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Knoephla / Knöpfle Knoephla soup. Knoephla, also spelled knephla / ˈ n ɛ f l ə /, is a type of dumpling, commonly used in soups in the United States. The word is related to the modern German dialect word Knöpfle, meaning little knob/button. Traditional knoephla soup is a thick chicken and potato soup, almost to the point of being a stew.
Leberknödel are large dumplings made of ground liver and a batter made of bread soaked in milk and seasoned with nutmeg or other spices, boiled in beef stock and served as a soup. Bread dumplings ( Semmelknödel ) are made with dried white bread, milk and egg yolks.
Soup A creamy soup made from asparagus. Beer soup [4] Soup In medieval Europe, it was served as a breakfast soup, [5] sometimes poured over bread. Pictured is beer cheese soup. Brain soup [3] Soup Bread soup [3] Soup A simple soup that mainly consists of stale bread; variations exist in many countries, and it is often eaten during Lent. Bread ...
Knoephla – Dumpling often used in soup Kopytka – Potato dumpling in Polish, Belarusian, and Lithuanian cuisines Kozhukkattai – Dumpling made from rice flour Pages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets
The great importance of Spätzle for the Swabian kitchen is proofed by the novel Die Geschichte von den sieben Schwaben (The history of the seven Swabians), published in 1827, according to which in Swabia exists the tradition "of eating five times a day, which means five times soup, and two times the soup is accompanied by Knöpfle or Spätzle".
Condensed soup (invented in 1897 by John T. Dorrance, a chemist with the Campbell Soup Company [10] [11]) allows soup to be packaged into a smaller can and sold at a lower price than other canned soups. The soup is usually doubled in volume by adding a "can full" of water or milk, about 10 US fluid ounces (300 ml).
Minnesotan soups include knoephla, which is popular in Western Minnesota and booyah, which is a thick stew usually requiring up to two days and multiple cooks to prepare; it is cooked in specially designed "booyah kettles" and traditionally was meant to serve hundreds to thousands of people, but in contemporary Minnesotan usage, booyah has ...
Rivels are an ingredient in some types of soup, often a chicken-based soup (archetypically chicken corn soup) or potato soup. [1] Rivels are common in Pennsylvania Dutch cooking. They are composed primarily of egg and wheat flour, which is cut together to create small dumpling-like pieces. [2] [3]