Seafood Catfish Soup

catfish soup
(from The Virginia House-wife, by Mary Randolph, 1825)

"An excellent dish for those who have not imbibed a needless prejudice against those delicious fish."

Ingredients:

2 large or 4 small white catfish that have been caught in deep water​
1 pound of lean bacon​
1 large onion cut up​
1 handful of parsley chopped small​
pepper​
salt​
yolks of 4 fresh eggs​
1 large spoonful of butter​
2 large spoonfuls of flour​
1/2 pint of rich milk​

Instructions:

Take the catfish, cut off the heads, and skin and clean the bodies; cut each in three parts, put them in a pot, with the bacon, onion, parsley, some pepper and salt, pour in a sufficient quantity of water, and stew them till the fish are quite tender but not broken; beat the yelks, add to them the butter, flour, and milk; make all these warm and thicken the soup, take out the bacon, and put some of the fish in your tureen, pour in the soup, and serve it up.​


In honor of August being Catfish Month, here is an authentic recipe for Catfish Soup! Hope you try this! Thanks!
 
Last edited by a moderator:
This sounds like a quick and simple way of making a delicious meal from cheap frozen fish. I think I'll try it. I really appreciate the period recipes!
 
Yeah, catfish is generally pretty mellow. Fried catfish is very common anywhere they roam, especially the South.
 

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