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Recipe·~45 min·nut-free

Snert (Dutch Split Pea Soup)

A side dish from the Dutch kitchen.

Ingredients

  • 2L Water
  • 300g Peas
  • 100g Pork
  • 1 Vegetable Stock Cube
  • 2 Celery
  • 2 Carrots
  • 1 large Potatoes
  • 1 small Onion
  • 1 small Leek
  • 1 cup Celeriac
  • 1 pound Sausages

Method

  1. Gather the ingredients.
  2. In a large soup pot, bring water, split peas, pork belly or bacon, pork chop, and bouillon cube to a boil. Reduce the heat to a simmer, cover and let cook for 45 minutes, stirring occasionally and skimming off any foam that rises to the top.
  3. Remove the pork chop, debone, and thinly slice the meat. Set aside.
  4. Add the celery, carrots, potato, onion, leek, and celeriac to the soup. Return to the boil, reduce the heat to a simmer and let cook, uncovered, for another 30 minutes, adding a little extra water if the ingredients start to stick to the bottom of the pot.
  5. Add the smoked sausage for the last 15 minutes of cooking time. When the vegetables are tender, remove the bacon and smoked sausage, slice thinly and set aside.
  6. If you prefer a smooth consistency, purée the soup with a stick blender. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Add the meat back to the soup, setting some slices of rookworst aside.
  7. Serve in heated bowls or soup plates, garnished with slices of rookworst and chopped celery leaf.
  8. Enjoy!

Source

This recipe is adapted from TheMealDB (id 52981), a free community-curated recipe API. Original listing: themealdb.com.

A walkthrough video is available at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5YV0sJLtLt8.

Original source noted by the contributor: https://www.thespruceeats.com/traditional-dutch-split-pea-soup-1129011.

Per serving
Estimate · medium confidence
Servings1
420kcal
Calories
22g
Protein
36g
Carbs
22g
Fat
10 g
Fiber
5.0 g
Sugar
850 mg
Sodium
Iron17%
Calcium4%
Vitamin D2%
Vitamin C13%
Vitamin B1233%
Potassium16%

Estimated by AI from the ingredient list. Values are approximate and not medical advice. If you have specific dietary requirements, verify with a registered dietitian or trusted nutrition database.

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