Rice Soup

The Book of Household Management · Beeton, Mrs. (Isabella Mary) · 1861
Source
The Book of Household Management
Time
Total: 60 min
Yield
8.0 persons
Status
success · extracted 13 days ago
Not a recipe
No
Ingredients (5)
Instructions (3)
  1. Throw the rice into boiling water, and let it remain 5 minutes; then pour it into a sieve, and allow it to drain well.
  2. Now add it to the stock boiling, and allow it to stew till it is quite tender; season to taste.
  3. Serve quickly.
Original Text
I. 150. INGREDIENTS.—4 oz. of Patna rice, salt, cayenne, and mace, 2 quarts of white stock. Mode.—Throw the rice into boiling water, and let it remain 5 minutes; then pour it into a sieve, and allow it to drain well. Now add it to the stock boiling, and allow it to stew till it is quite tender; season to taste. Serve quickly. Time.—1 hour. Average cost, 1s. 3d. per quart. Seasonable all the year. Sufficient for 8 persons. [Illustration: EARS OF RICE.] RICE.—This is a plant of Indian origin, and has formed the principal food of the Indian and Chinese people from the most remote antiquity. Both Pliny and Dioscorides class it with the cereals, though Galen places it among the vegetables. Be this as it may, however, it was imported to Greece, from India, about 286 years before Christ, and by the ancients it was esteemed both nutritious and fattening. There are three kinds of rice,—the Hill rice, the Patna, and the Carolina, of the United States. Of these, only the two latter are imported to this country, and the Carolina is considered the best, as it is the dearest. The nourishing properties of rice are greatly inferior to those of wheat; but it is both a light and a wholesome food. In combination with other foods, its nutritive qualities are greatly increased; but from its having little stimulating power, it is apt, when taken in large quantities alone, to lie long on the stomach.
Notes