Amazing Dill Pickle Soup
Submitted by weebles
Polish dill pickle soup (zupa ogorkowa) made from soup bone stock, shredded dill pickles, pickle brine, and a flour-cream finish for a tangy, creamy bowl. Eastern European comfort food at its purest.
YIELD
8 servingsPREP
10 minCOOK
1 hrsREADY
1½ hrsZupa ogorkowa is the soup Polish grandmothers make when they want to settle an argument. The shredded dill pickles and a generous splash of their brine deliver that signature tang that splits the room into instant fans and total skeptics. A long-simmered soup bone stock provides the savory backbone, and a sour cream and flour slurry pulls everything into a creamy, faintly cloudy broth.
The addition order matters more than it looks. Whisk the flour into cold cream before adding it to the hot stock, or the flour clumps into pasty knots. Bring it to a boil to cook out the raw flour taste, then add the pickles and brine. Adding the brine too early can curdle the cream, since the high acid content shocks the proteins out of suspension.
Kitchen Tips
- Use real Polish-style sour-fermented dill pickles, not vinegar-cured deli pickles. The lacto-fermented version has a deeper, funkier flavor.
- Shred the pickles on a coarse box grater, not a microplane. Fine shreds disappear. Coarse shreds give texture and pop.
- Don’t oversalt before tasting. Pickle brine carries plenty of sodium, and the soup bones add more.
- Serve with boiled potatoes, dropped noodles, or cubed cooked farina for the traditional starch.
Variations
Ingredients
Directions
Rinse vegetables and soup bones, clean, prepare stock and drain off. Shred dill pickles into fine strips.
Garnish soup with flour and cream, bring to a boil; add uncooked dill pickles, pickle juice, and salt to taste. Heat. The shredded pickles may also be added when cooked.
Serve with potatoes, dropped noodles or cooked farina cooled and cut into cubes.
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