Soups
JANUARY 2026
Thai style “frikadeļu” soup (Inese Grava-Gubiņa)
USA
Fragments from Inese Grava-Gubiņa’s interview with Latvieši pasaulē curator Marianna Auliciema, November 28, 2025.
Around 2006, 2007, and 2008—that was the time when we began teaching the first Latvian cooking classes at the Gaŗezers Summer High School. After that, a year passed, and I returned again—this time for the second time—to teach.
We worked with teenagers—young people aged 14–17. In the first year, I think Latvian cuisine as a class hadn’t been offered for some time, or only very minimally, and I don’t really know how it went back then. But in the year when I started, the group consisted only of girls. I remember how we laughed and joked, saying that those silly boys preferred to go play volleyball on the beach in the heat. They could have come into a cool room, cooked food together, and eaten. And besides—all those beautiful girls they could have gotten to know better!
In the second year, I had boys! Somehow they figured out that it wasn’t so bad to be in the kitchen and work together making food. It was very interesting… there were no problems in either year, but the dynamic completely changed once the boys showed up.
We already made soup in the first year—meatball soup, though not exactly the usual kind. I wanted something more interesting, so I had brought along some special Thai-style spices from home. Around Gaŗezers there aren’t many exotic shops where you can get everything. I had brought (I don’t know what it’s called in Latvian) lemongrass—citronzāle—and something called galangal (I don’t know the Latvian name either)—a root that looks like ginger but has a different taste and aroma. And kaffir lime leaves—those things I brought with me from Canada. And then coconut milk.
So we made the meatball soup the way it’s usually made—add whatever you want! I think I even made it with chicken or turkey, which I found at a big grocery store, because I had to make a very large amount—such a quantity! We made the meatballs and cooked the soup. Then we added the galangal, lemongrass, and kaffir lime leaves. And I also added—because I had them—dried hot peppers. I grow them in my garden and then simply dry them. In winter, if I need a little bit of heat, I throw one dried pepper into the pot, let it cook there, and then pull it out. It gives just a little kick, not so much that your tongue is on fire.
That’s how we made the soup, and then—right before it was ready—we poured in a few cans of coconut milk. And there you have it: Thai-style meatball soup!
I already knew it would be a hit, because these young people… Well, there were some things they really liked, but other things they ate rather reluctantly. This soup—they went back for a first, second, third bowl, and I think some of them would have eaten even more if they hadn’t had to go to their next classes. They absolutely loved it! It’s meatball soup, but with a different flavor.
The image was created by artificial intelligence.