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Jessie and Lennie Ware’s Chicken Soup with Matzo Balls

by Jessie Ware, Lennie Ware from Table Manners: The Cookbook

Serves 6

A Jewish family classic from the Table Manners team, this chicken soup with light, fluffy matzo balls is a comforting and restorative supper.

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Table Manners

Jessie Ware, Lennie Ware

Table Manners: The Cookbook

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Introduction

Chicken Soup

Every Jewish family thinks their mother’s chicken soup is the best. In emergencies, I have been known to send my soup across London in a taxi, because this ‘Jewish penicillin’ most definitely has healing qualities.

Reminiscent of Friday nights spent with family when I was a girl, the fragrance of the simmering soup is delicious. Chicken soup is synonymous with every Jewish household, and is one of the things that makes me most proud to be Jewish.

Serve with matzo crackers and challah bread.

Matzo Balls

In the words of Marilyn Monroe: ‘Isn’t there any other part of the matzo you can eat?’

It has taken me ages to achieve light fluffy matzo balls, but I think after 40-odd years of making them I have finally managed it. Of course, you can cheat and use the ready-made packets, which are sometimes sold under the name ‘kneidl’.

Matzo balls are very divisive: some prefer them fluffy like clouds, some prefer them dense like bullets. Some have them in the soup, others save them till after. But if you start by saying ‘I’ll only have one’ you will always submit to the second. Delicious and crucial to Chicken Soup.

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Ingredients

For the Chicken Soup:
2kgchicken thighs and legs
5large onions, skins left on, halved, cutting off the rooty bit
8carrots, sliced about 2–3cm thick
4celery sticks, with leaves, halved
1leek, halved
½swede
2 tbspTelma Chicken Soup Mix (available from a kosher shop or online), or 2 good quality chicken stock cubes
1 tspwhole black peppercorns
1 tspsalt
For the Matzo Balls:
100gmedium matzo meal
1 tspbaking powder
pinch of salt
pinch of white pepper
3large eggs, beaten
1 tbsprapeseed oil
4 tbsphot Chicken Soup or boiling water

Method

For the Chicken Soup:

Put the chicken and all the vegetables in a stockpot or very large pan (about 4 litres capacity) with enough cold water to cover everything by about 5cm (about 3 litres) and bring to the boil. When boiling, skim off all the frothy scum until there is none left. Add the soup mix or stock cubes, the peppercorns and salt, bring back to the boil and then reduce the heat and gently simmer for 2–3 hours.

Season the soup to taste, then leave to cool. Pour the soup through a colander into a large bowl. Carefully retrieve the carrots from the colander and add back to the soup. Give everything else a good squeeze to release the juices. Some people put a little of the chicken into the soup, but I’m not sure it has much taste after being boiled for so long – and you will make your cat/dog very happy if you give them the bone-free chicken meat.

Put the clear soup and carrots into the fridge for at least 2 hours or overnight. When it’s well chilled the fat will rise to the top and you can easily skim it off.

To serve, bring the soup to the boil over a medium heat and add your cooked matzo balls just before serving.

For the Matzo Balls:

Put all the dry ingredients in a bowl, gradually stir in the eggs and oil and then gradually add the chicken soup, mixing until smooth. Cover the bowl and chill for 30 minutes – it will firm up slightly.

Line a tray with baking parchment. Bring a large pan of salted water to the boil.

Wet your fingers and take small pieces of the mixture to make soft balls, about 2cm in diameter, placing them on the lined tray until you have used up all the mixture.

Drop the balls into the boiling water, turn down the heat and gently simmer for about 20–25 minutes until they are soft. They should swell up slightly, rise to the surface and look like little clouds.

Lift out using a slotted spoon and serve them in chicken soup.

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Ingredients
Method

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