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Garbure - {French}

This classic peasant soup from the Bearn and Gascon regions of France is well storied -- witness Gautier's opening chapter of Capitaine Fracasse. Indeed, its very name is controversial -- some say it came from the Spanish garbias, for "stew." Others from the Basque garbe, for "sheaf" or "bunch," since it's essentially a bunch of vegetables. Although Garbure was beneath Escoffier's notice (despite cataloging nearly 3000 French recipes), very fancy recipes for it abound in our rich times. Even so, I prefer Julia Child's simple recipe, which captures the robustness and goodness of the dish -- and I have adapted it above. Traditionally it should include a chunk of salt pork, or lard rance -- and it should be finished with a chunk of preserved meat, preferably the Bearn confit d'oie, or potted goose (salted then simmered for hours in its own fat). It's not a pretty soup, but it's full of flavors and textures, very satisfying.

Courses: Soup
Serves: 8 people

Recipe Ingredients

14 cups 3318mlWater - (3 1/2 quarts)
4 cups 948mlQuartered potatoes
1 1/2 lbs 681g / 24ozSalt pork
  (can also use bacon or country ham)
2 lbs 908g / 32ozCabbage - roughly chopped
4   Garlic cloves - pressed or crushed
2   Onions - studded with
2   Whole cloves - each
2   Carrots - peeled, quartered
2   Turnips - peeled, quartered
2 cups 320g / 11ozFresh white beans (lima beans are fine)
6   Parsley sprigs - tied with
1   Bay leaf
8   Crushed peppercorns (or hot chili pepper)
1/2 teaspoon 2.5mlThyme
1/2 teaspoon 2.5mlMarjoram
1/2 lb 227g / 8ozConfit d'oie - (to 1 lb)
  (ok shoot me--I tried it with store-bought
  Potted meat and it wasn't bad)
  Salt - to taste
  Sliced bread - for garnish

Recipe Instructions

For the garnish: You can place the sliced bread in a tureen and ladle garbure over it; you can saute it in the skimmed fat and place on top; or you can brown it in the oven with confit and serve separately.

Bring the water, salt pork, and potatoes to a boil in a large soup pot. Add the cabbage and all the remaining ingredients except the confit and the salt. Simmer, partially covered, for 2 hours.

Discard the parsley bundle and remove the cloves from the onions. Take out the meat and slice it into serving pieces. (Traditionally this is served on the side, but can be returned to the pot.) Stir in the confit. Salt to taste. Skim off the fat.

Serve in a tureen or ladle into soup plates -- accompanying with bread as suggested under the recipe garnish.

Serve hot as a meal to 8 people with lots of dense country bread.

Source:
Soup Of The Evening...Beautiful Soup at http://www.soupsong.com

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