Buchanan Carrot Soup

Modern cookery for private families · Acton, Eliza · 1845
Source
Modern cookery for private families
Yield
2.0 quarts
Status
success · extracted 14 days ago
Not a recipe
No
Ingredients (6)
Soup Base
Flavoring
Instructions (6)
  1. Make two quarts of soup by either of the foregoing receipts, using for it good brown stock (for a common family dinner strong beef broth will do).
  2. Mix smoothly with a little liquid, a tablespoonful of fine currie-powder, and boil it in the soup for ten minutes.
  3. Or instead of this, season it rather highly with cayenne pepper, and then stir into it from six ounces to half a pound of Patna rice boiled dry and tender as for a currie.
  4. The whole may then remain by the side of the fire without even simmering for ten minutes longer, and then be served immediately.
  5. A spoonful of Captain White’s currie-paste will flavour it very agreeably if smoothly diluted, and simmered in it for two or three minutes.
  6. Three or four ounces of pearl-barley well washed, soaked for some hours, and boiled extremely tender in broth or water, may on occasion be substituted for the rice.
Original Text
BUCHANAN CARROT SOUP. (Excellent.) Make two quarts of soup by either of the foregoing receipts, using for it good brown stock (for a common family dinner strong beef broth will do). Mix smoothly with a little liquid, a tablespoonful of fine currie-powder, and boil it in the soup for ten minutes; or instead of this, season it rather highly with cayenne pepper, and then stir into it from six ounces to half a pound of Patna rice boiled dry and tender as for a currie. The whole may then remain by the side of the fire without even simmering for ten minutes longer, and then be served immediately. As a winter potage this is generally much liked. A spoonful of Captain White’s currie-paste will flavour it very agreeably if 47smoothly diluted, and simmered in it for two or three minutes: we prefer it always to the powder. Three or four ounces of pearl-barley well washed, soaked for some hours, and boiled extremely tender in broth or water, may on occasion be substituted for the rice. Obs.—This receipt was, from inadvertence, omitted at its proper place, page 20, where it ought to have been inserted after the carrot soups which will be found there, and to which the reader is referred for the method of preparing the present one in part.
Notes