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Borscht

A recipe for traditional cold beet soupBy Claudia Roden

 

Prep Time: 45 mins Dish Type: Soup

Cooking Time: 2 hrs Servings: 6

Holidays: Hanukkah, Pesach, Rosh Hashanah, Shabbat, Shavuot,

Yom HaAtzmaut, Yom Kippur 

Tags: ,

Ashkenazi

,

Classics

,

Eastern

European, traditional, Vegetarian

From The Book of Jewish Food, published by Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. Reprinted with permission.

This cool sweet-and-sour soup, which was particularly popular in Lithuania, has become one of the great Jewish

standbys of the restaurant trade. It is one of  my favorites.

Ingredients2 lbs (1 kg) raw beets

A little salt and pepperJuice of 1 lemon

2 Tablespoons sugar or to taste

6 peeled boiled potatoes (optional)

1 cup (250 ml) sour cream to pass around

DirectionsPeel the beets and dice them. If they are young, that is easy to do. If they are old and too hard to dice, simply

cut them in half and, when they have softened with boiling, lift them out, cut them up, and put them back in the

 pan. Put the beets in a pan with 9 cups (2 liters) of  water and salt and pepper and simmer for 1-1/2 hours.

Let the soup cool, then chill, covered, in the refrigerator. Add the lemon and sugar to taste before serving (these

could be added when the soup is hot, but it is mor e difficult to determine the intensity of the flavoring). Remove

some of the beet pieces with a slotted spoon if it seems like there are too many of them and keep them for a

salad.

Serve, if you like, with a boiled potato, putting one in each plate. Pass around the sour cream for all to help

themselves.

VARIATIONS:

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When the soup is served with meat to follow, and the sour cream cannot be added, it is usual to thicken it with

two egg yolks. Beat them in a bowl, add a little of the boiling soup, beat well, and pour into the pan, beating all

the time. Take off the heat at once, before the soup curdles.

There are dozens of different Russian and Ukrainian borschts. These are rich hot soups made with a number of 

ingredients, including meat, cabbage and potatoes, carrots, onions, celery and parsnips, sometimes spinach or 

sorrel, tomatoes or mushrooms, leeks, dried beans, apples, and dried fruit. The common ingredient, which gives

them their name and their color, is beets.

The Book of Jewish Food, by Claudia Roden. Copyright 1996 by Claudia Roden.

This recipe can be found at:

http://www.myjewishlearning.com/culture/2/Food/Ashkenazic_Cuisine/Poland_and_Russia/Borscht.shtml