How To Make Green Peas Soup | Mutter Soup Recipes | Green Pea Soup | Green Peas Soup Indian Style | Matar Shorba | Pattani Soup Recipe | Green Potage Soup | High Protein Veg Soup | Pachai Pattani Soup | How To Make Matar Ka Soup | Pea Soup | Cream Of Pea | Basic Green Soup Recipe | Healthy Soup For Kids | Kid-Friendly Soup Recipes | Healthy Soups that are Filling | Breakfast Ideas | Midweek Meal Ideas | Good Home Cooked Recipes | Simple Veg Appetizers | Quick & Easy | Rajshri FoodLearn how to make Green Peas Soup at home with our Chef Varun InamdarGreen Peas Soup Ingredients:Introduction - 0:00Chef's Story - 0:22How To Make Green Peas Soup - 0:321 tbsp Oil3 Garlic Cloves2 Onion (sliced)Spring Onion (chopped) 1 Bay Leaf1/8 tsp Carom Seeds2 cup Green Peas (blanched)Salt To Taste1 cup Water1/3 cup Coriander Leaves (chopped)Spring Greens (chopped)Bringing the Mixture In Room Temperature - 4:52Grinding the Mixture - 5:22WaterHow To Make Green Peas Soup - 6:06Fresh Cream (as required)Black PepperPlating - 6:55#GreenPeasSoup #Creamsoup #AnybodyCanCookWithRajshriFood Visit our Website for more Awesome Recipeshttp://rajshrifood.com/Download the Rajshri Food App by clicking on this link:- http://bit.ly/RajshriFood_AndHost: Varun InamdarCopyrights: Rajshri Entertainment Private LimitedSubscribe & Stay Tuned - http://bit.ly/SubscribeToRajshriFoodFor more videos log onto http://www.youtube.com/rajshrifood Find us on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/rajshrifoodAbout Peas SoupPea soup, Green Peas Soup or split pea soup is soup made typically from dried peas, such as the split pea. It is, with variations, a part of the cuisine of many cultures. It is most often greyish-green or yellow in color depending on the regional variety of peas used; all are cultivars of Pisum sativum. Pea soup has been eaten since antiquity; it is mentioned in Aristophanes' The Birds, and according to one source "the Greeks and Romans were cultivating this legume about 500 to 400 BCE. During that era, vendors in the streets of Athens were selling hot pea soup.Eating fresh "garden" peas before they were matured was a luxurious innovation of the Early Modern period: by contrast with the coarse, traditional peasant fare of pease pottage (or pease porridge), Potage Saint-Germain, made of fresh peas[3] and other fresh greens braised in light stock and pureed, was an innovation sufficiently refined that it could be served to Louis XIV of France, for whose court at the Château de Saint-Germain-en-Laye it was named, c. 1660–1680.