I moved from the DMV to Italy in 2022, and made this soup a couple weeks ago. Not as good as Kostas’ but pretty tasty! I worked at 19th and L for 18 years and was a frequent customer at the Greek Deli!
If you liked the veggie measurements, you must have LOVED the few teaspoons of cornstarch. Maybe he meant a few cups of cornstarch…..? Love this video! He is obviously a real cook because he adds what his ❤️ tells him.
My schooling is in chemistry and when I first started cooking years ago...I would be leveling off 1/4 teaspoons of spices with all the tension of someone working in a bomb squad. I cooked like a baker. Over time, I've learned that cooking is more improvisational at times and to trust your instincts. I love watching someone loose and just flowing like this dude. 🇬🇷
I used to work across the street from the Greek Deli. This place has lines 20-30 people long at lunchtime, and it's totally worth it. Everything is very fresh and extremely tasty.
"NEXT IN THE LINE!" is one of the best things you can ever have yelled at you. Kostas runs a well-oiled machine capable of producing some of the very best food in all of DC. If this place were to ever close its doors, I'd seriously consider relocating.
Can't say enough about this place, everything they make is delicious and freshly made! But this soup...easily the best soup in the city, I highly recommend it stopping by this place it's worth it.
Fantastic! I ate this in Cyprus for the first time 40 plus years ago. The cook made it exactly like this, I have made it myself but not for years now. I must do it again. It looks great here. Thank you for sharing this vid, I have enjoyed it.
haha yeah that was not a diss. I am Greek myself, and yes a home cook. I just meant that it wasn't presented in the most precise fashion but the great thing about the recipe was that it still turned out great! :)
I wonder if RU-vid has a filter that will find me all the very old videos, before all the click-bait slick sameness started happening to please the darned algorithm. This is a great video (for my taste anyway) - very real-time & down+to-earth.
I am across the country but would love to try your cooking Kostas! I no longer have my yia-yias homemade cooking, and I need homemade Greek food in my life again!
Harry, your YaiYai is freaking at the thought of "Uncle Bens" rice in place of Orzzo. No kidding. ;-) May tast fine to you, but it isn't the same. (Coming from a southern gal who lived in Tarpon springs and ate what I feel was some of the BEST Greek food EVER.) :-)
I love the Greek Salad i got in Tarpon Springs. A nugget of potato salad tucked into the middle of the green, etc. Such a great surprise. Ive made mine lime that ever since my first experience. That is close to 40 years ago. I adore Greek cuisine. I make a good avgolemona sauce for many vegetables. The BEST
I’ve made this several times and this is the first time I’ve seen someone add corn starch, no complaining more like intrigued. I thought the orzo, which is my favorite way to make this would help with thickening it? Again, MY FAVORITE EVER🥰
Corn starch makes a more creamy consistency and because soup is usually serviced hot it doesn’t make a huge change but I could see it would make the recipe more stable in a commercial setting
Someone here in another comment said that the brownish looking stuff he adds is a mix of ground pepper and salt, but I would not doubt, a little bit of nutmeg in it too. Whaddya think? I bet this soup kills viruses!
The Chickens are removed, but what about the meat off them? Is that separated from the bones and added back to the stock, or are they literally just boiled for flavour for the stock? Seems a waste of chicken not to use the meat in the soup?
J C DC native here: Once they take out the whole chickens, they clean the meat off the bones and put the meat back into the soup. Guess they cut that part out. Soup is really good at this place.
Spencer Cresswell It varies from family to family. Some serve the chicken seperately from the soup on a plate and everyone adds to his/her plate as they like. I don't like this way. My family tradition is, after removing the meat from the broth clean all bones and skin, then cube it and add it back to the pot after about 10 minutes the egg+lemon sauce was added. Then let it warm up for 5-10 minutes and serve [don't let it cook more or the chicken will start breaking apart].
He probably does not - ususally you cut the chicken into smaller pieces and add them back inthe soup - what he was after was the kitchen broth, then mixed the rice/orzo, with the the liquid mixture of the 12 eggs with the lemon juice. You can add chicken pieces back in the soup if one wants.
Αυγολεμονη είναι Κότα βραστή και το ζόμο βάζουμε Ριζη και στο τελος ρίχνουμε το Λεμονή που το κτιπησαμε με το αυγό ,αυτό που είδα περισσότερο χόρτο σούπα είναι
no...no... he had 12 eggs !!! mixed with nearly a cup of fresh lemon juice!! Yes, he had some begetables too....carrots and onions...but the essence was the 12 eggs with the lemons.
my guess would be pepper..I make Avgolemono Soup all the time, my yiayia taught me years ago and I changed it a little, I make mine with uncle bens rice, chicken with natural chicken broth and bullion cubes and salt and pepper eggs and lemon, and everyone who has tried my soup told me it is the best they every had. I think corn starch and all those vegtables is a bad idea, to me it would ruin the taste, I also use a blender to make it creamy and top it with fresh ground pepper. It is to die for.
he adds the cornstarch most likely because it can hold heat for a commercial venue ... he made five gallons probably ... i have worked with lots of greeks they love ARGO .... lol