Italian Wedding Soup
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Italian Wedding Soup. A hearty traditional Italian soup, that's a meal in itself, featuring our recipe for make ahead mini meatballs.

A few weeks ago we featured a recipe for Mini Italian Meatballs. This meatball idea was meant to be made in large batches then cooked and frozen in smaller portions for easy meals later on.
We suggested using them with spaghetti sauce, in a baked ziti recipe, in honey garlic sauce, or in Italian Wedding Soup.


Today we take that last suggestion and provide a very tasty recipe for that traditional hearty Italian soup.
From the name alone, you would assume that it is a soup traditionally served at an italian wedding. However, that is not so.
This peasant dish originates from Naples and the Campania region overall. In truth, the name in English is a bit of a mistranslation of the "minestra maritata", which means "married soup"!
The phrase is meant to mean the combining 'marriage" of the meats and hearty vegetables in the soup.

Traditional elements of Italian Wedding Soup.
Traditional ingredients in Italy, long ago included the tough scraps of meat, mostly pork, which would be simmered a long time to tenderize them and provide flavour to the broth.
The meatballs element is actually an Americanization of the protein component when fresh meat was more readily available and cheaper for immigrants from Italy.

Italians would originally have foraged for wild escarole or chicory as the leafy vegetable commonly found in the soup. Escarole is still used by many today, but the spinach that is now ever present in today's supermarkets has become increasingly more common too.
The pasta was traditionally the tiny shaped acini de pepe, which translates as "seeds of a pepper". It was known as a symbol of fertility, which no doubt contributed to the soups association to weddings in the minds of many.

Today's Italian Wedding Soup.
Today, Italian Wedding Soup can be much more versatile in the ingredients. I suggest you make whatever substitutions necessary, depending upon what you have on hand or is available locally.
No need to slow simmer pork stock, we used or homemade chicken stock which we always have on hand. Boxed stock can be used to make a quicker version if you so choose.
We were lucky enough to find the acini de pepe pasta, but it is not common in many stores. Orzo or other smaller shapes of pasta will work equally well.

Finally, we could not find escarole in any stores in St. John's, so we substituted kale instead. Since we like to freeze our soups in small individual portions for easy lunches, we figured the thicker kale leaves would stand up better to that treatment.
We simmered some saved parmesan rinds in the broth which gave it additional depth of flavour and some additional seasoning as well. All In all it turned out to be a beautiful deeply flavoured soup, topped with additional parmesan melting into it.
Some hearty crusty bread is the perfect accompaniment for dipping, making this, indeed, a hearty and satisfying meal in itself, any time.

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