Cucumber Soup

Modern cookery for private families · Acton, Eliza · 1845
Source
Modern cookery for private families
Status
success · extracted 13 days ago
Not a recipe
No
Ingredients (12)
Optional enrichment
Instructions (13)
  1. Pare, split, and empty the cucumbers, removing seeds.
  2. Throw a little salt over the cucumbers and leave them for an hour to drain.
  3. Put the drained cucumbers with the white part only of the onions into a stewpan or saucepan.
  4. Cover them nearly half an inch with pale veal stock.
  5. Stew gently until perfectly tender, from three quarters of an hour to an hour and a quarter.
  6. Work the whole mixture through a hair-sieve.
  7. Add more stock as needed to reach the desired soup quantity.
  8. When the soup boils, stir in enough arrow-root, rice-flour, or tous les mois to bring it to a good consistence.
  9. Add half to a whole pint of boiling cream and serve immediately.
  10. Season with salt and cayenne while the cucumbers are stewing.
Optional enrichment
  1. Mix the yolks of six to eight eggs with a dessertspoonful of chili vinegar.
  2. Stir this mixture into the soup (do not allow to boil after adding).
  3. Add three dessertspoonfuls of minced parsley a couple of minutes before adding the egg mixture.
Original Text
CUCUMBER SOUP. Pare, split, and empty from eight to twenty[38] fine, well grown, but not old cucumbers,—those which have the fewest seeds are best for the purpose; throw a little salt over them, and leave them for an hour to drain, then put them with the white part only of a couple of mild onions into a deep stewpan or delicately clean saucepan, cover them nearly half an inch with pale but good veal stock, and stew them gently until they are perfectly tender, which will be in from three quarters of an hour to an hour and a quarter; work the whole through a hair-sieve, and add to it as much more stock as may be needed to make the quantity of soup required for table; and as the cucumbers, from their watery nature, will thicken it but little, stir to it when it boils, as much arrow-root, rice-flour, or tous les mois (see page 1), as will bring it to a good consistence; add from half to a whole pint of boiling cream, and serve the soup immediately. Salt and cayenne sufficient to season it, should be thrown over the cucumbers while they are stewing. The yolks of six or eight eggs, mixed with a dessertspoonful of chili vinegar, may be used for this soup instead of cream; three dessertspoonsful of minced parsley may then be strewed into it a couple of minutes before they are added: it must not, of course, be allowed to boil after they are stirred in. 38.  This is a great disparity of numbers; but some regard must be had to expense, where the vegetable cannot be obtained with facility.
Notes