Apparently, no one in this small town stocks escarole and most people I've asked have never even heard of it. I've had to get it special ordered. Is this soup really that uncommon?
I caught some kind of virus while traveling for the Thanksgiving holiday and thought I'd make some of this. Escarole soup is high in vitamins A and K and is prepared with a generous quantity of garlic. It's really good for you when you're sick.
Here in Spain is very common the escarole as component for green salad, often as replacement for lettuce.
I found escarole more tasty than lettuce. But here is not a common ingredient to cooking soups. http://verduras.consumer.es/documentos/ ... /intro.php
I can't say I've ever heard of it unless it's known by other names.
Anyway, thanks for that, I'm a lover of soups as a quick and easy way to satisfy hunger pangs. My lunch during the week is a bowl of soup and some sandwich crackers.
I've often found that even if the soup doesn't have any medicinal qualities, such as being particarly good for you or good for some ailment like colds and chicken soup, there's nothing like a good not soup to help you feel better.
Not canned but I saw something similar in Krogers a while back... Italian Wedding Soup... it would depend on what yu put in the soup as to how close that is. You can get the tortellini at any town over 40,000 people... several brands dried and just refigerated... Unless you use kale or something odd everything else is there...
If you use tomato stock... and tomato paste I recommend cooking the tomato paste innnn a skillet with a few mashed garlic cloves and a little olive oil for a few moments...