Thread: Stone Soup
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Sheldon
 
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Default Stone Soup


Barscz Bialy (aka, Zurek)
(Polish Easter Soup)

This authentic Polish recipe was brought to the United States from
Krakow in the early 1900s by Agnes Kravitz, who settled in Northeastern
Pennsylvania and passed the "little bit of this, little bit of that"
recipe to her daughter Theodosia (Tess) Burke, who in turn passed the
love of it on to her own daughter in law, of Italian descent, Maria
Burke. Maria sent it to me, for which I shall always be grateful. It's
a rich and unusual soup--thickly white from milk and dark rye flour;
sour from fermenting the flour into traditional barscz kwaszony zytni
(the Russian kvass), tart from freshly grated horseradish, and highly
textured from chopped egg and smoked kielbasa and rye bread. Maria
says, "it's something you have to acquire a taste for, but once you do,
there's no substitute for it." As a converted addict, I agree. Serve
hot to 4-6 people on Easter morning...or whenever.


MAKING THE BARSCZ, 5-6 days before making the soup:
1/4 pound dark rye flour
4 cups warm water
Stir together in an ample container (ceramic is good) and set it aside
in a warm place, covered with a towel. I made mine in a big plastic
container, covered it with a potholder, and put it on the back of the
stove. The kitchen counter is also fine.) Stir once a day. The
fermentation and sour smell is a sign that it's getting good. After
making the soup, you can decant the clear liquid, refrigerate, and use
as a flavoring in other soups.
PREPARING THE CONDIMENTS, PER SERVING BOWL:

1 slice rye bread, torn into bits
1 hardboiled egg, chopped
1 4-inch piece of smoked kielbasa (Polish sausage), chopped
horseradish, freshly grated and mixed with a little vinegar
MAKING THE SOUP:

4 cups of water
1 egg
1 cup milk or buttermilk
1 cup Barscz--thoroughly mixed before measuring
salt and pepper
When you're ready to make the soup, bring a quart of water to a simmer
on the stove. Beat together the egg and milk, then slowly stir it into
the simmering pot. Turn up the heat a bit, let thicken, then slowly
pour in the barscz. Stir until it thickens to the consistency of watery
oatmeal or runny pea soup. Season well with salt and pepper. It should
smell sour.
FINAL ASSEMBLY:

When ready to serve, place the bread bits, chopped sausage and egg into
each bowl that you're serving. Ladle the Barscz soup over all, then
stir in horseradish to taste.
---

Sheldonski