Chicken Soup Glossary: A Glossary Of The Different Types of Chicken SoupPage 1: Overview This is Page 1 of an 3-page article. Click on the red links below to visit other pages. This glossary is protected by copyright and cannot be reproduced in whole or part. You are welcome to link to it.
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Send someone a delicious half-gallon of chicken soup. Above, Grandma’s Chicken Soup. |
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Overview Probably every society makes a chicken soup; chickens are ubiquitous worldwide. It’s easy to make chicken soup: just boil chicken parts (or in less wealthy economies, the bones) in water with various vegetables and seasoning. In older times and in less prosperous societies, chicken soup was/is prepared using hens (“soup hens” or “stewing hens”) too old to be effective layers, and therefore to tough and stringy to be roasted. While we have found such hens at farmer’s markets, they’re rarely seen in modern supermarkets, which focus on selling “broilers,” younger chickens. While our grandmother had access to soup hens, our chicken soup, made with supermarket broilers, is just as delicious. As with all ingredients, the better (more flavorful) the chicken, the better the soup. A classic chicken soup is a clear broth, strained of much or all of the fat and served with pieces of chicken and vegetables. To make a meal of it, noodles, dumplings (including matzoh balls), rice or barley can be added.
Continue To Page 2: Comparison Of Grandma’s Chicken Soup & Spoonful Of Comfort |
Last Updated May 2018
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