Chas’ Recipe for Garlic Soup
Ingredients.
- A head (yes, a head, not a clove) of garlic for each diner
- A small onion, or half of a larger one. (You don’t want onion taking over the flavour)
- 2/3 tablespoonfuls of olive oil ( or the equivalent of goose fat if you can lay hands on it.)
- 1 tablespoonful of plain flour
- One and a half pints of good chicken stock (vary this according to the density of the soup you want. Start with a smaller quantity; you don’t want the soup to be too thin)
- 3 egg yolks
- 4 tablespoonfuls of red wine vinegar
Method
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- Peel all your garlic cloves (yes, it takes time but the end product is worth it!)
- Dice the onion.
- Sweat the garlic and onions gently in the olive oil/goose fat for about 5 minutes until they turn a light golden colour. Do not overheat!
- Add the flour and cook gently again for a further 5 minutes
- Add your chicken stock, stirring to keep the mixture from going lumpy.
- Bring to the boil and then reduce the heat as far as you can go. Some books will tell you to simmer for about half an hour, but personally I find that the longer the time and lower the temperature, the better the soup. A gentle hour’s simmering seems best to me.
- Now here you have to make a decision. Do you like your garlic soup smooth or as it comes? My own taste is to put the whole lot through a liquidiser and return to the pot.
- Ten minutes before you want to eat, re-heat gently the mixture.
- In a separate bowl whisk together your egg yolks and your vinegar, adding a warm ladle-full of the soup itself.
- Now add this egg/vinegar mix to the soup itself, stirring all the time. In a few minutes, the soup will acquire a beautiful creamy texture. (Do not overcook/overheat at this point or the mixture will begin to resemble scrambled eggs…) If the soup still looks too thin, take another 2 egg yolks, whisk them then add gently to the soup.
Voila, as Madame Magar would have said, the perfect Touraine!

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