Search
Recommended Sites
Related Links






   

Informative Articles

Barbecue Basics for all
Since the Stone Age, man has been perfecting the art of cooking using a direct flame. If you were to ask someone about the history of barbecue, you would most likely get a response similar to the statement above. However that would not be quite...

PICKLES
The true history of the pickle is somewhat of a mystery. Although some believe it dates back to India 4030 years ago. The pickle has been mentioned in the Bible by Jesus and in the Old Testament books Numbers and Isaiah. Napoleon valued its health...

Properly Season Your Cast Iron Cookware
Cast iron cookware is an old fashioned form of cookware that still has a place in today's world of modern cooking. You will find all types of cast iron pots, pans, skillets, tea kettles, and even large dutch ovens. Those who routinely use cast iron...

Regional Cuisine - Down Home Southern Cooking
I grew up in New England, the home of 'plain cooking', where corn on the cob is served as is with a slab of butter and a sprinkle of salt and pepper. We boil salted meats with vegetables and call it - well, a boiled dinner. Our clam chowder is...

Scottish Cuisine: Haggis
Haggis is a traditional Scottish highland dish that resembles, in some senses, a rather rough sausage. It is the national dish of Scotland, and Robert Burns, the great Scots poet, who wrote the famous "Address to a Haggis" called the haggis the...

 
Fragrant Hammelsuppe


Did you know that zesty mutton soup is a well-loved culinary concoction in both European and Asian cultures? All over the globe, be it in the East or West, cooking maestros have long latched on to the potent taste punch that a simple bowl of mutton soup packs. The unmistakably rich muttony flavour then that permeates throughout the broth is pure dynamite when masterfully mingled with egg, cream and pungent spices in the traditional German style, so savour this simple yet satisfying meat delicacy for yourself today!
Hammelsuppe (Mutton Soup)
600g mutton
1t salt
1 onion
1/2 celariac (celery root)
1 leek
1 carrot
3 medium carrots
4t fine farina
1 egg yolk
2t cream (or milk)
Yields 6 Servings
Cut well-washed pieces of mutton into bite-sized pieces. Place in water (1 1/2 liters) with salt and bring to a boil. Add the celeriac and carrots, finely-cut onion, and then put in cubed potatoes. Cook for 1 1/2 hours. If the potatoes do not fall apart, run them through a sieve.
Half an hour before the soup is finished, sprinkle in the farina. When fully cooked, put walnut-sized pieces of potato dumpling into the soup. After ten minutes, stir in chopped parsley, nutmeg, then add in the egg yolk that was beaten into the cream or milk.

About The Author

Luke Indran is a professional food and recipe addict who actively balances his obsession with eating with his fanaticism for exercise and healthy living. If you're after delicious recipes that stir your senses, then head on over to Luke's mega website at http://www.recipemecca.com/ for the yummiest recipes anywhere presented in a step-by-step format anyone can follow easily!
recipes@recipemecca.com

Sign up for PayPal and start accepting credit card payments instantly.