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Boston Soup
Recipes, 1880s
Potato Soup Recipe
3 potatoes
1 pint milk
1 teaspoon chopped onion
1 stalk celery
1 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon celery salt
1/2 teaspoon white pepper
1/4 teaspoon cayenne
1/2 tablespoon flour
1 tablespoon butter
Wash and pare the potatoes, and let them soak in cold water for half an hour.
Put them into boiling water, and cook until very soft. Cook the onion and
celery with the milk in a double boiler. When the potatoes are soft, drain
the water and mash them. Add the boiling milk and seasoning. Rub through a
strainer, and put it on to boil again. Put the butter in a small sauce pan,
and when melted and bubbling, add the flour. When well mixed, stir into the
boiling soup; let it boil five minutes, and serve very hot. The flour
thickening keeps the potato and milk from separating, and gives a smoothness
and consistency quite unlike the granular effect which is often noticed. If
the soup is too thick, add more hot milk.
The celery salt may be omitted if you have fresh celery, or if you
like, put one tablespoon of fine chopped parsley into the soup just before
serving.
When you wish a richer soup, use a quart of milk, making it much thinner,
and add two well beaten eggs after you take it from the heat, or you can
put them into the tureen (bowl) and stir rapidly as you pour in the boiling
soup. New raw potatoes, cut into small dice or balls and cooked until tender
but not broken, are sometimes served in potato soup.
Related Recipes
Black Bean Soup
Celery Soup
Green Pea Soup
Split Pea Soup
Tomato Soup
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