Knott's Berry Farm Charleston Chicken Soup
- Ready In:
- 2hrs 10mins
- Ingredients:
- 15
- Serves:
-
6-8
ingredients
-
Mushroom Dumplings
- 2 tablespoons flour
- 1⁄2 teaspoon baking powder
- 2 eggs, separated
- 1 teaspoon parsley
- 1⁄2 cup mushroom, finely chopped
- 1⁄4 teaspoon salt
- 1⁄8 teaspoon pepper
-
Soup
- 3 lbs chicken, cut up
- 2 onions, diced
- 6 carrots, diced
- 4 stalks celery, with tops sliced
- 1 parsnip, diced
- 5 sprigs parsley, cut into fourths
- salt, pepper
- 10 cups water
directions
-
Dumplings:
- Combine the flour and baking powder.
- Beat the egg yolks on high speed until light, 3 minutes.
- Add the parsley, mushrooms, flour mixture, salt and pepper.
- Mix on medium speed for 1 minute.
- In a separate bowl, beat the egg whites on high speed until they're stiff but not dry, 2 minutes.
- Fold them into the yolk-mushroom mixture. Set the batter aside while you make the soup.
-
Soup:
- Place the chicken, onions, carrots, celery, parsnip, parsley and salt and pepper to taste in a Dutch oven or large saucepan.
- Add enough water to cover the ingredients, about 10 cups, and bring to a boil over high heat.
- After 15 minutes, skim off the foam, reduce the heat and simmer 1 hour, skimming the soup occasionally as it simmers.
- Remove the chicken pieces and, when they're cool enough to handle, separate the meat from the bones and cut it into small pieces. Return the chicken to the pot and bring the soup back to a simmer.
- Drop the Mushroom Dumpling batter by the tablespoon into the soup. If it joins together let it cook, then sepearate with a spoon after.
- Cover the pot and simmer the soup until the dumplings rise to the surface, 10 minutes more.
- Serve the soup in warm bowls with a dumpling or two floating on top of each serving. Add seasoning to taste.
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RECIPE SUBMITTED BY
Cook4_6
United States
I am originally from Minneapolis, Minnesota and moved to Ohio in 1978. It was quite a culture shock going from the city to living next to the Amish. I spend most of my time cooking, cleaning and caring for my four kids. I have abandoned cookbooks and now cook from favorite, wilted recipe pages and the internet. I fell in love with my Italian family recipes (Scavo, Rotella, Scalzo, Micelli, Grande, Gigliotti) and my Mom's homecooked meals.