1. SOUP is a liquid food that is prepared by boiling meat or
vegetables, or both, in water and then seasoning and sometimes
thickening the liquid that is produced. It is usually served as
the first course of a dinner, but it is often included in a
light meal, such as luncheon. While some persons regard the
making of soup as difficult, nothing is easier when one knows
just what is required and how to proceed. The purpose of this
article, therefore, is to acquaint the housewife with the
details of soup making, so that she may provide her family with
appetizing and nutritious soups that make for both economy and
healthfulness.
2. It is interesting to note the advancement that has been made
with this food. The origin of soup, like that of many foods,
dates back to practically the beginning of history. However, the
first soup known was probably not made with meat. For instance,
the mess of pottage for which Esau sold his birthright was soup
made of red lentils. Later on meat came to be used as the basis
for soup because of the agreeable and appetizing flavor it
provides. Then, at one time in France a scarcity of butter and
other fats that had been used to produce moistness and richness
in foods, brought about such clear soups as bouillon and
consommé. These, as well as other liquid foods, found much
favor, for about the time they were devised it came to be
considered vulgar to chew food. Thus, at various periods, and
because of different emergencies, particular kinds of soup have
been introduced, until now there are many kinds from which the
housewife may choose when she desires a dish that will start a
meal in the right way and at the same time appeal to the
appetite.
3. VALUE OF SOUP IN THE MEAL.--Not all persons have the same
idea regarding the value of soup as a part of a meal. Some
consider it to be of no more value than so much water, claiming
that it should be fed to none but children or sick persons who
are unable to take solid food. On the other hand, many persons
believe that soup contains the very essence of all that is
nourishing and sustaining in the foods of which it is made. This
difference of opinion is well demonstrated by the ideas that
have been advanced concerning this food. Some one has said that
soup is to a meal what a portico is to a palace or an overture
to an opera, while another person, who evidently does not
appreciate this food, has said that soup is the preface to a
dinner and that any work really worth while is sufficient in
itself and needs no preface. Such opinions, however, must be
reconciled if the true value of this food is to be appreciated.
4. Probably the best way in which to come to a definite
conclusion as to the importance of soup is to consider the
purposes it serves in a meal. When its variety and the
ingredients of which it is composed are thought of, soup serves
two purposes: first, as an appetizer taken at the beginning of a
meal to stimulate the appetite and aid in the flow of digestive
juices in the stomach; and, secondly, as an actual part of the
meal, when it must contain sufficient nutritive material to
permit it to be considered as a part of the meal instead of
merely an addition. Even in its first and minor purpose, the
important part that soup plays in many meals is not hard to
realize, for it is just what is needed to arouse the flagging
appetite and create a desire for nourishing food. But in its
second purpose, the real value of soup is evident. Whenever soup
contains enough nutritive material for it to take the place of
some dish that would otherwise be necessary, its value cannot be
overestimated. If soup is thought of in this way, the prejudice
that exists against it in many households will be entirely
overcome. But since much of this prejudice is due to the fact
that the soup served is often unappetizing in both flavor and
appearance, sufficient attention should be given to the making
of soup to have this food attractive enough to appeal to the
appetite rather than discourage it. Soup should not be greasy
nor insipid in flavor, neither should it be served in large
quantities nor without the proper accompaniment. A small
quantity of well-flavored, attractively served soup cannot fail
to meet the approval of any family when it is served as the
first course of the meal.
5. GENERAL CLASSES OF SOUP.--Soups are named in various ways,
according to material, quality, etc.; but the two purposes for
which soup is used have led to the placing of the numerous kinds
into two general classes. In the first class are grouped those
which serve as appetizers, such as bouillon, consommé, and some
other broths and clear soups. In the second class are included
those eaten for their nutritive effect, such as cream soups,
purées, and bisques. From these two classes of soup, the one
that will correspond with the rest of the meal and make it
balance properly is the one to choose. For instance, a light
soup that is merely an appetizer should be served with a heavy
dinner, whereas a heavy, highly nutritious soup should be used
with a luncheon or a light meal.
6. ECONOMIC VALUE OF SOUP.--Besides having an important place in
the meal of which it forms a part, soup is very often an
economy, for it affords the housewife a splendid opportunity to
utilize many left-overs. With the French people, who excel in
the art of soup making chiefly because of their clever
adaptation of seasoning to foods, their _pot-au-feu_ is a
national institution and every kitchen has its stock pot.
Persons who believe in the strictest food economy use a stock
pot, since it permits left-overs to be utilized in an attractive
and palatable way. In fact, there is scarcely anything in the
way of fish, meat, fowl, vegetables, and cereals that cannot be
used in soup making, provided such ingredients are cared for in
the proper way. Very often the first glance at the large number
of ingredients listed in a soup recipe creates the impression
that soup must be a very complicated thing. Such, however, is
not the case. In reality, most of the soup ingredients are small
quantities of things used for flavoring, and it is by the proper
blending of these that appetizing soups are secured.
About the author:
Raul Gallu is the author of
http://chicken-so
up-recipes.blogspot.com - a website full of information for
those who love chicken soup and want to learn how to cook it.