Hill billi's Wife's Soup

 

List of 8 items

. 1-1/4 cups dry lentils

. 8 cups water (2 quarts)

. 4 carrots, peeled and sliced

. 3 or 4 celery stalks, peeled and sliced

. 1 large onion, peeled and sliced

. 4 bouillon cubes or 1 teaspoon salt

. 1 teaspoon garlic powder

. 1/4 teaspoon black pepper

list end

 

Dumplings

List of 6 items

. 2 tablespoons vegetable oil

. 1 egg or 3 tablespoons more milk (see note below)

. 1/2 cup milk

. 1-1/2 cups flour

. 1-1/2 teaspoons baking powder

. 1/2 teaspoon each salt & sugar

list end

 

Begin by making the soup. Rinse the lentils under running water. Then place 
them in a large pot and cover them with 2-quarts of water. Bring the mixture

to a boil and allow it to simmer over medium heat for about 20 minutes. The 
lentils will be almost tender. Add the vegetables, bouillon, garlic and black

pepper. Stir gently and allow the mixture to simmer for 20 minutes more. The 
vegetables and lentils will both be tender. Taste and add salt if you think

it needs it.

 

Now look over the amount of liquid in the pot. Add enough extra water so that 
all of the solids are well covered with liquid. They don't need to be swimming

over their heads, but they should be wading up to their waists. Bring the 
mixture to a slow lazy simmer, not a boil. If the soup boils it will 
disintegrate

the dumplings instead of cooking them up into fluffy, glimmering jewels.

 

While the soup is simmering, prepare your dumplings. Get out a big bowl. In it 
combine the oil, egg and milk until they are well blended. Add the flour,

baking powder, salt and sugar. Mix it up to a stiff batter, like for drop 
biscuits. Set it aside until you need it.

 

When the soup is simmering slowly, it is time to drop in the dumplings. Take 
small rounded scoops of the dough with teaspoon and drop them into the simmering

broth, on top of the vegetables. Keep dropping the dough blobs until you have 
scraped the bowl clean. Now put the lid, or a handy pizza pan over the pot

and let it simmer for 20 minutes. Do not peak. Let the dumplings simmer covered 
for the full 20 minutes. The thing about dumplings is that they cook partly

from the boiling soup and partly from the steam. The steam is what makes them 
fluffy, and the simmering broth is what cooks them all the way through. If

you peak while the dumplings are cooking then they will turn into lumpy, doughy 
rocks. When the time is up, serve the soup and dumplings as soon as possible.

The soup will be thickened and the dumplings will be light and fluffy.

 

Makes between 4 and 6 servings.

 

NOTE: If you don't have any extra eggs, then leave out the egg and replace it 
with 3 tablespoons of milk. The dumplings will still be good.

 


~To get something you never had, you have to do something you never did.
-Sugar

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