
Recipe Book: The Ford Times Traveler’s Cookbook
Publishing and Copyright: Ford Motor Company, The American Road, Dearborn MI., C: 1965
SOUPS
Soups come in great variety: canned, dehydrated, frozen. Hot soup is bracing in cold weather, and cold soup is refreshing in hot weather – it is little trouble at any time. Soup is especially good to remember when the time comes – as it inevitably does that sandwiches begin to taste dry. Combinations of soups add to the selection. Some wilderness campers mix soups at random and claim they are always able to eat the result with relish, but then, wilderness campers get very hungry. For guaranteed good eating, you may want to try:
Little additions make a big difference with soup. A sprinkle of chives, or chopped spring onions, on vichyssoise; lemon juice with black bean soup, or a dash of sherry; grated cheese on onion soup or minestrone; a cut-up hot dog in split-pea soup.
Other additions can make soup into a one-dish meal: