Village Squire, 1976-03, Page 32BY RON RUDD
March, the blustery, cold month, is the
time for hearty soups served piping hot with
crusty bread.
One of the pleasantest memories I have of
early teens is snowshoeing on crisp,
moonlight nights through snowladen cedars.
The incredible brightness and stillness was
unforgettable. As you moved, the only sound
was the swish, squeench of the snowshoes.
When you stopped to admire a particularly
breathtaking vista, the awesome stillness
enveloped you and forced a lingering
enjoyment of the wonder of a night, a moon
and a silent forest. These joyful, healthful and
awe inspiring journeys often terminated with
a bowl of my mother's oyster stew.
There is little point in giving quantities, so
experiment as your fancy and budget will
permit. You .need oysters, cream, milk,
cayenne pepper and a touch of salt. There are
several secrets to the success of this
particular soup. Do not overcook the oysters
sincre that toughens them. Do not thicken
except with a generous quantity of salted
soda biscuits, hand crushed into the glorious,
creamy mixture just before serving. A few
grains of cayenne are added just before the
biscuits. Do not use pepper in this
heaven-sent broth.
Another favourite is homemade beef and
vegetable soup. When round steak was two
pounds for a quarter and ground beef was
made from the round, real butchers would
throw in a shank for nothing --if you asked.
The shank was what was left after the round
was cut far enough down so nobody would
buy it because the slices were beginning to
have as much bone as meat.
The shank was simmered, NOT BOILED,
with onion, a bay leaf or two and much
skimming and loving care. The simmering in
March was done on the back of the kitchen
stove.
That night, supper was one of my
favourites. The shank meat was tender,
mist, flavorful and accompanied by warm
bread, butter, horse radish and my mother's
nine -day pickles. There was never any left to
have cold. Beef cooked this way, sliced cold
and served with fresh bread, butter, hot
mustard and a glass of ale, is very satisfying
far. -
30, VILLAGE SQUIRE/MARCH 1976
Squire's Chef
Hearty soup suggestions
for blustery March
Now the bone. Return it to the pot. It
should be cracked but don't worry if you
cannot do this. It just makes it easier to get
the marrow out. Despite all caution to the
contrary, do not skim the fat from this soup.
There is very little anyway and most is from
the marrow. Don't strain it either. When the
bone looks like a bleached skeleton you have
seen on the prairie, take it from the pot, cool
it and give it to the dog. The remaining broth
is just magnificent as it is with a pinch of salt
and crusty bread. To make it even better, add
carrots cut into small chunks ('A" cubes),
turnip the same or use larger pieces if you
wish. Use celery stalks --no tops, and
parsnips. The celery should be small, the
parsnips large and thoroughly cooked as all
the vegetables should be. Put in whole
potatoes. Cook long and slowly --hang the
energy crisis --food must be cooked properly.
Don't put cabbage in this soup.
To serve, remove potato and have with
butter, salt and pepper to taste. Potatoes
cooked this way are delicious. Have a bowl of
the broth either with or without the rest of the
vegetables. Try a plate of vegetables with
butter, salt and pepper. This meal is
satisfying, meatless, delicious and not very
expensive even now.
The white navy bean which hovered around
20c a pound for years but is now climbing to
51.00 a pound, makes a delicious hearty soup
with the help of a ham bone. Use white beans,
dried split peas or whole dried peas. Each will
give a distinct flavor so don't use a mixture.
Soak about a cup of them overnight. The ham
bone can be simmered in a quart and a half of
water to which has been added a large bay
leaf. You should also have thrown into this
pot all the bits of ham fat, skin and what not
that is left over. After a satisfactory stewing
and simmering, strain the stock and have
about a quart for the soup. Don't use less but
more won't hurt.
Add to this heavenly brew the drained
beans (peas), a large onion, a big carrot, a
couple of celery stalks, all finely chopped.
Simmer gently until everything is delightfully
tender. The soup may be pureed but 1 like it
as is. Serve with a great gob of butter, a bit of
fresh crushed mint, lots of warm sourdough
bread rand a robust red wine.
I have no idea what this next soup/stew is
called but, at times of severe physical anguish
as the mumps, flu, a double hernia or the
strange and unexplainable actions of a loving
wife, the mixture is as comforting as a good
belt of rum.
Take a large piece of cod, a few potatoes, a
like quantity of onion, a great lump of butter,
a few bay leaves and as much milk as it takes.
You can see that quantities don't matter. Peel
and dice the potato. Cut the onion into chunks
and boil in lightly salted water. (use only
enough to cover) until tender. Add bay leaf
and potato and cook until the potato is tender.
Remove bay leaf. Add the cod, cut in
bite -sized pieces. Put in milk to suit; lots if
you like it soupy, less if you like it stewy.
Simmer very gently until the fish is cooked.
Add lots of butter, DO NOT USE THE
OTHER SPREAD. Salt and pepper to taste.
Freshly ground pepper is a must here. Serve
with cool beer and lots of soda crackers.
Now here is heresy! If the cod is too
expensive at $1.90 a pound, and butter at
$1.10 hasn't been in your house since
Christmas of '67, try this. Use the canned
chicken haddie and margarine.
Everybody's favorite soup is cream of
tomato. Modern housewives and house-
husbands (housepeople?) hesitate to make
this soup because of the fear of curdling.
Tomato soup is nothing more than stewed
tomato and delicately seasoned thin, white
sauce mixed together.
Stew enough peeled and seeded tomatoes
to make about three cups, with an onion stuck
with cloves.
The cream sauce is made with 3
tablespoons butter, 3 tablespoons flour, 3
cups milk. Melt butter in a thick-walled
saucepan, add flour and cook (this is a roux).
Add milk and cook 5 minutes. Stir constantly
with a wooden spoon. Add salt and pepper to
taste.
The tomato may be pureed or chopped. A
very nice soup results if the tomato is left in
small chunks. If you wish to puree, do not use
canned tomato because the seeds interfere
with the flavor. Mix the hot tomato and the
hot white sauce just before serving and there
should be no curling. Serve with soda
crackers or toast.
Well next month is shower (rain) month
and we'll talk about sauces.