TOP Reviews:
My late grandmother came from the Old country, and I’ve used this recipe as a basis for replicating her recipe, but a few adjustments are critical. First, the pasta must be cooked separately; otherwise, it thickens and ruins the soup. If you don’t plan on leftovers, the pasta can be cooked in the soup, but you need to go easy on the amount of pasta. She always preferred alphabet pasta. Second, she always used either ground turkey or chicken for the meatballs. Also, you need to take it easy on the spices in the meatballs because they can easily overpower the milder flavor of poultry. (By the way, why would anyone use ground beef in a chicken stock–it doesn’t make sense, not to mention it isn’t authentic.) Third, she used celery in her recipe. I add a couple of stalks, finely diced. I also up the amount of carrots. Finally, for an added touch, she always had hard-boiled eggs available for individuals to add, as they chose. It enriches the flavor and texture. This recipe is very good–with these few tweaks. Thanks for sharing it.
Excellent soup!! I made this last weekend for lunch, and it was so good that I had to have it for dinner too! I made a few minor adjustments to it. For the meatballs, I used 1/2 lb grnd pork, 1/2 lb. grnd beef, 1 tsp onion powder, 1 tsp garlic salt, 1 tsp steak spice and 1 tbsp worchester sauce and froze the rest of meatballs for next batch. I also browned the meatballs before adding them to the soup. I increased the carrots to 1/2 cup, and decreased the pasta (acini di pepe) to 1/2 cup. The pasta soaks up alot of liquid, so I cooked it separately and added it when the soup was finished cooking. I’m definitely making this one again, and recommending it to others!
Delicious! Easy to make! Wonderful~
I followed the advice of others:
1. Make pasta separately (Acini de Pepe instead of orzo)
2. Baked the meatballs at 350 for 25 minutes
3. Used frozen spinach (I had some on hand)
I also added some celery as well as some onion, garlic and zucchini that I had sauteed in olive oil. (also other people’s suggestions) It was a nice touch but I think I will skip it next time and stick with the original recipe.
This was fabulous! I made it for co-workers and they loved it! I did take the advice of so many and did sub acini di pepe for the orzo, a bag of baby spinach for the escarole, baked the meatballs ahead of time, and added a small boiled and diced chicken breast. It was unbelievably good! I even did it all ahead of time, kept things separated, and then put it all in the crock pot to heat through for lunch. Thanks for the recipe Star!!!
YUM,YUM,YUM! I love soup, especially Italian Wedding Soup. This recipe is fantastic. My only problem was that the orzo completely took over the pot by the time myself, honey and guests were scooping out our seconds (and thirds). I doubled the recipe and the four of us didn’t leave a drop left in the pot! Will definitely be making again, and again, and again.
This is a great soup for crisp fall evenings.
SERVINGS 8
INGREDIENTS
16 1⁄2 ounces meatballs
6 cups chicken broth
1 cup cooked chicken, chopped
1⁄2 cup carrot, diced
1⁄2 cup celery, diced
2 ounces frozen chopped spinach, defrosted
garlic salt, to taste
pepper, to taste
1⁄4 cup romano cheese
1⁄4 cup acini di pepe pasta (small pasta)
DIRECTIONS
Pop the meatballs in the microwave for 1 minute on defrost so you can quarter them.
Combine rest of ingredients except pasta in crock pot and cook all day on low.
Add the pasta during the last hour of cooking.
Freezes well.
From: allrecipes.com