Here you will find good, culturally literate recipes for broths. You may object: why do you need recipes for broths at all, because cooking them is a mere trifle, and everyone knows how to cook it correctly. Well, read the recipes collected in this section, and you will see that cooking broths at home is not as elementary a procedure as it may seem at first glance. You need to know some secrets to cook a really excellent broth. So you will find these secrets in the recipes presented below.
Pea soup has been known for a long time. In each country, pea soup is prepared in its own way. I’m writing a recipe for Canadian pea soup. This recipe is very popular in Quebec. Only yellow polka dots are used.
The originality of this soup is that tomatoes are used in the soup. The taste is bright, not whipped, very rich. Original spices give a unique flavor that emphasizes the aroma of mushrooms. Try this!
This is a diet soup, without re-frying, without saturated meat or chicken broth. Only light vegetable broth, steamed rice, squid with protein and minerals and, of course, unsurpassed soy sauce.
This is a Japanese dish. It consists of Chinese-style wheat noodles served in meat or (sometimes) fish broth, often seasoned with soy sauce or miso, and using fillings such as sliced pork, dried seaweed (nori), menma and green onions. Almost every region of Japan has its own variations of rain, ranging from pork bone broth.
This recipe contains apples, and the light sweetness that is inherent in the Armenian soup of dried plums, and the aroma of meat. But in general – a wonderful symphony of tastes and aromas and, in my opinion and taste, perfect harmony.
This recipe makes a hearty, thick broth, with an incomparable taste. Be sure to try, and you’ll thank me a hundred times, I’m sure!!! One condition is that the ingredients do not change!