A recipe from the 1924 volume of
American Cookery calls for "at least four different kinds" of meat, such as lamb, beef, smoked ham, chicken or other combination, simmered with lettuce, chives, celery and butter.
Succotash is added to the pot just before the soup finishes cooking. The soup is garnished with fresh parsley and paprika. In 1925 Henry Smith's
The Master Book of Soups noted that hotch potch retained a particular association with Scottish cooking. His version, a soup rather than a stew, is based on lamb stock with peas, beans, turnips, carrots, spring onions, cauliflower and lettuce. A
Yorkshire version, more a stew than a soup, calls for mutton or lamb cooked in water, added to a braised mixture of onions, carrots, turnips and celery and simmered before serving.
Paul Newman specifies chicken in his 1985 ''Newman's Own Cookbook''. His recipe differs from others in including potatoes and green peppers. In the
Canadian Maritime provinces, hodge podge is a soup based on cream or butter with fresh vegetables. Although it can also be flavoured with meat stock or bacon, in its simplest form it is essentially a vegetarian chowder. ==See also==