God: "I looked for someone to take a stand for me, and stand in the gap" (Ezekiel 22:30)
God wants us to follow a recurring pattern of intense work and then rest, intense work and then rest, and so forth. Whatever view one takes of the Sabbath, surely the six days of work and the one day of rest embedded in the creation remain relevant in some sense. Any routine of life that is unsustainable long-term cannot be of God. He calls us to work. But he also calls us to rest, in order to work most fruitfully. What sets us apart is this. We rest, in order to work; we do not work, in order to rest. We who believe the gospel are not living for the weekend, but for The End. In the meantime, we figure out rhythms of life that make fruitful labor sustainable.
Ray Ortlund
Chicken Soup Avgolemono
0
(0)
CATEGORY
CUISINE
TAG
YIELD
Meats, Eggs
Greek
Soups, Greek, Usenet
4
Servings
INGREDIENTS
64
oz
Chicken broth (You can get away with instant broth, but make sure it is of good quality. I usually use Knorr Chicken Bouillon cubes)
4
tb
White rice (unconverted, not Uncle Ben's!!!)
2
lg
Eggs
1
Lemon
1/2
ts
Salt (or more to taste)
INSTRUCTIONS
Bring the broth to a boil and add the rice and salt. Let rice cook for
15-20 minutes. Remove pot from stove and let it cool for a while.
Separate the whites from the egg yolks, and beat the whites in a large
bowl, until they thicken a little. Add the yolks and the juice of the lemon
and beat until you get a uniform mixture.
Now carefully, using a ladle, pour some of the warm broth into the egg
mixture, while beating continuously. When your bowl is full, pour the
contents back into the remaining broth, and stir until you get a uniform
mixture.
Now serve and, I hope, enjoy!
NOTES:
* Greek style egg & lemon chicken soup -- Avgolemono in greek means egg
and lemon and is the most popular technique for preparing soup in Greece.
So much so, that unless stated otherwise, when one talks of soup, one means
avgolemono soup. What follows is a recipe for my favourite, chicken soup,
but feel free to substitute any kind of meat or fish broth for the chicken.
Yield: Serves four -hungry- people.
* This process of treating eggs is known in greek as avgokomma, and
describes both this process and what will happen if you are not very
careful, the egg will coagulate and spoil everything! In order to avoid
such an unfortunate occurrence, you must let the broth cool a little before
adding the egg. This can easily be done by starting to beat the eggs only
after you have removed the broth from the stove, thus giving time to the
broth to cool. However, if you're in a hurry, you can pour a small glass
of cold water into the broth (which will obviously make the soup more
diluted). The broth must be poured slowly into the egg and lemon mixture,
but the two must be blended quickly (use of an electric mixer is
recommended).
* The original recipe does not require beating the whites separately, so
you can simply beat the eggs whole until the whites blend with the yolks,
and then add the lemon. If you prepare the eggs this way, the soup will be
a little less smooth.
* The soup can be kept in the refrigerator for a day or two. Be careful
not to bring it to a boil when re-heating it, because the egg will
coagulate.
: Difficulty: moderate (handling of egg whites in soup takes experience).
: Time: 30 minutes.
: Precision: Approximate measurement OK.
: Kriton Kyrimis
: Princeton University, Computer Science Dept.
: princeton!tilt!kyrimis
: I reversed the polarity of the neutron flow...
: Copyright (C) 1986 USENET Community Trust
From Gemini's MASSIVE MealMaster collection at www.synapse.com/~gemini
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