Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general/soups

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Soup

Primarily liquid food


Primarily liquid food

FieldValue
nameSoup
imageFile:Asparagus_soup_(spargelsuppe).jpg
captionAsparagus soup
main_ingredientLiquid, meat or vegetables
variationsClear soup, thick soup

Soup is a primarily liquid food, generally served warm or hotthough it is sometimes served chilledmade by cooking or otherwise combining meat or vegetables with stock, milk, or water. According to The Oxford Companion to Food, soup is the main generic term for liquid savoury dishes; others include broth, bisque, consommé, potage and many more.

The consistency of soups varies from thin to thick: some soups are light and delicate; others are so substantial that they verge on being stews. Although most soups are savoury, sweet soups are familiar in some parts of Europe.

Soups have been made since prehistoric times and have evolved over the centuries. The first soups were made from grains and herbs; later, legumes, other vegetables, meat or fish were added. Originally, sops referred to pieces of bread covered with savoury liquid; gradually the term soup was transferred to the liquid itself. Soups are common to the cuisines of all continents and have been served at banquets as well as in peasant homes. Soups have been the primary source of nourishment for poor people in many places; in times of hardship soup-kitchens have provided sustenance for the hungry.

Some soups are found in recognisably similar forms in the cuisines of many countries and regionschicken soups and oxtail soups are known round the world. Others remain almost entirely exclusive to their region of origin.

Name

The term soup, or words like it, can be found in many languages. Similar terms include the Italian zuppa, the German Suppe, the Danish suppe, the Russian суп (pronounced "soup"), the Spanish sopa and the Polish zupa.

According to the lexicographer John Ayto, "the etymological idea underlying the word soup is that of 'soaking'". In his 2012 The Diner's Dictionary Ayto writes that the word dates back to an unrecorded post-classical Latin verb suppare"to soak", which was derived from the prehistoric Germanic root "sup–", which also produced the English "sup" and "supper". The term passed into Old French as soupe, meaning a piece of bread soaked in liquid" and, by extension, "broth poured on to bread". The earliest recorded use in English of "sop" in the first sense dates from 1340. The Dictionnaire de l'Académie française records the term "soupe" in French use from the twelfth century but adds that it is probably earlier. {{refn|In all its editions from the first (1694) to the eighth (1935) the Dictionnaire de l'Académie française stipulated that soup is served with bread: "a kind of food made of broth and slices of bread" (1694) and "liquid food in which bread is usually soaked" (1935)sorte d’aliment fait de boüillon & de tranches de pain and aliment liquide dans lequel trempe ordinairement du pain. The first known cookery book in English, The Forme of Cury, , refers to several "broths", but not to soups.

The Oxford Companion to Food (OCF) comments that soups can "stray, over what is necessarily an imprecisely demarcated frontier", into the realm of stews. The Companion adds that this tendency is noticeable among fish soups such as bouillabaisse. The food writer Harold McGee contrasts soups with sauces in On Food and Cooking, commenting that they can be so similar that soups may only be distinguished as less intensely flavoured, permitting them to be "eaten as a food in themselves, not an accent."

History

Prehistory

Before the invention of boiling in water, cooking was limited to simple heating and roasting. The making of soup or something akin has been dated by some writers back to the Upper Palaeolithic (between 50,000 and 12,000 years ago). Archaeological evidence for bone broths has been found in sites from Egypt to China.

Ancient times and later

In 1988 the food writer M. F. K. Fisher commented, "It is impossible to think of any good meal, no matter how plain or elegant, without soup or bread in it. It is almost as hard to find any recorded menu, ancient or modern, without one or both". Methods of making soup evolved from one culture to another. The first soups were made from grains and herbs; later, peas, beans, other vegetables, pasta, meat or fish were added. In her 2010 work Soup: A Global History, Janet Clarkson writes that the ancient Romans had a great variety of soups. De re coquinaria (On the Subject of Cooking), a collection of Roman recipes compiled in the fourth or fifth century from earlier manuscripts gives details of numerous ingredients, mostly vegetable.

1570|thumb|upright]] In European and Arab cuisines soups continued to feature after the fall of the Roman Empire. Clarkson writes that the earliest known German cookery book, the Buch von guter Spise (Book of Good Food) published in about 1345, includes recipes for many soups, including one made with beer and caraway seeds, another with leeks, almond milk and rice meal, others with carrots and almond milk or goose cooked in broth with garlic and saffron. The early fifteenth-century French book Du fait de cuisine (From the Kitchen) has many recipes for potages and "sops" including several regional variants.

During the seventeenth century the soup itself, rather than the "sops" it contained, became seen as the most important element of the dish. One of the most famous cookery books of its time was Robert May's The Accomplisht Cook (1660). Clarkson comments that about a fifth of May's recipes are for soups of one kind or another.

The Huangdi Neijing, a Chinese medicinal text, describes the preparation of soups and clear liquids by steaming rice, and recommends soups as medicine.

In the eighteenth century, meals at grand European tables were still served in the style that had persisted since the Middle Ages, with successive courses of three or four dishes placed on the table simultaneously and then replaced by three or more contrasting dishes. Soup was typically part of the first course. Exceptionally, at particularly grand dinners, a first course might consist of four different soups, succeeded by four dishes of fish and then four of meat. In the early nineteenth century a new style of dining became fashionable in Europe and elsewhere: service à la russeRussian-style service: dishes were served one at a time, usually beginning with soup.

Soup for the poor

Interior of temporary building with large boiler in them middle and stores and serving stations at each side. The space is full of the great and good in smart clothes for the official opening ceremony
Soup-kitchen in Dublin, 1847

In the OCF Alan Davidson writes that although soup is now typically served as the first of several courses in western menus, in many places around the world substantial soups have historically been an entire meal for poorer people, particularly in rural areas.

Charitable soup-kitchens preparing soup and supplying it to the needy, either free or at a very low charge, were known in the Middle East in the sixteenth century. From the late eighteenth century, soup-kitchens (in German Suppenküche, in French, soupes populaires) were set up in Germany, France, England and elsewhere. In the 1840s the chef Alexis Soyer established a soup-kitchen in the East End of London to feed Huguenot silk weavers impoverished by cheap imports. During the Irish famine, which began in 1845, he set up a kitchen in Dublin capable of feeding a thousand people an hour.

In the United States soup-kitchens were set up in the 1870s. During the Great Depression, Al Capone established and sponsored a soup-kitchen in Chicago. In the same period the Salvation Army ran similar operations elsewhere in the US and in Canada, Australia and Britain.

Regional cuisines

Asia

In Asian countries soup became a familiar breakfast dish, but has not, according to Clarkson, done so in the west. In China and Japan, soup came to have a different place in meals. As in the west, there was a distinction between thick and thin soups, but the latter would often be treated as a beverage, to be drunk from the bowl rather than eaten with a spoon. Ramen, a noodle soup, popular in Japan and latterly internationally, is documented only from the second half of the nineteenth century.

In China, soups wholly unknown in the west were developed, including bird's nest and shark's fin soups. Snake soup continues to be an iconic tradition in Cantonese culture, and that of Hong Kong. In China, rat soup is considered the equal of oxtail soup.

Indian cuisine includes rasam (sometimes called pepper-water), a thin, spicy soup, typically made with lentils, tomatoes, and seasonings including tamarind, pepper, and chillies. In Thai cuisine gaeng chud are soups: the most popular are tom yum kung made with prawns and tom khaa gai made from galangal, chicken and coconut milk. Pho is a Vietnamese soup, usually made from beef stock and spices with noodles and thinly sliced beef or chicken added. In Filipino cookery sinigang is a soup made with meat, shrimp, or fish and flavoured with a sour ingredient such as tamarind or guava; also from the Philippines is caldereta, a goat soup. The soups of Indonesia include soto ayam (chicken), sop udang (shrimp with rice vermicelli) and sop kepiting (crab). Garudhiya is a soup served in the Maldives, with chunks of tuna in it.

Two soups from Armenia are a cucumber and yoghurt soup called jajik, and bozbash, containing lamb and fruit; dyushbara is a dumpling soup from Azerbaijan; Tibetan cooking includes tsamsuk, made from grains, butter, soya and cheese. An Iranian summer soup, mast-o khiar, is made with yoghurt, cucumber, and mint. Turkish kelle-paça is made from the meat from animal heads and feet. Tarhana, one of the oldest traditional Turkish soups, is made by mixing and fermenting yoghurt, cereal flours and a variety of cooked vegetables, producing a soup with a sour and acidic tang and a yeasty flavour. Also from Turkey is Yayla çorbasi, a yoghurt soup with rice or barley. Like chicken soup it has curative properties ascribed to it by some.

Europe

From the sixteenth century onwards, Paris was known for its street vendors selling soup, and in mid-nineteenth-century Paris, Les Halles, the large central food market, became known for its stalls selling onion soup with a substantial topping of grated cheese, put under a grill and served au gratin. This gratinée des Halles transcended class distinctions, becoming the breakfast of the forts des Hallesthe workers responsible for transporting the goodsand a restorative for the party people leaving the cabarets of Paris late at night.

The many cuisines of Europe have a wide range of soups. Among the soups of Italy are minestrone, zuppa pavese and straciatella, respectively a vegetable broth, consommé with poached eggs, and a meat broth with eggs and cheese. From Belgium there are potage liégeoisa pea and bean soupand soupe tchantches, a vegetable soup with fine vermicelli and milk. Bulgarian cuisine includes tarator, a cold yoghurt and cucumber soup. Dutch soups include erwtensoepa split pea soupand bruinebonensoep, a brown bean soup eaten with rye bread and bacon. A soup from the Faeroe Islands is raskjøt, made with dried mutton. Erbensuppe mit Schweinsohren, is a German split pea soup with pig's ear. Zivju supa, a Latvian fish soup incorporates whole pieces of cooked fish with potato; The Finnish kesäkeitto is a light summer soup of seasonal vegetables cooked in milk and water; the Swedish köttsoppa is a meat and vegetable soup; the Norwegian blomkålspuré is cauliflower soup with egg yolks and cream.

Maltese soups include soppa tal-armla ("widow's soup"), made with green and white vegetables and garnished with a poached egg and cheese, and aljotta a light fish soup flavoured with garlic and marjoram. Two soups from Poland are chlodnik, a crayfish and beetroot soup, served chilled and grochowka, yellow-pea soup with barley. Portuguese soups include canja (chicken) and caldo verde (potato and cabbage). Cullen skink (smoked haddock soup) and nettle soup are of Scottish origin. A Welsh soup, cawl, is typically made with lamb or beef together with vegetables including potatoes, swedes and carrots. Slovenian cuisine includes juha, a meat and vegetable soup. Russian soups include schi (cabbage soup), solyanka (vegetable soup with meat or fish), rassolnik (pickled cucumber soup), and ukha (fish soup).

Africa

Arab shorba typically contains meat and oats; Egyptian food includes melokhia, a soup of jute leaves and meat. The Moroccan harira contains chickpeas, meat and rice. In Nigeria, according to Davidson, "soupy stews or stewlike soups" are popular. He gives as examples egusi soup, often made with offal, palm oil, carob, lemon basil, and egusi powder, and various okra soups. He adds that in Nigeria soup made from goat is "so important that it is usually served at the most important functions". In A Safari of African Cooking (1971) Bill Odarty also highlights goat soup from Liberia. Other Nigerian soups include the spinach-based soup Efo. A study in 2025 reported that despite their nutritional richness and cultural importance, traditional soups were declining in popularity, particularly among younger generations and in urban areas.

Soups from other parts of Africa include Cherubaa lamb and vegetable soup with lima beans or chickpeasfrom north Africa; a West African speciality is groundnut soup. Abenkwan, from West Africa, is a soup of crab meat, pulped palm nuts and lamb. East African cuisine includes bean soup with tomato, onion, pepper and curry powder. Supuya papai, from Tanzania, is a cream soup containing papaya and onion. A Congolese green papaya soup is made with bacon fat, chicken broth, milk and red pepper. South African soups include curried snoek head soup. A 2014 study records a Ghanaian saying, "I haven’t eaten if I don't have my soup and fufu" (a dough of pounded cocoyam or cassava). The soup is typically based on okra.

The Americas and Australasia

Soups from the Americas include a spiny lobster soup from Belize, Cajun crayfish bisque, and gumbo, a hearty soup (or stew) traditionally made from meat or shellfish with tomatoes, vegetables, herbs, and spices, thickened with okra. In the Caribbean and Latin America sancocho is a thick soup typically consisting of meat, tubers, and other vegetables. Callalloo soups are found in the West Indies and Brazil.

A Brazilian favourite is Moqueca de camarão, a broth of tomato and coconut with shrimps: one food writer comments "locals eat steaming bowls on even the hottest days". Ajiaco Santaferenio is a Colombian avocado soup), and Mexico has a black bean soup. Chupe de camarones, a Peruvian soup, is a chowder of shrimp and chilli pepper and is reputedly an aphrodisiac. The Mexican sopa de alb digas is a meatball soup.

Soups from the US include the clam chowder of New England, which has entered the international culinary repertoire, an American regional favourite, Maryland crab soup, and cream of corn soup, which became popular in California during the 1980s.

Australasian soups include two from New Zealand: toheroa (clam) and kumara (sweet potato and chilli). Davidson remarks favourably on the Australian wallabi-tail soup.

Classification

In the western cuisine of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries there have been and are numerous soups. Auguste Escoffier divided them into two main types:

  • Clear soups, which include plain and garnished consommés
  • Thick soups, which comprise the purées, veloutés, and creams He added, "A third class, which is independent of either of the above, in that it forms part of plain, household cookery, embraces vegetable soups and garbures or gratinéd soups. But in important dinnersby this I mean rich dinnersonly the first two classes are recognised".

Louis Saulnier's Le Répertoire de la cuisine, first published in 1914, contains six pages of details of potages (clear soups), two pages on soupes (moistened with water, milk or thin white stock), eight pages on veloutés (soups thickened with egg yolks) and crèmes (thickened with double cream), as well as a further three pages on fifty-three "Potages étrangers"foreign soupsincluding borscht from the Russian Empire, clam chowder from the United States, cock-a-leekie from Scotland, minestrone from Italy, mock turtle from England, and mulligatawny from British India.

The French distinction between clear and thick soups is echoed in other languages: in German Klare Suppen and Gebundene Suppen; in Italian Brodi and Zuppe; and in Spanish Sopas claras and Sopas spessas. Many soups are fundamentally the same in the cuisines of various countries, with minor local variations. Oxtail soup, a familiar item in British and American cooking, is one of several oxtail soups from round the world, including one from Sichuan, others from Austria (Ochsenschleppsuppe), Jamaica, South Africa and France (potage bergéreoxtail consommé thickened with tapioca, garnished with asparagus and diced mushrooms). Chicken soups have been common to numerous cuisines since ancient times: they featured in east Asian cooking more than 5,000 years ago, and were considered therapeutic in pharaonic Egypt, the Roman empire, Persia and biblical Israel. Modern variants are found from Japan (tori no suimono) to Portugal (canja), Colombia (ajiaco) and France (consommé de volaille).

Elizabeth David comments in French Provincial Cooking (1960), "No doubt because the tin and the package have become so universal, people are astonished by the true flavours of a well-balanced home-made soup and demand more helpings if only to make sure that their noses and palates are not deceiving them". In their Mastering the Art of French Cooking (1961), Simone Beck, Louisette Bertholle and Julia Child write:

Cold soups

Cold soups are a particular variation on the traditional soup. Two well-known chilled soups are the Franco-American vichyssoise and the Spanish gazpacho. The Oxford English Dictionary defines the former as "A soup made with potatoes, leeks, and cream, usually served chilled", and the latter as "A cold Spanish vegetable soup consisting of onions, cucumbers, pimentos, etc., chopped very small with bread and put into a bowl of oil, vinegar, and water".

Sweet soups

Many ancient cuisines developed versions of fruit soup: either fruits were added to a grain-based pottage or the soup consisted mostly of fruit flavoured with various spices.

Sour soups

Davidson mentions a category, "sour soups", important in northern, eastern and central Europe. Some have a fermented beer base or use Sauerkraut, others are soured with vinegar, pickled beetroot, lemon or yoghurt. Examples include sinisang (above), chorba, a meat and vegetable soup found in many countries of eastern Europe, north Africa and Asia, and sop ikan pedas, a fish soup from Indonesia. Żurek, from Poland, is a sour bread soup based not on meat or vegetable stock but on fermented cereal such as rye. According to a Polish cookery book, "it is always sour, salty, and creamy at the same time".

Portable, tinned and dried soups

1913}}

Food preservation has, in Clarkson's phrase, "always been a preoccupation of the human animal", allowing food to be kept for long periods. In her Domestic Cookery (1806), Maria Rundell gave a recipe for "Portable Soupa very useful thing"highly concentrated meat stock that set to a solid consistency: for a bowl of soup it was only necessary to dissolve some in hot water. By the beginning of the nineteenth century the Royal Navy had been victualling its ships with portable soup for some years. Recipes were published under many names; Clarkson lists "veal glew", "cake soup", "cake gravey", "broth cakes", "solid soop", "portmanteau pottage", "pocket soup", "carry soup and "soop always in readiness".

In 1810 Peter Durand, an English inventor, was granted a patent for the first tin can for soup. The first commercial canning factory opened in England in 1813; it had a capacity of only six cans an hour; each can was cut by hand, filled and the lid soldered on individually. With advances in technology the canning of food had expanded by the end of the century and companies such as Heinz were promoting their soups as gourmet products indistinguishable from home-made versions. Canning made soup readily available, easily transportable, long-lasting and convenient. In 1897 Heinz's rival Campbell's introduced condensed canned soups, to be diluted with water to produce double the volume. According to the food historian Reay Tannahill, tomato soup was not popular in the US or Britain until Campbell's began marketing it.

Drying is one of the oldest methods of preserving food, and in the nineteenth century Soyer praised commercially dried vegetables as a good ingredient of soldiers' soup during the Crimean War. Dried soups remained in military use into the 1950s, but it was not until the mid-twentieth century that manufacturers began extensively marketing them for domestic use. The Good Nutrition Guide (2008) commented, "Although many types of processed soup have been criticised for their salt levels, packet soups are by far the worst". Subsequently, some manufacturers have experimented with reduced-salt packet soups. A trial in France in 2012 found that reducing salt in chicken noodle soup by more than thirty per cent did not affect consumers' liking for the product.

Literature, screen and stage

Soups and sops are frequently encountered in literature. In the King James Bible, Jesus identifies his forthcoming betrayer: "'He it is, to whom I shall give a sop, when I have dipped it'. And when he had dipped the sop, he gave it to Judas." Stone Soup, an old folk tale, tells of soup produced by travellers who have no food and promise to feed the inhabitants of a village who contribute what they have to a cauldron which at first contains only a stone but is quickly added to by the villagers, making a tasty soup for everyone.

The figurative use of "milksop"literally bread dipped in milkto mean a feeble, timid or ineffectual person is found in Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales and Shakespeare's Richard III. In Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice, Mr Bingley is kept waiting to announce his forthcoming ball until his cook has made enough white soup, a soup containing veal stock and almonds, much favoured for dances at the time. One of Lewis Carroll's best-known characters, the Mock Turtle, who owes his name to the eponymous soup, sings a song that begins "Beautiful Soup, so rich and green/ Waiting in a hot tureen!" In Isak Dinesen's 1958 story "Babette's Feast", turtle soup is the first course of a magnificent dinner.

Soup is frequently mentioned in films and on television. Though the foodstuff plays no part in the action, Duck Soup is used as the title of a 1927 film by Laurel and Hardy and a 1933 film by the Marx Brothers. In Alfred Hitchcock's 1972 film Frenzy, Mrs Oxford serves her nonplussed husband a soup containing "smelts, ling, conger eel, John Dory, pilchards and frogfish". In the 1990s a character dubbed "the Soup Nazi" appeared in Seinfeld, an American television comedy series: his magnificent soup-making was offset by his bullying manner. Tortilla Soup is a 2001 film comedy about a retired restaurateur and his family's love of food.

In the theatre, Chicken Soup with Barley is the title of a 1956 stage play by Arnold Wesker. A later stage play was the comedy There's a Girl in My Soup, in which, again, the actual soup is purely nominal; it ran in the West End for 2,547 performances between 1966 and 1969.

Notes, references and sources

Notes

References

Sources

  • {{cite book | last= Grigson| first= Sophie|authorlink=Sophie Grigson| title= The Soup Book| year= 2009| location= London| publisher= Dorling Kindersley|url=https://archive.org/details/soupbook0000unse/page/348/mode/2up|url-access=registration| isbn= 978-1-40-534785-3}}

References

  1. bisque]], [[broth
  2. Ayto, p. 344
  3. The ancient conjunction of bread and soup still exists not only in the [[croutons]] often served with soup, and the slice of [[baguette]] and [[Gruyère]] floating on traditional [[French onion soup]], but also in bread-based soups including the German {{lang. de. Schwarzbrotsuppe ([[black bread]] soup), the Russian {{lang. ru-Latn. Okroshka and the Italian {{lang. it. [[pappa al pomodoro]] (tomato pulp).Clarkson, pp. 90–91
  4. [https://www.dictionnaire-academie.fr/article/A9S2286 "soupe"], {{lang. fr. Dictionnaire de l'Académie française. Retrieved 14 June 2025
  5. The current edition distinguishes between the old and the modern meanings of the word: (i) a slice of bread that was drizzled with broth or another liquid (ii) a liquid dish, more or less substantial, which is most often served hot and at the beginning of the meal ({{lang. fr. soup
  6. Clarkson, pp. 26–27
  7. McGee, p. 581
  8. Speth, John. [https://paleoanthropology.org/ojs/index.php/paleo/article/view/732/693"When Did Humans Learn to Boil?"], ''Paleoanthropology'', 5 September 2014, pp. 54–55
  9. Some archaeologists conjecture that early humans employed hides and watertight baskets to boil liquids. According to a study by the academic Garritt C. Van Dyk, the first soup may have been made by [[Neanderthal]]s, boiling animal bones and drinking the broth.Van Dyk, Garritt. [https://theconversation.com/good-soup-is-one-of-the-prime-ingredients-of-good-living-a-condensed-history-of-soup-from-cave-to-can-205656 "Good soup is one of the prime ingredients of good living: a (condensed) history of soup, from cave to can"], ''The Conversation'', 4 June 2023
  10. Fisher, p. 34
  11. Rumble, p. 3
  12. Clarkson, p. 26
  13. Clarkson, p. 27
  14. Tannahill, p. 237
  15. Clarkson, p. 29
  16. (1949). "The Yellow Emperor's Classic of Internal Medicine". The Williams & Wilkins Company.
  17. Clarkson, p. 30
  18. Tannahill, pp. 298–299
  19. {{cite OED. soup-kitchen
  20. Abu-Manneh, Butrus. [https://doi.org/10.1525/jps.2005.34.2.123 "Singer: Constructing Ottoman Beneficence: An Imperial Soup Kitchen in Jerusalem"], ''Journal of Palestine Studies'', Vol. 34, No. 2, 2005, p. 123
  21. Clarkson, pp. 55–56
  22. Cowen, pp. 120–121
  23. Ray, Elizabeth. [https://doi.org/10.1093/ref:odnb/26076 "Soyer, Alexis Benoît (1810–1858)"] {{Webarchive. link. (3 January 2023 , ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography'', Oxford University Press, 2011. {{ODNBsub)
  24. Clarkson, p, 57
  25. Schetterer, June. "Salvation Army{{snd80 Years of Service in New Rochelle", ''The Standard-Star'', 8 May 1969, p. 4; and "Soup Kitchen is Opened for Needy in City", ''Shawnee News-Star'', 20 December 1931, p. 15; "Salvation Army Feeding Many Hungry Hoboes", ''The Cornwall Freeholder'', 31 January 1931, p. 1; "The Tragedy of Unemployment", ''The Williamstown Advertiser'', 15 June 1929, p. 4; and "Soup Kitchen Opens", ''Cheltenham Chronicle'', 10 Nov 1934, p. 5
  26. Clarkson, pp. 107–108
  27. Diat, p. 59
  28. In Japan [[miso]] soup became the best known of the thick type, with many variations on the basic theme of [[dashi]], a stock made from [[kombu]] (edible seaweed) and dried fermented [[tuna]], with miso (fermented soy bean) paste. Clarkson writes, "Miso soup is the traditional breakfast soup in the ordinary home, and the traditional end to a formal banquet".Clarkson, p. 106
  29. Tsu, Timothy Y. [https://dx.doi.org/10.1353/jjs.2014.0038 "Review of Slurp! A Social and Culinary History of Ramen{{sndJapan’s Favorite Noodle Soup, by Barak Kushner"], ''The Journal of Japanese Studies'', Vol. 40, No. 1, 2014, pp. 224–226
  30. Clarkson, pp. 106–107
  31. Landry Yuan, Félix ''et al''. "Conservation and Cultural Intersections within Hong Kong’s Snake Soup Industry", ''Oryx'', Vol. 57, No. 1, 2023, p. 40
  32. Davidson and Jaine, p. 673
  33. {{cite OED. rasam
  34. Davidson and Jaine, p. 817
  35. {{cite OED. pho
  36. {{cite OED. sinigang
  37. Davidson, p. 342
  38. Anderson (1995), pp. 18–20 and 24
  39. Davidson and Jaine, p. 487
  40. Davidson, p. 35
  41. Davidson and Jaine, p. 48
  42. Davidson, p. 808
  43. Davidson and Jaine, p. 415
  44. Davidson and Jaine, p. 302
  45. Tarakçı, Zekai, Ismail S. Dogan, and A. Faik Koca. [https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2621.2004.00803.x "A Traditional Fermented Turkish Soup"], ''International Journal of Food Science & Technology'', Vol. 39, No 4, April 2004, p. 455
  46. Montagné, p. 806
  47. [https://www.leparisien.fr/week-end/degustation-la-soupe-a-l-oignon-bonne-a-en-pleurer-21-01-2015-4466103.php " Dégustation : la soupe à l'oignon, bonne à en pleurer!"] {{Webarchive. link. (28 March 2019 , ''Le Parisien'', 21 January 2015. Retrieved 27 August 2023)
  48. Briffault, p. 155
  49. Blum-Reid, p. 187
  50. David (1987), pp. 53 and 58–61
  51. Davidson, p. 71
  52. Davidson, p. 783
  53. Davidson and Jaine, p. 550
  54. Davidson, p. 286
  55. Davidson, p. 265
  56. Davidson and Jaine, p. 459
  57. Bonekamp, p. 27
  58. Bonekamp, p. 25
  59. {{lang. lu. Gehäck, from Luxembourg, is made with pork offal, and finished with prunes soaked in local white wine.Davidson and Jaine, p. 480
  60. Davidson and Jaine, p. 489
  61. Davidson, p. 175
  62. Davidson, p. 615
  63. Davidson and Jaine, p. 644
  64. Davidson and Jaine, p. 237
  65. Davidson, p. 531
  66. {{cite OED. cawl
  67. Davidson and Jaine, pp. 745–746
  68. {{cite OED. schi; {{cite OED. solyanka; {{cite OED. rassolnik; {{cite OED. ukha
  69. Davidson, p. 32
  70. Davidson, p. 257
  71. Davidson, p. 515
  72. Davidson, p. 842
  73. Odarty, p. 72
  74. Odarty, p. 90
  75. Oluwadunsin, Olugbuyi, Ajibola Mitchell Oyinloye, Toyin Olanike Adaramoye, Adefisola Bola Adepeju and Kemisola Joy Ojo (2025). [https://www.researchgate.net/publication/392541047_Analysis_of_nutritional_properties_sensory_attributes_and_perceived_consumption_frequency_of_some_selected_Nigeria_indigenous_soup "Introduction"] "Analysis of nutritional properties, sensory attributes and perceived consumption frequency of some selected Nigeria indigenous soup", ''Discover Food'', Vol. 5, June 2025
  76. Hachten, p. 12
  77. Hachten, p. 212
  78. Hafner, p. 34
  79. Odarty, p. 46
  80. Hachten, p. 237
  81. Hafner, p. 110
  82. Odarty, p. 33
  83. Van Wyck, p. 14
  84. Williams-Forson, pp. 69, 75 and 83
  85. Williams-Forson, p. 75
  86. Davidson, p. 151
  87. Davidson and Jaine, p. 128
  88. {{cite OED. gumbo
  89. {{cite OED. scancocho
  90. Davidson, p. 125
  91. Smith, Jen Rose. "[https://albanyherald.com/features/20-of-the-worlds-best-soups-2/ "20 of the world’s best soups"], ''The Albany Herald'', 17 November 2024
  92. Davidson and Jaine, p. 208
  93. Davidson, p. 371
  94. Honduras, the US and Mexico all have a [[tripe]] soup, respectively {{lang. es. [[mondongo]], [[pepper pot soup]], and {{lang. es. [[Menudo (soup)
  95. Smith, p. 551
  96. Saulnier, p. 51
  97. Oliver, p. 172
  98. Lovegren, p. 298
  99. Davidson and Jaine, p. 552; and Baker, p. 47
  100. Davidson, p. 40
  101. Escoffier, p. 197
  102. Saulnier, pp. 33–50
  103. Saulnier, pp. 50–53
  104. Bickel, p. 59
  105. Davidson, p. 562; Hess and Hess, p. 14; Scala Quinn, p. 61; Van Wyk, p. 18; and Saulnier, p. 33
  106. Chuah, Benjamin [https://www.oxfordstudent.com/2019/04/28/the-history-of-chicken-soup/ The History of Chicken Soup"], ''The Oxford Student'', 28 April 2019
  107. Klawans, p. 176; and Rumble, p. 67
  108. Spiegl, p. 87; and {{cite OED. Jewish penicillin
  109. Davidson and Jaine, p. 428
  110. Davidson and Jaine, p. 644
  111. Davidson and Jaine, p. 644
  112. Saulnier, p. 2
  113. David (2008), p. 136
  114. Beck ''et al'', p. 35
  115. {{cite OED. vichyssoise;{{cite OED. gazpacho
  116. da. [[rødgrød]], also known as {{lang. de. rote Grütze, a red berry soup popular in Denmark, other parts of Scandinavia and Germany, {{lang. fi. sitruunakeitto, a creamy lemon soup from Finland, and the Middle Eastern {{lang. ar
  117. Davidson, p. 736
  118. Anderson (1995), p. 23
  119. Applebaum and Crittenden, p. 78
  120. Clarkson, p. 67
  121. Rundell, pp. 101–102
  122. Tannahill, p. 229
  123. Clarkson, p. 70
  124. Clarkson, p. 68
  125. Clarkson, p. 81
  126. Clarkson, p. 83
  127. Featherstone, pp. xxvii–xxviii
  128. Stanger, Howard R. "Condensed Capitalism: Campbell Soup and the Pursuit of Cheap Production in the Twentieth Century". ''Business History Review'' 85.2 (2011), p. 419
  129. Tannahill, p. 207
  130. Clarkson, p. 76
  131. Edwardes, p. 234
  132. Willems, Astrid A. ''et al''. "Effects of Salt Labelling and Repeated In-Home Consumption on Long-Term Liking of Reduced-Salt Soups", ''Public Health Nutrition'' 17.5 (2014), p. 1130
  133. John, 13.26
  134. Irving, p. 95
  135. "The Monk's Tale"{{sndPrologue, line 22; and ''Richard III'', Act V, scene 3
  136. Anderson (2022), p. 77
  137. Gardner and Burstein, p. xv
  138. Gardner and Burstein, p. 125
  139. Dinesen, pp. 55–56
  140. Everson, p. 41
  141. Eyles, pp. 44–45
  142. Ayto, John and Ian Crofton. [https://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780199916108.001.0001/acref-9780199916108-e-2389 "Duck soup"], ''Brewer's Dictionary of Modern Phrase & Fable'', Oxford Reference, 2011 {{subscription required
  143. Zimmerman, p. 100
  144. Hogan, Michael. [https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2015/oct/16/the-10-best-fictional-chefs-bradley-cooper-burnt-tv-film-screen-artie-bucco-ratatouille-soup-nazi "The 10 best fictional chefs"] {{Webarchive. link. (17 January 2016 , ''The Guardian'', 16 October 2015.)
  145. Stark, Jim. https://doi.org/10.1525/gfc.2002.2.1.100 "Tortilla Soup"], ''Gastronomica'', Vol. 2, No. 1, 2002, p. 100 {{subscription required
  146. Wesker, p. 39
  147. Herbert, p. 1319
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Soup — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report