oh, I love posole. You can make it with beef, pork or chicken. It's really good with chicken thighs. I like to make it with chile verde and tomatillos, chicken broth, diced onions and diced green chiles. Then when the chicken is tender I add the hominy. Occasionally I use the chicken meat for enchiladas verdes and and eat the soup with the hominy on the side.
The South Beach diet cookbook has a recipe for the most fabulous tomato soup. It is basically half tomatoes (I used the peeled tomatoes canned in puree) and half chicken broth simmered with a one inch chunk of peeled ginger and served with cilantro on top. Oh boy is it good.
I've never understood why soup is so bad in restaurants when it is so easy to make good soup.
I learned this one in Tahiti: peel and cube your favorite root vegetables and/or winter squash such as carrots, potatoes, sweet potatoes, rutabaga (delicious), pumpkin, yellow squash, parsnip, etc. Mince some onion and brown gently in some butter. Add root vegetables and enough chicken broth to cover. Cook until vegetables are really tender and then puree the whole thing - I use an immersion blender which is a great invention. The soup is creamy and has depth of flavor because of the variety of root vegetables and winter squash you put in it.
And here's German dumplings for garnishing soup usually clear soup. Combine 1 1/2 cups flour, 1 teaspoon salt, 2 eggs, 2 tablespoons very soft butter and juts enough water to make a soft dough. Drop by half-teaspoonfuls into salted boiling water or broth. When they float they are done. They are a little chewy but taste like egg noodles. the low fat version: 1 1/2 cups flour, 1 teaspoon salt, 1/2 cup egg substitute, 1 tablespoon oil, enough water to make a soft dough. I sometimes add a tablespoon or two of parmesan cheese.