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Title: Iroquois Soup From Loren Martin
Categories: Amerind Soup Fish Corn Mushroom
Yield: 4 Servings

4 Large mushrooms, sliced
2 10 1/2 oz cans beef consomme
2tbYellow corn meal
2tbMinced parsley
1clGarlic, crushed
1/2tsBasil
1 Onion, thinly sliced
  Fresh ground pepper, dash
1/4tsSalt
  Haddock fillets, 12 oz
10ozBaby lima beans
1/3cDry sherry (optional)

Place the mushrooms, consomme, corn meal, parsley, garlic, basil, onion, pepper and salt in a large saucepan, and simmer, uncovered, for 10 minutes. Add haddock, lima beans, and sherry and simmer 20 minutes, stirring occasionally, breaking haddock into bite-sized pieces. Serve hot.

The Iroquois were blessed with clear, cool lakes and sparkling streams, and both served up an abundance of fish. Fish soup, or u'nega'gei, as the Iroquois called it, was a favorite. One early recipe is described, "Fish of any kind is boiled in a pot with a quantity of water. It is then removed and coarse corn siftings stirred in to make a soup of suitable consistency." When wild onions and greens were available, they were usually tossed into the soup pot, adding both color and flavor.

From: The Art of American Indian Cooking by Yeffe Kimball and Jean Anderson, Avon Books, New York, NY, 1965.

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