Avgolemono Soup
When we lived on the East side of Baltimore, our favorite late dinner was the thick, bottom of the pot Avgolemono soup at the legendary Ikaros restaurant on Eastern Avenue. Since moving to the suburbs, we don't get there as often as we'd like so I turned to the cookbook I got one year at the Greek Festival at the Greek Orthodox cathedral. But being me, the laborious stock making, egg separating process was no match for my laziness and this recipe was born.Ingredients:
- 2 Lemons
- 4 Eggs
- 3 cups Chicken stock (canned or home-made)
- 1 Carrot
- 1-2 cups Cooked rice
- 1-2 cups Cooked chicken (e.g., leftover rotisserie chicken)
- Salt & pepper (to taste)
- Put chicken stock on to BOIL and then REDUCE to a simmer.
- GRATE the carrot and CUBE the chicken.
- ZEST both lemons and then JUICE them.
- BEAT the eggs in a large bowl until they are foamy.
- ADD the lemon juice and half the lemon zest and beat to combine.
- ADD ~½ cup of the hot stock to the eggs SLOWLY and BEAT as you ADD it.
- REPEAT with another ½ cup of stock.
- ADD the egg/lemon/stock mixture to the simmering stock.
- DO NOT BOIL SOUP AFTER THIS POINT!
- ADD chicken, rice, and carrot to the soup and simmer for 15-20 minutes.
- After the soup has simmered for a while, taste the soup (Waiter! Taste my soup!) and add salt, pepper, and additional lemon zest as needed.
This recipe is very forgiving. The critical part is the beaten eggs with lemon juice, tempered with the hot stock. Once you get that part done, the rest is up for interpretation. The original Ikaros soup doesn't actually have the carrot but our next favorite Greek restaurant (Dmitri's on Frederick Road in Catonsville) makes it that way and we like it. Many places use orzo instead of rice. In an attempt to make us appear "healthy" I stopped buying white rice and I always seem to have leftover brown rice pilaf in the fridge, which works really well. The first time I made this it was a desperation dinner made with canned stock, leftover Thanksgiving turkey, wild rice pilaf, and RealLemon bottled lemon juice. It was delicious.
NOTE: If you are lucky enough to have some leftover, you probably want to add some more stock before you put it in the fridge. Otherwise it will seize up and assume the consistency of wallpaper paste.
UPDATE: I have started making this soup in the slow cooker. It is much easier to control the temp to keep it from simmering too hard and breaking the eggs after you add them. Set the slow cooker to high and get the stock hot (or boil it on the stove and add it to the slow cooker already hot).
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