Recipes |
SOUPS:
Chicken Soup With
Lemon
(Hamoud)
Hamoud is a very popular Egyptian
soup. It's usually used as a sauce for rice, and for this reason
utilizes the parts of the chicken that Westerners often discard.
However, it is often served as a straight soup, sometimes fulfilling
both functions in one meal. The most important ingredients are
chicken, celery, lemon and garlic, but other vegetables are often
added when available.
Carcass and giblets of 1 chicken
3-4 stalks celery with leaves, sliced
2 leeks, sliced (optional)
2-3 cloves garlic, slivered
Salt and black pepper
Juice of 1-2 lemons
2-3 zucchini, sliced (optional)
3/4 cup rice, boiled (measure uncooked)
Collect a chicken carcass, giblets, and bones to make a rich
stock. The giblets must be very fresh, and the bones and carcass
those of a chicken prepared the same day, otherwise any meat
on them will be hard and dry, and the marrow in the bones very
stale. Crack the bones slightly to release more flavor.
There are two ways of preparing this soup. The stock can be
made beforehand and strained through a fine sieve, the vegetables
then being cooked in the clear broth. However, I usually cook
all the ingredients together in the following manner.
Put the carcass, bones, and giblets in a large pan. Add the
celery and, if you like, sliced leeks. (The basic recipe is made
with celery only.) Add the slivered garlic and cover with about
9 cups water. Bring to the boil and skim the scum off the surface.
Season with salt and pepper, and squeeze the juice of 1 lemon
into the pan. Simmer gently for about 1 hour. Remove the pan
from the heat and discard all the bones, leaving only pieces
of chicken in the broth. Add the zucchini, if using them, and
cook for 15 minutes longer. Adjust seasoning, adding more lemon
juice if necessary. The soup should have a distinctly lemony
tang. It is this and the taste of garlic which give it an Oriental
flavor
Add cooked rice just before serving so as not to give it time
to become sodden and mushy.
Serves 6.
From "A Book of Middle Eastern Food"
by Claudia Roden
Say Bismillah and eat!
Recipes

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