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Sorrel soup

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Type
  
Soup

Serving temperature
  
Hot or cold

Region or state
  
Eastern Europe

Sorrel soup everydayrussiancomwpcontentuploads200907Rus

Alternative names
  
Green borscht, green shchi, green soup

Main ingredients
  
Water or broth, sorrel leaves, and salt

Similar
  
Shchi, Borscht, Sorrel, Cucumber soup, Rassolnik

How to make sorrel soup


Sorrel soup is a soup made from water or broth, sorrel leaves, and salt. Varieties of the same soup include spinach, garden orache, chard, nettle, and occasionally dandelion, goutweed or ramsons, together with or instead of sorrel. It is known in Ashkenazi Jewish, Belarusian, Estonian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Romanian, Polish, Russian and Ukrainian cuisines. Its other English names, spelled variously schav, shchav, shav, or shtshav, are borrowed from the Yiddish language, which in turn derives from Polish szczaw. The latter together with its Eastern Slavic cognates (Belarusian шчаўе, Russian and Ukrainian щавель, shchavel) comes ultimately from the Proto-Slavic ščаvь for sorrel. Due to its commonness as a soup in Eastern European cuisines, it is often called green borscht, as a cousin of the standard, reddish-purple beetroot borscht. In Russia, where shchi (along with or rather than borscht) has been the staple soup, sorrel soup is also called green shchi. In old Russian cookbooks it was called simply green soup.

Contents

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Sorrel soup usually includes further ingredients such as egg yolks or whole eggs (hard boiled or scrambled), potatoes, carrots, parsley root, and rice. A variety of Ukrainian green borscht also includes beetroot. In Polish, Ukrainian, and Russian cuisines, sorrel soup may be prepared using any kind of broth instead of water. It is usually garnished with smetana (an Eastern European variety of sour cream). It can also be a kosher food. It may be served either hot or chilled.

Sorrel soup Sorrel Soup Sauerampfer Suppe Kitchen Frau

Sorrel soup is characterized by its sour taste due to oxalic acid (called "sorrel acid" in Slavic languages) present in sorrel. The "sorrel-sour" taste may disappear when sour cream is added, as the oxalic acid reacts with calcium and casein.

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References

Sorrel soup Wikipedia


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