Woman's Institute Library of Cookery - Volume 3: Soup; Meat; Poultry and Game; Fish and Shell Fish  by Woman's Institute of Domestic Arts and Sciences
page 17 of 354 (04%)
page 17 of 354 (04%)
|  |  | 
|  | 
			should be added to the stock after it is removed from the pot. MAKING OF SOUP PRINCIPAL INGREDIENTS 18. The making of the stock that is used in soup is the most important of the soup-making processes; in fact, these two things--soup and stock--may be regarded, in many instances, as one and the same. The housewife will do well, therefore, to keep in mind that whenever reference is made to the making of soup usually stock making is also involved and meant. Before the actual soup-making processes are taken up, however, the nature of the ingredients required should be well understood; for this reason, suitable meats and vegetables, which are the principal ingredients in soups, are first discussed. 19. MEAT USED FOR SOUP MAKING.--With the exception of pork, almost every kind of meat, including beef, veal, mutton, lamb, game, and poultry, is used for soup making. Occasionally, ham is employed, but most other forms of pork are seldom used to any extent. When soup stock is made from these meats, they may be cooked separately, or, as a combination is often an improvement over a single variety, several kinds may be combined. For instance, mutton used alone makes a very strongly flavored soup, so that it is usually advisable to combine this kind of meat with another meat that has a less distinctive flavor. On the other hand, veal alone does not have sufficient flavor, so it must be combined with lamb, game, fowl, or some other well-flavored meat. 20. Certain cuts of meats are preferred to others in the making of |  | 


 
