Donair soup at Souper Duper Soup shop in Dartmouth a big hit

The Soup Whisperer and the Cake Crusader have joined forces to create a new delicacy

Image | Donair soup

Caption: The soup shop has only been open on Ochterloney Street for two months and each week they try and roll out a new variety of soup. (CBC)

A new Dartmouth, N.S., eatery is serving up a new soup made out of one of the city's favourite snacks.
"My friend Stephen joked that we should make donair soup," said Roz Wilson-Oliver, co-owner of Souper Duper Soup.
"We put it off and we put it off and this week we said: donair soup is up on the list."
That's right, donair soup. Just two days on the menu and so far donair soup is a hit with customers.
Made with many of the same ingredients found in traditional donairs, but without the pita shell, the concoction created quite a stir on social media.
"It sort of hit Twitter and it's been on fire," said Wilson-Oliver.

Embed | Twitter

Open Full Embed in New Tab (external link)Loading external pages may require significantly more data usage.
The soup shop has only been open on Ochterloney Street for two months and each week they try and roll out a new variety of soup.
"All of a sudden we decided, let's go for it," said Jenn Service, co-owner of Souper Duper Soup. "Go for it we did and now we have donair soup on our menu."

Unorthodox marketing working

Service and Wilson-Oliver both have marketing backgrounds and both recently lost their jobs, but they also know their way around the kitchen.
Service is known as the Soup Whisperer. Wilson-Oliver is the Cake Crusader, a dessert specialist.
When they opened the shop, they weren't sure what to expect. Rolling out a soup that was guaranteed to raise a few eyebrows was all part of their plan.

Image | Roz Wilson-Oliver

Caption: Roz Wilson-Oliver, co-owner of Souper Duper Soup, is known around the shop as the Cake Crusader, a dessert specialist. (CBC)

"It was kind of different to find ways to do marketing because we have a very limited budget," said Service.
"Trying to get people through word of mouth and that sort of thing, we've been trying a variety of different ways to get people through the door."
So far the unorthodox marketing is working and the donair soup combo is popular.
For $8, you get soup and a biscuit.
"This soup is delicious," said customer Danielle Skinner. "It tastes like a donair but without the wheat of a pita."
"It's great and it's a nice twist on a Nova Scotia favourite for sure," said Nick Russell.
"It's pretty similar to an actual donair and the biscuit has a really nice taste to it."