BOOKBINDER RED SNAPPER SOUP
This soup has been served at the Drake Hotel in Chicago since it opened for business in 1933. The Drake adapted it from the snapper soup from Bookbinders restaurant in Philadelphia, using RED snapper instead of turtle. Recipe is from the Chicago Tribune Good Eating Cookbook.
Provided by Hey Jude
Categories Lunch/Snacks
Time 1h5m
Yield 8 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 22
Steps:
- To make soup base, heat olive oil in a Dutch oven over medium heat; add carrots, celery, garlic, onion, red bell pepper, and green bell pepper; cook, stirring frequently, about 4 minutes.
- Stir in peppercorns, bay leaf, tomato paste, thyme, rosemary, and cilantro; cook 2 minutes and add 7 cups of the vegetable broth; heat to boil.
- Melt butter in a small saucepan; add flour and cornstarch, cook, stirring constantly, 4 to 5 minutes.
- Slowly whisk in remaining 1 cup broth until mixture is smooth; add mixture to soup base; cover and simmer over medium-low heat 20 minutes.
- Taste and adjust seasonings.
- Strain through a fine-mesh sieve or cheesecloth; discard solids and return broth to pot.
- To make snapper, heat water to boil in a medium-sized saucepan over medium-high heat; add onions and celery; blanch until soft, about 3 minutes.
- Remove with a slotted spoon and add to broth.
- Boil fish in the same water until cooked through.
- Remove fish from water; flake very finely with a fork.
- Stir snapper and sherry, if desired, into soup base; heat through.
VINCENT PRICE BOOKBINDER SNAPPER SOUP
Here is the Bookbinder Snapper Soup recipe from Vincent Price's "A Treasury of Great Recipes" (1965). It differs from the Chicago Tribune Good Eating Cookbook version in various ways, most notably by being the original and uses snapping turtle. Mr. Price notes: "...you can make a sort of 'mock snapper' soup using a red snapper." Instructions on how to make the subsitution are in the recipe. This is an old fashioned recipe, and doesn't take many shortcuts. Info on the "Old Original Bookbinders" Philadelphia restaurant is available on Wikipedia.
Provided by Julesong
Categories < 4 Hours
Time 2h50m
Yield 12 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 18
Steps:
- In a large soup kettle cook the frozen snapper (in the shell) in the 3 quarts water for 90 minutes.
- When the turtle meat is tender, remove the snapper from the pot and allow to cool. Pick the meat from the shell, keep warm, and set aside.
- Put the turtle shell back into the snapper stock, along with the beef extract, beef stock, carrots, celery, onion, marjoram, salt and pepper (to taste), tomato puree, Tabasco, bay leaf, and garlic.
- Simmer for 30 minutes and strain.
- In a separate container mix together the melted butter with the flour. Beat the butter/flour mixture into the soup until smooth.
- Cut the snapper meat into small pieces and add to soup. Add the chopped hard-cooked eggs to soup. Stir in the sherry and sliced lemons. Let soup simmer for an additional 30 minutes.
- Presentation: Serve soup in a tureen. Into each soup bowl ladle some of the snapper meat, a couple slices lemon, and some soup. Pass a small pitcher of sherry and let each person add some to his/her soup according to taste.
- Using red snapper instead of turtle: Cook the skin, head, and bones of the fish with some of the flesh for 90 minutes in 3 quarts of water. Proceed with recipe. Dice about a cup and a half of the snapper fillets and add them to the soup for the last half hour.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 280.7, Fat 9.9, SaturatedFat 5.6, Cholesterol 73.3, Sodium 888, Carbohydrate 24.6, Fiber 2.9, Sugar 4.8, Protein 7.4
BOOKBINDER'S PHILADELPHIA SNAPPER SOUP
Pilfered this recipe from recipe gold mine. Can't wait to try it (well, the politically correct version at least. I doubt I could get my hands on some turtle meat anyway!)Here's their description "This is a traditional dish served at the famous Bookbinder's Restaurant in Philadelphia. It should be made with turtle meat, but you can substitute lean stewing beef. It will taste the same." P.S. I've had this at this restaurant many times in the restaurant's previous life (closed and re-opened again recently) and this is one of my two fav's from this restaurant. The recipe didn't say how many it served, so I guessed!
Provided by CHRISSYG
Time 5h
Yield 8-10 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 19
Steps:
- Place turtle or beef in stock pot with 1 1/2 quarts water. Bring to a boil. Skim during cooking. Simmer for 2 hours or until meat is tender.
- Strain meat from stock. Dice meat into 1/4 inch pieces. Set both aside.
- Cook vegetables in butter until onions are translucent. Add beef stock.
- In a small bowl, mix 1/4 cup water into paprika and flour until smooth. Add tomato purée and spices.
- Stir into beef stock until well blended. Bring to a boil; reduce heat, cover and simmer for 2 to 2 1/2 hours.
- Strain soup.
- Place vegetables into food processor or blender and purée.
- Mix cornstarch with remaining water and blend until smooth. Add to soup and cook 15 minutes, stirring, until stock is thickened.
- Add meat and vegetable purée.
- Remove from direct heat. Add sherry right before serving.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 169.4, Fat 6.5, SaturatedFat 3.9, Cholesterol 43.6, Sodium 636, Carbohydrate 11.3, Fiber 0.9, Sugar 2.2, Protein 13.7
SNAPPER SOUP
Snapping turtles were once prized for their meat. From the Pennsylvania Dutch chapter of the United States Regional Cookbook, Culinary Arts Institute of Chicago 1947. If you don't have access to turtle meat, feel free to sub chicken.
Provided by Molly53
Categories Wild Game
Time 3h40m
Yield 12 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 18
Steps:
- Have the butcher break the veal knuckles into pieces.
- Place in a roasting pan with chicken fat, onions, celery, carrots, thyme, marjoram, cloves, bay leaf, salt and pepper.
- Bake in an oven preheated to 400F until brown.
- Remove from oven and add flour, mixing well and cook for an additional 30 minutes.
- Pour browned mixture into a large soup kettle; add broth and tomatoes and simmer for 3 hours.
- Combine meat with 1 cup sherry, salt, Tabasco and lemon; simmer 10 minutes.
- Strain soup and combine the two mixtures.
- Add egg, remaining sherry and serve at once.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 399.4, Fat 18.5, SaturatedFat 8.7, Cholesterol 37, Sodium 603.7, Carbohydrate 18.5, Fiber 1.4, Sugar 4.2, Protein 4.3
VINCENT PRICE CAESAR SALAD
Mr. Price's "Treasury of Great Recipes" is a wonderful cookbook that I'm privileged to have on my shelf! The style of recipe format is rather different from what we're used to these days, so I'm translating for a more modern audience. Posted by request. Times do not include overnight chilling, but do include chilling for the lettuce.
Provided by Julesong
Categories Vegetable
Time 1h15m
Yield 6 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 13
Steps:
- Night before serving (or 8 hours before): crush the garlic and add into the olive oil, then chill overnight in glass container in refrigerator.
- About an hour before serving: tear the leaves from the lettuce, wash well, and dry thoroughly (a salad spinner works well); chill in refrigerator.
- When ready to make salad: strain and remove the garlic from the infused chilled olive oil.
- Trim the crusts from the stale bread, cut into cubes, and brown them by sautéing over medium heat in 1/4 cup of the garlic-infused olive oil, turning them to brown on all sides; drain on paper towels and set aside.
- Pour the remaining infused oil into a jar and add the cayenne, Tabasco, sugar, and anchovies (which Mr Vincent says are optional, but you shouldn't try to make real Caesar dressing without them), cover with lid, and shake well to mix.
- Break the chilled lettuce leaves into pieces and place in a large bowl; sprinkle the lettuce with the pepper and salt, then pour the olive oil mixture over and mix to thoroughly coat the leaves.
- Put water in a pot and bring to a full boil, then take the egg and boil it for 1 minute; remove, crack the shell, and drop it into the salad.
- Sprinkle the lemon juice over the egg in the salad and then gently stir the egg into the leaves- it will come to have a creamy appearance.
- Presentation: when ready to serve the salad, sprinkle the Parmesan cheese over it and then the croutons, then toss lightly to mix and serve immediately.
- Great with garlic bread!
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