Soup, Sir? But what soup?

oggbashan

Dying Truth seeker
Joined
Jul 3, 2002
Posts
56,017
Soup, Sir?

In 1960 I travelled from the UK to Australia as a first class passenger on the flagship of the Koninklijke Rotterdamsche Lloyd (Royal Rotterdam Lloyd) MV Willem Ruys.

The voyage was enjoyable, comfortable, and the staff were magnificent. Their attention to passenger comfort was exemplary. I only realised how good they had been when I travelled on other ships.

But there was one problem. Meals were a lottery because the menus were in Dutch and the Dutch interpretation of Restaurant French. Their French didn’t align with the English version of Restaurant French, and of course neither would have made sense to a real Frenchman.

The menus were extensive and there was a significant choice of main course. However, reading the menu we weren’t sure whether the meat (or fish) was just that, and we should order vegetables as well, or whether the dish came with appropriate vegetables. We could have a bare piece of meat, or a dish amply supplied with vegetables and our extra order of vegetables as well.

We could have asked the waiter. We did. He/she could explain in Dutch IF he/she knew what the dish was. Usually they were as clueless as we were, and we didn’t understand Dutch. We had Dutch people on our table but although their English was better than the waiter’s, they didn’t understand the menu either. Sometimes it didn’t make sense in Dutch. It looked good with a wide choice but what the listed items were? We didn’t know.

For all of us, evening meals were a gamble. We would try to understand and then order. Until the plate arrived at the table we might have no idea what would come. By day two the six of us on our table had worked out a strategy. We would order six different items, and vegetables if we thought them necessary. Those who had too many vegetables would pass them to those who had none. After a week into the voyage we had learned most of the items by trial and error.

But Soup? Surely soup should be easy? It wasn’t.

Here is a selection of the soups listed on 1960 1st class menus from another voyage, not the one I was on:

Monday

Clear Trois Filets Soup (Heldere Trois Filets Soep)
Bagration Cream Soup (Gebonden Bagration Soep)

Tuesday

Clear Solange Soup (Heldere Solange Soep)
Clermont Cream Soup (Gebonden Clermont Soep)

Wednesday
Clear Italienne Soup (Heldere Italienne Soep) I knew that one!
Caroline Cream Soup (Gebonden Caroline Soep)

Thursday

Clear Bergère Soup (Heldere Bergère Soep)
Dubarry Cream Soup (Gebonden Dubarry Soep)

Friday

Clear Madrilène Soup (Heldere Madrilène Soep)
Londonderry Cream Soup (Gebonden Londonderry Soep)

Saturday

Clear Belle Fermière Soup (Heldere Belle Fermière Soep)
Jackson Cream Soup (Gebonden Jackson Soep)

Obviously Soup = Soep; Clear = Heldere; and Cream = Gebonden. There was a choice of Clear or Cream Soup everytime.

But what were the soups? Apart from Italienne, I still don’t know.

Any suggestions about what each soup might have been?
 
I imagine all of the clear soups were consommees. Google gives hints, on the couple I looked up, but not so much...

I am struck that by the grace of one letter, you would have been eating soaps instead!
 
Bergere is shepherd, but I don't know if that implies that it's what a shepherd in the field might cook up, or possibly lamb-based.

And heavens help me but it immediately brings the Sweeney Todd tune "Priest" to mind: "Shepherd's Pie peppered with actual shepherd on top."
 
Bergere is shepherd, but I don't know if that implies that it's what a shepherd in the field might cook up, or possibly lamb-based.

And heavens help me but it immediately brings the Sweeney Todd tune "Priest" to mind: "Shepherd's Pie peppered with actual shepherd on top."

I'm not sure I'd appreciate lamb soup. I think it might be too greasy unless prepared very carefully.
 
Thank you. And Yeuck!
If you google the entire phrase E.G. "Dubarry Cream Soup" you do have a chance of finding something.

Except "clear trois filets soup" is a no show.:eek:

I'm not sure I'd appreciate lamb soup. I think it might be too greasy unless prepared very carefully.
well, it's clear so it's going to have been very much degreased... refined, don'cha know.
 
I tried for Bergère Soup. All I got was a soup bowl decorated with shepherdesses!
 
...

well, it's clear so it's going to have been very much degreased... refined, don'cha know.

I remember that the clear soups were very thick. If left, for example if the passenger couldn't stand the taste, it would cool to a jelly.
 
On further thought, you teased my inner recipe geek. Answers inline

Monday

Clear Trois Filets Soup (Heldere Trois Filets Soep)
Mixed results but likely a clear fish soup, possibly salmon or white fish
Bagration Cream Soup (Gebonden Bagration Soep)
Another fish soup

Tuesday

Clear Solange Soup (Heldere Solange Soep)
no clue
Clermont Cream Soup (Gebonden Clermont Soep)
Cream of broccoli came up on Google but I don't know why

Wednesday
Clear Italienne Soup (Heldere Italienne Soep) I knew that one!
Caroline Cream Soup (Gebonden Caroline Soep)
veloute caroline: cream soup with white rice and almond milk
Revelation of all sorts of cream soups

Thursday

Clear Bergère Soup (Heldere Bergère Soep)
possibly cream of lettuce soup - geez how boring! OR oxtail ?
Dubarry Cream Soup (Gebonden Dubarry Soep)
Cauliflower Cream Soup

Friday

Clear Madrilène Soup (Heldere Madrilène Soep)
Sounds like gazpacho
Londonderry Cream Soup (Gebonden Londonderry Soep)
This one has legs!

Saturday

Clear Belle Fermière Soup (Heldere Belle Fermière Soep)
cabbage, green beans and pasta
Another 'death by soup' page
Jackson Cream Soup (Gebonden Jackson Soep)
cream of potato


Obviously Soup = Soep; Clear = Heldere; and Cream = Gebonden. There was a choice of Clear or Cream Soup everytime.

But what were the soups? Apart from Italienne, I still don’t know.

Any suggestions about what each soup might have been?
 
Bagration Cream Soup? The only Bagration I know of is: Operation Bagration, a Red Army offensive in 1944.

What sort of soup commemorates that?

The Great Bagration of 1939 refers to the hordes of middle-aged shoppers who fled the Nazis with all their food and possessions in paper bags. ("Sackration" in the UK and parts of the NE US.)

The soup probably contained cabbage, potatoes, and bits of lint.
 
Thank you for all the answers (and guesses).

By the time the ship reached Singapore, all I wanted was Heinz Cream of Tomato. :D
 
There is the rest of the Monday Menu:

Hors d'Oeuvre: Assorted Carolines

Soup - we've done the Soups

Fish: Fried Codfish aux Fines Herbes - Boiled Potatoes

Releves and Entree:
Roast Veal - English Broad Beans - Rissolées Potatoes
Shoulder of Reindeer - Currant Sauce - Sprouts - Marquise Potatoes
Ox-Brains, Villeroy - Périgueux Sauce
Stuffed Pimentos - Saffron Rice in Timbale

Grill: Pork Chops à la Jean Conel (Who?)

Poultry: Braised Pullet - Potato Crisps

Vegetables: Mixed; Green Peas; Spinach

Potatoes: Croquettes; Snow; Pont Neuf; Steamed

Cold Buffet:
Rib of Beef à la Bouquetière
Virginia Ham, Cantaloup

Salads: Lettuce; Tosca; Bombay

Dressings: French; Coronation; Vincent

Compotes: Pineapple; Peaches

Sweets and Ice Cream: St Honoré Cake; Harlequin Pudding; Coupe Jacques

Cheese: Danish Blue; de Brie

Fruit

Coffee
 
Last edited:
Back
Top