Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
1. Martha Washington’s Crab Soup. First lady Martha Washington’s crab soup was served often during the Franklin D. Roosevelt and Eisenhower administrations.
Working in batches, puree the soup in a food processor. Return the soup to the pot, season with salt and pepper and keep warm. In a saucepan, bring the remaining 1/4 cup of cream to a boil. Remove from the heat; whisk until frothy. Ladle the soup into bowls, top with the frothed cream, garnish with the dill and portobello gills and serve.
Cream of mushroom soup is a simple type of soup where a basic roux is thinned with cream or milk and then mushrooms or mushroom broth are added. In North America, it is a common canned condensed soup. Cream of mushroom soup is often used as a base ingredient in casseroles and comfort foods. This use is similar to that of a mushroom-flavored gravy.
Garlic soup is a type of soup using garlic as a main ingredient. In Spanish cuisine , sopa de ajo ('soup of garlic') is a traditional garlic soup made with bread and egg [ 1 ] poached in chicken broth, and laced with garlic [ 2 ] and sherry.
London particular is a thick soup of pureed (dry or split) peas and ham from England; purportedly it is named after the thick fogs of 19th-century London. Magiritsa soup is made in Greece and Cyprus using lamb offal. Maryland crab soup is made of vegetables, blue crab meat, and Old Bay Seasoning in a tomato base, from Maryland.
Yamaoka and Kurita take Nagahara to a Korean restaurant where they are served cooked garlic dishes. Yamaoka explains that while garlic restores the body, eating minced raw garlic kills intestinal bacteria and has the reverse effect. The restaurant chef then teaches Nagahara a simple way to make garlic soup.
It was filmed at the Gilroy Garlic Festival in Gilroy, California, as well as in other locations in Northern California.The director recommends that, when the film is shown, a toaster oven containing several heads of garlic be turned on in the rear of the theater, unbeknownst to the audience, with the intended result that approximately halfway through the showing the entire theater will be ...
"1985" is a song that was written and recorded by American pop-punk band SR-71 for their album Here We Go Again. Mitch Allan, SR-71's frontman, gave the song to pop-punk band Bowling for Soup, who recorded a cover version that reached number 23 on the US Billboard Hot 100 and was included on the band's album A Hangover You Don't Deserve.