Tuesday, June 13, 2006

401. BACON and EGG SOUP

1 lb. good bacon
1/2 cup chopped shallots
3/4 cup frozen spinach or collard greens
1/2 cup water
2-4 eggs
3 cans Campbell's chicken broth
1/3 cup shelled chopped pistachios
3/4 cup fresh cilantro, loosely chopped
3/4 cup grated muenster cheese
several tablespoons heavy cream, to taste
black pepper, sage, mace
2 tablespoons dry sherry
1 packet unflavored gelatin (optional)

Chop the bacon and the shallots both small and fry them together in a pan until the bacon is crisped. Set them aside. Drain off all the grease except a little, and use that and the water to cook the collards until they soften. Turn off the fire and let your pan cool while you beat two or three or four eggs. If you only use two eggs, first sprinkle a packet of unflavored gelatin into your chicken stock. Beat the chicken stock into the eggs. Pour this into the pan with the collards and heat, stirring constantly, until the soup thickens. This will be sudden, so keep your fire moderate and watch closely. While you're stirring, throw in the pistachios and cilantro, and season to taste with black pepper, a good pinch of rubbed sage, and a little mace. When the soup has thickened, turn off the fire and keep stirring. Add the crisp bacon and onions, and a little later the cheese, stirring the whiles until the cheese melts. Temper it up with sherry and cream and serve it forth.

NOTE: You can also make this soup with leftover baked ham, and use the juices from the ham's baking if you're not on a low-salt diet. A very nice addition is queso de freir, also known as queso para freir, queso fresco, queso blanco fresco, and panela. It's a crumbly white Hispanic cheese that doesn't melt when you cook it. If you take a slice and fry it in a little oil, browning it on both sides, it's like an entire slice of the little crispy bits you get around the edges of a grilled cheese sandwich. Take several of these browned cheese slices and use your scissors to cut them up into strips. At the last minute, throw them into the soup in place of the grated cheese.


courtesy of: Teresa Nielson Hayden

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

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Anonymous said...

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