Authors: Maggie Stuckey
Recipe from
Albertina’s Restaurant
, Portland, Oregon
Serves 6
It’s amazingly good!
Make ahead?
Cook the wild rice. Complete the recipe through step 3. Refrigerate, reheat, and complete the recipe.
For large crowds:
This is a wonderful soup to expand, for the primary ingredients — canned clams and wild rice — are relatively inexpensive and easy to find year-round.
Portland, Oregon
In my hometown of Portland, Oregon, there is a most unusual luncheon restaurant. Housed in a beautiful historic building, it is operated almost entirely by volunteers (the only paid employees are the chef and the dishwasher). Also sharing that building are a thrift shop, gift shop, and a wonderful antiques shop.
All the proceeds from the shops and the restaurant — even the servers’ tips — go to support a nonprofit organization (Albertina Kerr Centers) that provides critical services for children, adults, and families with mental health challenges and developmental disabilities.
I was one of the volunteer cooks for about 15 years, and it was one of the best experiences of my life. Everything about cooking for 100 people — the process, the equipment, the tools, the careful management of sequencing — was endlessly fascinating, and I learned a great deal about food safety and presentation. Most of all, I learned about life from the other women on my crew. They were all considerably older than me, but full of zest and sass, and taught me a lot about living a good life at that age. I’ll never forget them. (Mary Steerman, my surrogate mother, I miss you every single day.)
The wonderful volunteers who cook and serve lunches are supported by many other volunteers behind the scenes. One critical group creates, tests, tweaks, and retests the recipes, paying particular attention to dishes that are suited to the kitchen’s very limited space.
Over the years many of the favorites have been collected into three cookbooks; the first two are out of print, but the most recent,
Albertina’s Exceptional Recipes
, is now in its fifth printing. You can find it from several online booksellers, or order direct from the restaurant (so they get all the profits). Contact
[email protected]
for current pricing. The wonderful Albertina’s recipes in
this
book, the one you are holding, are some of my personal favorites from
Exceptional Recipes
, reprinted with the board’s kind permission.
And if you ever find yourself in Portland, try to have lunch at Albertina’s; while you’re there ask your server to tell you about Albertina herself. It’s quite a story.
Albertina’s Restaurant
424 NE 22nd Avenue
Portland, OR 97232
503-231-0216
(reservations optional)
Recipe from
Julie Dahlberg
, Grayslake, Illinois
Serves 8–10
Julie says: I usually make a large batch, because this is so popular at Soup Nights. If there’s any left over, it’s lunch the next day, or into the freezer for another night.
Make ahead?
You can make the rice and cook the chicken as much as one day ahead.
For large crowds:
Julie’s recipe already makes a hefty amount, but doubles easily.
Recipe from
Suzy and Philip Poll
, Houston, Texas
Serves 6
Suzy and Philip say: A delicious, filling chowder made easy by using a precooked rotisserie chicken from the supermarket.
Make ahead?
Through step 2, but remove from the heat just before vegetables are tender, so that they don’t overcook during reheating. Refrigerate, reheat, and complete the recipe.
For large crowds:
Suzy’s original recipe is double this amount, for 12 servings.
Grayslake, Illinois
Have you ever noticed how quickly the best ideas get passed around? Julie Dahlberg and her husband Scott read a magazine article about a Soup Night in Brooklyn, and that inspired them to start one in their Illinois neighborhood. And then Julie’s friend
Karen Robbins
(see
page 154
) liked the idea so much she started one in her own neighborhood. About the same time, Julie wrote a magazine article about her experience, which inspired Kate Allen’s Soup Night (see
page 107
). And then Julaine Kammrath (
page 266
) followed Kate’s example in
her
neighborhood. Same thing happened, by the way, with Claudia and Dave Darmofal (
page 222
), who so enjoyed the wonderful event of their Houston friends Suzy and Philip Poll (
page 61
) they started their own Soup Night in their Boston-area neighborhood. And believe me, everyone in this book would be totally thrilled if you copied their ideas when you start your own Soup Night.
There’s something about opening up your home that makes people open up. Our neighbors opened up, and so did we. It was wonderful to see.
Julie tells their story: “We are part of the Covenant Church, and had been trying to get some of our neighbors interested, without much luck. Then I read this article about a woman in Brooklyn who started a Soup Night, who invited people from her different circles and created a cohesive group. And I thought, maybe that’s what we should do. Invest in our neighborhood. That could be our way to fulfill the biblical command to love our neighbors — we’d start by getting to know them!
“We decided to do it once a week, on Thursday evening. We created invitations and the kids helped me hand-deliver them to the neighbors; others, to Scott’s coworkers and other friends, went in the mail. That very first night, I was a nervous wreck. What if nobody comes? What if all 30 families come and we run out of food? What if my soup isn’t good enough?
“But of course I didn’t need to worry. That first night, we had five families, and they all wanted to know where the idea came from. People introduced themselves to each other, conversation was easy, and the soup was a hit.
“We quickly figured out ways to make it manageable. It’s a school night, so we started early — 5.30
pm
. I did all the shopping early in the week, and always kept a loaf of garlic bread in the freezer in case we ran out.
“We set aside one drawer in the kitchen for Soup Night bowls and spoons, which made it easier to organize cleanup. I picked up bowls wherever I could, at discount stores and tag sales, so we had a big assortment of sizes and patterns, plus we kept a supply of plastic bowls and spoons just in case. I made sure the dishwasher was empty by Thursday afternoon, and people would put their dirty bowls in.
“For the children, I checked out videos from our church library. Our own children were great at helping with coats, traffic flow, and house rules.
“Some of our neighbors were hesitant at first; they thought we were trying to convert them. But we were intentionally
not
evangelizing, we didn’t want the church thing to get in the way, and they saw that. They just were so eager to meet their neighbors. Years later they would say to us, ‘I wasn’t too sure about you at first, but now I can’t imagine life without you.’”
You may have noticed that Julie is speaking in the past tense. That’s because after five years the Dahlberg family has put Soup Night on hiatus for a while. “It just got too big,” Julie says. “The house was rocking every week. People started inviting other people, and it became more like a party than our original purpose, which was to get to know our neighbors well enough to know how to love them, the way Jesus wants me to. Plus everybody’s kids got older and were involved in other activities, and it just got harder. I think we may start up again, though.”
And I think she will too, because of one final comment. “When we first started this, our friends were astonished. You mean, you just let all these people come into your house, people you don’t know? What we discovered is that there’s something about opening up your home that makes people open up. Our neighbors opened up, and so did we. It was wonderful to see.”
Recipe from
Suzy and Philip Poll
, Houston, Texas
Serves 6
Suzy and Philip say: This lusciously rich soup gets its New Orleans flavor from andouille sausage. It’s a great choice for a Mardi Gras–themed event.
Make ahead?
Complete through step 4; or stop at step 3, depending on your time availability. Refrigerate, reheat, and complete the recipe.
For large crowds:
Suzy routinely makes twice this amount, for 12 servings.