Bread soup

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Bread soup is a simple soup that mainly consists of bread, usually stale bread. Variations exist in many countries, and it is often eaten during Lent. Both brown and white bread may be used.[1][2][3][4]

TypeSoup
CourseAny, sometimes appetizer
Place of originUnknown, possibly Central Europe; ancient/universal
Serving temperatureHot
Quick facts Type, Course ...
Bread soup
German-style bread soup called Brotsuppe, served with herbs in a crock (2008)
TypeSoup
CourseAny, sometimes appetizer
Place of originUnknown, possibly Central Europe; ancient/universal
Serving temperatureHot
Main ingredientsStale bread, broth, marjoram and other herbs, onions, spices, sometimes cream
VariationsMillefanti
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Bread soup with pureed brown bread, wine and cream from Vienna, Austria

The basis for bread soup is traditionally either meat soup or vegetable broth.[5][6][7] Less often it is made with fish broth.[8] To prepare the dish, the bread is either cut into pieces and put directly into the broth, or it is cooked with onions and spices in a broth and then pureed.

Some versions add bacon, egg and cream, others liver sausage or blood sausage. A common version of the dish[where?] is prepared from the broth remaining from the steeping of sausage during home butchering of pigs. The soup is then traditionally seasoned with marjoram. An Italian variation, millefanti, also uses egg and Parmesan cheese. Some fine variations contain wine.[9] Other more rustic versions contain malt or beer.[10][11]

Brewis

Brewis is a type of bread soup associated with the cuisine of Northern England. Originally a term for bread soaked in meat drippings, brewis came to be used for broths thickened with bread (or sometimes oatmeal).[12] A similar dish in the cuisine of New England was made by softening rye bread or Boston brown bread with milk and maple syrup.[13]

Varieties

See also

References

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