Soup
Chicken Soup with Miniature Leek-Chive Matzo Balls
For bigger matzo balls in this soup form mixture into 12 rounds and cook them for one hour ten minutes.
Mushroom Barley Soup
Not so many years ago dried "exotic" or wild mushrooms could be found only in fancy specialty shops, but no longer. Many good urban and suburban supermarkets now carry little packages of various varieties. And Asian markets are a great source for dried shiitake, also known as Chinese black mushrooms. The dried mushrooms are an optional addition to this soup, but they do add a deeper, woodsier flavor.
Vietnamese Beef Soup
Called pho in Vietnam, this unusual soup is a wonderful party centerpiece dish for an informal gathering. Start out by supplying everyone with a large soup bowl and a ladle. Place the soup tureen in the middle of the table. Have each guest take a generous helping of noodles first, then some meat and broth. Each serving is topped off with shredded lettuce, sliced green onion and a squeeze of lemon juice.
Lentil Soup
By Colette Rossant
Buttermilk Soup with Cucumber and Crab
Low-fat buttermilk and nonfat yogurt provide the base in a refreshing, tangy soup.
Green Pea Vichyssoise
Chef Louis Diat created this famous cold soup (without the peas, which are a nice addition) during his tenure at The Ritz-Carlton Hotel in New York. Diat named the soup after Vichy, the resort town near his boyhood home in France. Hot potato-leek soup had been popular with French chefs for centuries, but Diat-inspired by his own childhood habit of adding milk to hot soup to cool it of-served his version cold. Exactly when vichyssoise first appeared on the hotel menu is unclear, but British food writer Elizabeth David claimed that it debuted in 1917.
Posole with Bacon
When stewed, the dried corn kernels sold as "posole" or "hominy" expand and become tender. At Cafe San Estevan, in Santa Fe, New Mexico, chef Esteven Garcia makes posole as a mild, brothy side dish, unlike the heartier and spicier stew type.
By Esteven Garcia
Tomato Soup with Poached Eggs and Crispy Croutons
Nourishing and quick to make, this one-pot meal is perfect for a workday supper. Make the tomato soup ahead, then reheat it and poach the eggs just before serving. For this dish, I like to use medium eggs or, for an even more special touch, quail eggs if I can get them.
By Marie Simmons
Asparagus Bisque with Curry and Crème Fraîche
The pink-peppercorn garnish gives this chilled soup a pretty spring look.
Chilled Corn and Buttermilk Soup
Simmering cobs in the corn-broth mixture gives the soup extra flavor.