croutons. Serves 12 to 16.
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Kreplach A Jewish mother was much distressed over the problem of her young son who was afraid to eat the popular dish known as kreplach. She took the boy to a psychiatrist for consultation. After hearing the case, the doctor said, "Now, Madam, this is very simple. Take the boy home, take him out into the kitchen, and show him how kreplach are made. This should probably eliminate the condition." Hopefully the mother followed his advice. On the kitchen table she put out a small square of dough beside which was a small mound of prepared chopped meat. "Now," she said, "there is nothing here you should mind." The lad beamed and nodded encouragingly. The mother then put the meat in the center of the dough and folded over one corner. The boy smiled and all seemed to be going well. She folded over the second corner and the third. The boy was nodding, and the experiment seemed to be progressing most favorably. Then she folded over the fourth and final corner; whereupon the boy groaned and muttered ........ "Oi, KREPLACH!" What the psychiatrist didn't know was to tell her to try one of our recipes for kreplach. They're guaranteed to not only remove all phobias, but to nurture a life long affection for the luscious dish as well! Kreplach I Bessie Ginsburg 1 cup flour 1 or 2 small eggs ½ t. salt Mix together. Knead until elastic using a floured board. Add flour until smooth and elastic and dough does not stick. Roll out on floured table and cut into 2-2 ½ inch squares. Filling: Grind meat, beef or turkey that has been cooked. To ½ cup meat, add 1 egg and some browned onion and season. Place 1 t. Filling in each square. Dampen edges with water and fold over to seal in a triangle. Boil in salted boiling water 10 minutes Usinig [sic] a wooden spoon, stir to prevent sticking. Drain in a colander and rinse in cold water. Serve in chicken soup or roast in oven, or heat in oven with salt and chicken fat. Makes 2 dozen. Kreplach II Naomi Lansky Dough: 1 egg Approx. ⅔ C. flour ¼ t. salt Filling: Any cooked meat or leftover (⅓ lb. meat is sufficient) ½ t. onion juice Finely chopped celery Schmaltz to hold meat together Salt and pepper to taste To make dough, beat egg slightly. Add salt and enough flour to make a stiff dough. Knead well on floured board. Invert bowl over dough and let stand, covered, ½ hr. Roll out as thin as possible. Dough should not be sticky but not too brittle. Cut dough into squares. Fill and pinch ends together. Cook in boiling salted water for 15 minutes. Drain To make filling, grind meat very fine, add other ingredients, season to taste, and mix well.
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Vegetables Vegetables. Few things are more commonly cooked than vegetables, and few things are served more often in an unwholesome and unpalatable form. It is too often thought and said that "any one can cook vegetables," and it is true that few cook them well. Of course, much depends on the freshness and quality of the vegetables themselves, even when well cooked. Green vegetables are never so fine as when freshly gathered, and all vegetables are best in their season, the forced ones lacking in quality and flavor. For chemical reasons cook young green vegetables in hard salted water, and dry vegetables, as dry peas, lima and other beans in soft water, without salt. Put them on in freshly boiling water, boil continuously until tender and drain at once. Have them neither underdone or overdone, if you would have them perfect. Especially is this true of potatoes. Wilted green vegetables may be freshened by sprinkling with cold water. Old potatoes may be improved by soaking in cold water for several hours. Dried beans and peas should be soaked over night in soft water. To keep celery and lettuce fresh roll in a damp napkin and place on ice. When green peas are growing old add a pinch of Wyandotte soda to make them tender. TIMETABLE FOR COOKING VEGETABLES. Thirty minutes:---asparagus, corn, macaroni, mushrooms, peas, boiled potatoes, tomatoes, lettuce. 45 minutes:---young beets, carrots, parsnips, turnips, baked potatoes, rice. 1 hour:---artichokes, new cabbage, string beans, Brussels sprouts, cauliflower, greens, salsify, new onions, winter squash. 2 hours:---winter cabbage, carrots, parsnips, turnips, onions. 3 to 5 hours:---old beets. 5 to 8 hours:---dried beans, dried peas, hominy, etc. Mrs. R. Campbell. The above timetable will serve as a guide to the inexperi-