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The sauerkraut variant of cabbage soup is known to Russians as "sour shchi" ("кислые щи"), as opposed to fresh cabbage shchi. An idiom in Russian, " Профессор кислых щей " ("sour shchi professor"), is used to express an ironic or humorous attitude toward a person who makes a pretense of having considerable knowledge.
The earliest known cookery manuscript in the English language, The Forme of Cury, written by the court chefs of King Richard II, [6] contains several pottage recipes including one made from cabbage, ham, onions and leeks. [7] Google Books and Internet Archive. A slightly later manuscript from the 1430s is called Potage Dyvers ("Various Pottages ...
Okroshka is a cold soup of Russian origin. Partan bree is a Scottish soup made with crabmeat and rice. [21] Patsás is made with tripe in Greece. It is also cooked in Turkey and the Balkan Peninsula. "Peasants' soup" is a catch-all term for soup made by combining a diverse—and often eclectic—assortment of ingredients.
The Bible [a] is a collection of religious texts and scriptures that are held to be sacred in Christianity, and partly in Judaism, Samaritanism, Islam, the Baháʼí Faith, and other Abrahamic religions. The Bible is an anthology (a compilation of texts of a variety of forms) originally written in Hebrew, Aramaic, and Koine Greek. The texts ...
Vegetable soup can be prepared as a stock- or cream-based soup. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] Basic ingredients in addition to vegetables can include beef, fish, beans and legumes, grains, tofu, noodles and pasta, vegetable broth or stock, milk, cream, water, olive or vegetable oil, seasonings, salt and pepper, among myriad others.
There's everything from Egg Roll Soup and Stuffed Cabbage Soup to heartier, meat-based soups like Ground Beef Cabbage Soup and Italian White Bean, Cabbage and Sausage Soup.
John Speed's Genealogies recorded in the Sacred Scriptures (1611), bound into first King James Bible in quarto size (1612). The title of the first edition of the translation, in Early Modern English, was "THE HOLY BIBLE, Conteyning the Old Teſtament, AND THE NEW: Newly Tranſlated out of the Originall tongues: & with the former Tranſlations diligently compared and reuiſed, by his Maiesties ...
John 13 is the thirteenth chapter of the Gospel of John in the New Testament of the Christian Bible. The "latter half", [ 1 ] "second book", [ 2 ] or "closing part" [ 3 ] of John's Gospel commences with this chapter.