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We like Ike — the soup maker!

QUESTION: Sometime in the 1950s, President Eisenhower published his recipe for vegetable soup. I used it and made the most delicious soup, but must have thrown out the recipe with the peelings. Can you help me find the recipe?ANSWER: You just gotta love Ike. You gotta love a man whose station in life does not prevent him from doing the things he loves. You want to have a barbecue on the roof? Who cares if you're the president and you live in the White House — you are going to have your barbecue no matter what the neighbors think. You just heard that Khrushchev is coming to visit and Castro has taken control of Cuba. What do you do? Cook up some vegetable soup to ease the stress and clear your head. Ike loved to cook, and knew how to balance the common and not-so-common stresses that can come one's way in any given day.

Here is Ike's recipe exactly as it was published in newspapers around the country:"The best time to make vegetable soup is a day or so after you have fried chicken and out of which you have saved the necks, ribs, and backs, uncooked. (The chicken is not essential, but does add something.)"Procure from the meat market a good beef soup bone, the bigger the better. It is rather a good idea to have it split down the middle so that all the marrow is exposed. I frequently buy, in addition, a couple of pounds of ordinary soup meat, either beef or mutton, or combination of both."Put all this meat, early in the morning, in a big kettle. The best kind of is heavy aluminum, but a good iron pot will do almost as well. Put in all the bony parts of the chicken you have saved. Cover with water, something on the order of five quarts. Add a teaspoon of salt, a bit of black pepper and, if you like, a touch of garlic (one small piece). If you don't like garlic, put in an onion. Boil all this slowly all day long. Keep on boiling until the meat has literally dropped off the bone. If your stock boils down during the day, add enough water from time to time to keep the meat covered. When the whole thing has practically disintegrated, pour out into another large kettle through a colander. Make sure that the marrow is out of the bones. I advise you to let this drain through the colander for quite a while as much juice will drain out of the meat. Shake the colander well to help get out all of the juice."I usually save a few of the better pieces of meat to be diced and put into the soup after it is done. Put the kettle containing the stock you now have in a very cool place, outdoors in the wintertime or in the icebox; let it stand all night and the next day until you are ready to make your soup."You will find that a hard layer of fat has formed on the top of the stock which can usually be lifted off since the whole kettle full of stock has jelled. Some people like a little bit of fat left on, and I know a few who like their soup very rich and do not remove more than about half of the fat."Put the stock back into your kettle and you are now ready to make your soup."In a separate pan, boil slowly about a third of the teacupful of barley. This should be cooked separately since it has a habit, in a soup kettle, of settling to the bottom and if your fire should happen to get too hot it is likely to burn. If you cannot get barley use rice, but it is a poor substitute."One of the secrets of making good vegetable soup is not to cook any of the vegetables too long. However, it is impossible to give you an exact measure of the vegetables you should put in because some people like their vegetable soup almost as thick as stew, others like it much thinner. Moreover, sometimes you can't get exactly the vegetables you want; other times you have to substitute. When you use canned vegetables, put them in only a few minutes before taking the soup off the fire. If you use fresh ones, naturally they must be fully cooked in the soup."The things I like to put into my soup are about as follows:• 1 quart of canned tomatoes• teacupful of fresh peas• If you can't get peas, a handful of good green beans cut up very small can substitute.• 2 normal sized potatoes, diced into cubes of about half-inch size• 2 or 3 branches of good celery• 1 good sized onion (sliced)• 3 nice sized carrots diced about the same as the potato• Z\x cup of canned corn• A handful of raw cabbage cut up in small pieces"Your vegetables should not all be dumped in at once. The potatoes, for example, will cook more quickly than the carrots. Your effort must be to have them all nicely cooked but not mushy, at about the same time."The fire must not be too hot, but the soup should keep bubbling."When you figure the soup is about done, put in your barley, which should now be fully cooked, add a tablespoonful of Kitchen Bouquet and taste for flavoring, particularly salt and pepper and, if you have it, use some onion salt, garlic salt, and celery salt. (If you cannot get Kitchen Bouquet, use one teaspoonful of Worcestershire Sauce.)"Cut up the few bits of the meat you have saved and put about a small handful into the soup."While cooking the soup, do not allow the liquid to boil down too much. Add water from time to time. If your stock was good and thick when you started, you can add more water than if it was thin when you started."As a final touch, in the springtime when nasturtiums are green and tender, you can take a few nasturtium stems, cut them up in small pieces, boil them separately as you did the barley, and add them to your soup. (About one tablespoon after cooking.)"

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