;; But I Had A Tiara: Soup's On Saturday
Showing posts with label Soup's On Saturday. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Soup's On Saturday. Show all posts

Saturday, September 4, 2010

This ‘n That, Saturday Around Home

I am so thankful for a 15 year old who cheerfully helps me with chores that include heavy lifting and lifting at odd angles. Today he helped me get at some old tables we have that need work so I could see about preparing one of them for the school room. He also, with not one word of complaint, helped me with some other barn projects. He is really good about this. I took him out to lunch today to let him know how much I appreciate that about him.

nathan burgerThat baby had beef, ham, bacon, typical veggies, two kinds of cheese, and an egg on it!

Remember when I referred to Sneaky Mama Hen making her nest where I could not get at them? Well, her babies hatched this week and we moved her, so I could finally get to the tables.

After looking today, I am glad to see that one table and a set or partial set of chairs looks promising. I am excited to get started. Oh, and I am indeed going to paint a red color similar to the red on that chalkboard topped desk I included in a post last week. I just love that it is red, yet still somewhat neutral because of the shade it is. And I think I will use a velvet looking gold fabric for the seats. I’m not immovably decided on this though. It depends on what kind of screaming deal I can get on fabric and how durable it is. Stay tuned.

Since today is Saturday – I thought I’d remind you that Soup’s On Saturday begins next month. So, if you love soup even half as much as I do, you will want to start thinking about it and getting ready to link your faves! Also, if you plan to post -- or even check it out, or if you have friends who love soup, please grab my S.O.S. button for your blog by cut and pasting the jibberish in the little box under my SOS button below. Clicking on it will also take you to the category schedule.

Yummy. Soup and warm bread are about the only two things that made me look forward to fall. Sort of.

~The Soup's On Saturday carnival runs from October through May~

Saturday, August 14, 2010

Soup's On Saturday! III


Sorry to interrupt your summer and all but, since today is Saturday, I thought I'd announce the upcoming
Soup's On Saturday!, Edition III. Because it's coming up sooner than I'd like to think!

If you have read my blog for awhile, you already know what S.O.S. is. If you have not, you can read about it here. This year, I thought it would be nice to also suggest that you may also comment about your favorite store bought or ready made soup and/or share links to articles about any given theme.

I LOVE soup! If you love soup too, you will want to 1) Participate, 2) Tell your friends, 3) Grab my S.O.S. button from my sidebar for your blog too, 4) Look on my sidebar to check out the great links I have posted from the last couple of years!

Below is my tentative schedule of each week's soup theme. I have tried to make each theme coordinate with what you might be doing or enjoy at that time. I am hoping to throw a contest or two in there as well!

October 2: Soup, The Basics

October 9: Freezing and Canning Soups

October 16: Tasty Veggie Soups

October 23: Dry Soups and Mixes

October 30: Sides for Soups

November 6: Soups with Toppings

November 13: Soups for a Crowd

November 20: Soups Using Poultry

November 27: Soups With A Theme

December 4: I’m Just Stewing

December 11: Soups With Tradition

December 18: Ham Soups (or any Pork)

December 25: What A Crock

January 1: Diet Soups

January 8: Soups For Sickies

January 15: I Am Wild and I Got Game

January 22: Gettin’ A Little Chili

January 29: Beef Soups

February 5: CONTEST: Using Leftovers For Soup

February 12: Cream Of…

February 19: Spring and Summer Soups

February 26: Comfort Soups

March 5: Best Of

You may now return to your regularly scheduled summer already planning for fall!


Monday, March 8, 2010

A,B,C -- Easy As 1, 2, 3 (Alphabet Soup)

In my hastily posted menu plan yesterday, I included a link for Scrabble Soup for Wednesday. Because of mood schedule changes, I often make my menu items on a night other than the one I have planned.

So yep, we had Alphabet Stew tonight. I did not use the Scrabble Soup recipe I linked to but, instead, made up my own. It turned out great, especially with the fabulous bread my daughter makes (by herself other than getting the honey out of the gallon jar) in the bread machine. Everyone, including Mr. Picky Pants, loved it. I am going to attempt to write out the recipe below so I can make it again. If you want to make it also, have at it.


Be forewarned that preparing this soup, or even thinking about it, could bring on your own kitchen performance of ABC, ala Jackson 5.

Off The Cuff Alphabet Soup


Put about 10 cups cold water in a gorgeous pot. Mine is a red Le Creuset 8.5 quart I purchased at Costco with my rebate check a couple years ago.


If the pot is pretty it makes all the difference in the world.




Throw some beef bones in there and add 2+ Tablespoons plain old white vinegar. Vinegar helps extract more nutrition out of those old bones. I say 2+ Tablespoons because I actually really like the tangy flavor it gives so I use more than the recommended amount. Why is it, that when I talk about "those old bones", I keep thinking of myself? Hmm.

Add:

~ 1-2 turnips, peeled and diced

~ 1-2 carrots, sliced thinly

~ Celery stalks and/or leaves and parts, cut up

~ 1-2 cloves garlic

~ 1 onion, sliced

~ Sea Salt, maybe about 2 teaspoons

Now go correct your kid's math, get caught up on laundry, cut up all of the produce you bought yesterday and freeze them on cookie sheets for smoothies later -- or whatever it is that you do all day.

Then pour yourself a glass of wine. We're going to be here awhile.


This is my friend Julie, getting some wine. Not while she made soup. It was at her birthday party. But, still. She was getting some wine and she looks cute in her new dress so I'm leaving it up.

Let those bones and veggies boil for hours and hours, maybe even overnight.


Then, if your family hates the veggies you have included, take them out and blend them up so they don't know they are in there. Then put 'em back in. If they don't have that hatred, well, I'm happy for ya, and just leave them alone.

Remove the bones, strip the little bit of meat that might have still been attached, shred it up and throw it back in the gorgie pot. Add some more veggies of your choice, as many or as few as you'd like.


Add:

~ 1 32 ounce box Beef Broth

~ 1/4 - 1/2 cup onion soup mix (I buy in bulk from Frontier), to taste


~ 1 packet Simply Organic Mushroom Sauce Mix (because I had it, you don't have to)


~ 1 Tablespoon Oregano


~ 1 Tablespoon Dried Basil or fresh to taste


~ Sea Salt to taste


~ 4 Tablespoons Worchestershire Sauce


~ Veggies of your choice (I did not add any additional veggies because I was hoping to slip one over on Mr. Picky Pants, which I did).

~ 1 Pound Cooked Beef of your choice, I used ground

Bring back to boil and add Alphabet Pasta. I found the alphabet pasta for $3.00 through my co-op.

Like, um, a year ago.


So when I cleaned out my pantry and saw I still had it, I decided I better use it. Tomorrow is my co-op order day. I am glad I know how much we like it so I can order more. And it will not be a year before I use it this time.

It is especially fun for little ones who don't like "veg-a-bles". Mine got so distracted with the alphabet and the colors of the pasta that he didn't say a word about the veggies. It helped that the veggies were soft and sort of fell apart in the soup also.

If you want soup, add about 1/2 cup of the ABC pasta. Or, you can be like me, reason that you have had the box for a year, it's time to use it up, and dump the whole thing in, creating a thicker stew.


Whatever. The picture is from my cell phone because my camera is broken. At least now you have a blurry idea of what an alphabet stew might look like.



Serve piping hot, preferably with a slice of homemade bread and a pat of real butter.

Some of us are dippers. This bread is too good to dunk, but the crust can be sacrificed to use as a great dipper.


E-A-T U-P!



Saturday, February 28, 2009

Soup's On! Saturday : Cream of Broccoli


Do any of you have a wonderful "Cream of...." Soup? Leave me a comment!

I have many fabulous creamy soup recipes. They are so warm and comforting. And, well, on the not so good for weight loss side of things, if ya know whaddi mean.

Several years ago I was on Weight Watchers (after my 5th pregnancy) and I discovered that cream soups don't always have to undo my efforts at losing weight.

This Cream Of Broccoli Soup is one of my favorite WW recipes. It's only 2 points and very satisfying. I think adding the hot pepper sauce is a stroke of genius. It adds an unexpected punch before you even realize you are missing the things you have left out. When I make it, I put in more broccoli. Veggies are FREE so it doesn't add any more points, and it makes it creamier and thicker still. I also like toasted almonds on top too, but then you have to count those points.

Of course, if you are not trying to lose weight, feel free to use 1 cup cream of half and half instead of the fat-free milk. And throw in alot of cheddar, then top with sour cream. And, rather than count points, well, just count yourself lucky!

Now my friends, I must announce that SOS is over for this season. My plan was to go through February and it is now the very last day of February. But SOS will be back, Lord-Willing, when Fall is here once again. Ewww, don't even say such a thing right now!

BUT, stay tuned for a new weekly food carnival. I am still deciding on some of the details and will, of course, put it all here when the time is right. Thank you to those of you who participated. I have definitely gained some new favorites!


Saturday, February 21, 2009

Soup’s On Saturday: Chicken Wing Soup


Does anyone else have a chicken soup recipe?

Here is the recipe I threw together last week. It turned out pretty well, but I am going to post it with the tweaking I did since then. I hope you try it and like it!

1 Whole Chicken, stewed and deboned (or equivalent)

2 cups broth from stewed chicken and/or other broth.

3 stalks celery

3 grated carrots

1 grated onion

Olive oil or butter


Hot Sauce (what I had was a very mild chili sauce which was more like ketchup, so I added 2 T. Tabasco. Using Hot Wing Sauce with a kick will be much better)

1 t liquid smoke

2 t worchestershire sauce

3-4 small potatoes

8 ounces grated Cheddar Cheese

1 brick cream cheese

Half and Half or milk

Saute onion, carrots and celery in butter or olive oil until crisp tender. Add all ingredients except cheeses. Cook on low for 4-6 hours. Stir in cubed cream cheese and grated cheddar. Stir until melted. Serve with all or some of these choices on side:

~Blue Cheese crumbles

~ Ranch Dip

~ Spicy Wing Sauce

~ Cilantro

~ Sour Cream

~ Salsa

~ Anything else you would serve with Chicken Wings. Have fun!


NEXT WEEK: Cream Of ??? soups.

Link your favorite or put your recipe in the comments section.

Saturday, February 14, 2009

Soup's On Saturday: A Call For Chicken Wing Soup



Yes, it's Saturday. No, I do not have any tried and true soup recipe for you. However, I have an interesting idea for you to experiment with. I am trying it tomorrow too.

Some of you are WILD about football. There was alot of hullabaloo about that a couple weeks ago. Here at my house, we are basketball folks. Especially my boys. This weekend is All Star weekend. The boys are especially excited because our (our= our team's) own Brandon Roy is playing. So I want to make something special to eat.

This morning as I was deboning a chicken I made broth with and mulling over what to do with it. I was thinking about what I would make in the crockpot to be ready when we get home from church, as well as what I would make for the basketball festivities. Then it occured to me that there MUST be some kind of recipe for Chicken Wing Soup.

I love search engines.

I found several recipes, got some great ideas, and am adding some ingredients of my own. Next week I will post the results and, if it was deeee-lish-us, I will post the recipe.

In the meantime, have any of you made Chicken Wing Soup before? Do you have a wonderful recipe for it? I also considered Barbeque Chicken Soup so if you have a recipe for that I'd love that too. Maybe this week you can experiment and come up with your own. Or maybe you have a treasured recipe.

If you want to post next week about some kind of soup that is modeled after your favorite way to eat chicken, I'd love it if you will link! I will plan to have the link up first thing next Saturday.

GO WESTERN CONFERENCE!!!

Saturday, January 17, 2009

Soup's On Saturday...Soup In a Jar


I really did mean to post every single Saturday. At least.

Life happens. And then I can blog about it. Sometimes.

I love blogging. So I hope I get back into my groove.

Anyway, about soup ...

The soup this week is one you can make ahead and keep in your pantry until you are ready for it. I like making it for gifts for my siblings at Christmas. It is good for me to have on hand, all made up, especially during basketball season, as it is a quick thing to throw together. This recipe makes a huge batch too.

Soup In A Jar! (Sorry no pic. New computer so none loaded on here yet!)

There are some really good recipes out there for this. And you can use different sized jars and decorate them if you'd like, or just put a square of fabric on the flat lid then screw the ring on.

This recipe is my favorite. Sometimes I add chicken cooked in wine, and have even thrown in some bacon. And I like the look of a plain old canning jar so I mostly leave them plain, or just tie a piece of raffia around it with the instruction tag.

Wild Rice and Mushroom Soup... In A Jar

3/4 Cup Country Gravy Mix
2 Tablespoons Chicken Boullion or Broth Granules
1 and 1/2 Tablespoons Dried Minced Onion
1 Tablespoon Dried Celery Flakes
1 Tablespoon Dried Parsley
1/2 Wild Rice
3/4 Cup Long Grain White Rice
1/2 Cup Wild Rice
3/4 Cup Long Grain White Rice
Add:
1 Can Mushrooms or 2 Cups sauteed Fresh Mushrooms
14 Cups Water
Bring to boil, cover and let simmer 20-25 minutes or until rice is tender. Check and stir occasionally.

Saturday, January 3, 2009

Soup's On! Saturday: The Best Bean and Ham Soup


I can't believe I have been missing SOS. It sure hasn't prevented me from actually making soup. Just from writing about it. Over Christmas Break that is pretty much all we ate. We had Cheesy Ham and Rice Soup, White Chili, Taco Soup and more. Each time I made a big pot of it so we would have something quick to heat up for the next meal.

As I mentioned before, we had *S*N*O*W*. Lots of snow. We had no way to get out of our driveway so we stayed home, warm and cozy, for almost two weeks, with a couple slow but beautiful trips to the store in between storms.

So soup was perfect. And I got to try some new soups too.

If you post a soup recipe this week, I'd love to see any new recipes. I am especially looking for soups with no dairy or grains if you have them.

We wanted a pretty laid back New Year's Day. But, since we didn't do our annual NYE Sushi Party, we wanted to do something. So our sons just invited some of their friends and we just had a few of ours over.

What is the perfect thing to serve to a group that doesn't have to be done at the last minute, that allows me to relax? You guessed it. I also wanted to use up my ham bone so searched specifically for a recipe using that. Certain types of beans are supposed to bring good luck so, though I don't believe in actual "luck", I thought it was fun for New Years to have black eyed peas included in the soup.



Huh? Oh. Sorry. I meant these.
I bought mine in a 13 bean mix from Bob's Red Mill. The recipe for The Best Bean and Ham Soup
called for a 15 bean mix but 13 is what I had and it worked just fine. I didn't miss those extra two kinds of beans at all. As usual, I amended the recipe to suit what I had and our tastes. Work with it Baby. Make it your own.

As it turns out, everyone really liked the soup. Except me. I omitted the salt and it was still a little too much on the salty side for me. And I yearned for that slight smoky taste I remember from when my grandma would open up a can of Bean with Bacon. So next time I will probably add some smoke flavor. And maybe toss in some bacon along with the ham.

Have a cozy back to school week. Remember to take some moments to yourself and don't get the After Christmas Blues.

Saturday, December 13, 2008

Soup's On! Saturday: Past Soup Links



For Soup's On! Saturday today, I have finally finished linking each soup recipe on my side bar. I am still working on linking for a couple unlisted blogs. Other than that, they are all there I think! Look to the right, under my S.O.S. button. And, please, take the code for your blog too. Enjoy this week's festivities. And, if you live near me, stay safe in the impending snow and possible ice! Enjoy! We don't get it much. (If you want to link, leave me a comment and I will put up a Mr. Linky.)

Saturday, December 6, 2008

Soup's On! Saturday: Tex Mex Turkey Soup



Sorry I am a little late today. I had problems with a sluggish computer. In fact, that's a large part of why I haven't posted more all week. But here I am:) Still with a very sluggish computer that needs Metamucil.

For details about S.O.S. click on my little S.O.S. blog button to the right. Feel free to copy the code to post on your blog too!

I wanted to post a recipe this week that used TURKEY. After all, I cooked two of them for Thanksgiving and I wanted to use it all up. Every last morsel and drip.

I found a recipe we enjoyed, with our own modifications of course. Why is that anyway? If I get a recipe, it can be a recipe that is perfectly tasty -- and I still have to modify it. What is it that compels me to do so? I guess we just want our own special brand? Whatever.

Tex Mex Turkey Soup (find original recipe here)
1 onion, chopped
4 cloves garlic, chopped
Saute in butter or olive oil until onions are translucent then add:
2 teaspoons chili powder
1+ teaspoons cumin (Should I say it again? I LOVE cumin:)
1 teaspoon oregano
1 tablespoon parsley
6 cups turkey broth (made with bone broth if possible)
2 quarts canned tomatoes
2 anaheim chiles, roasted and diced
(instead of home canned tomatoes and chiles you can use canned if you wish)
1 and 1/2 cups salsa
1 pound COOKED beans of your choice (or one 14 ounce can)
1 cup corn (my hubby doesn't like corn so I go easy on it, sadly. I know it is unamerican.)
4 cups shredded turkey
Heat until bubbly then let it simmer for at least 30 minutes. I put mine in the crockpot and left at all day so the flavors could mingle. Then stir in:
4-8 ounces cream cheese
Stir until melted then add:
Sour cream, creme fraiche or plain yogurt to taste
Cilantro to taste

Serve topped with any/all of the following:
tortilla chips
sour cream
green onions
salsa
cilantro
avocado
tomatoes
olives
CHEESE

How have you used your turkey leftovers? Any soups today?

I am hoping to tell you about another way I used up our turkey in my Menu Plan Monday post. But I will be traveling to see my Grandma so am not sure if I will get it posted or not.

Don't forget about Pantry Raid: Craft Projects, Charity, Calendars and Cards on Monday as well.

Here's Mr. Linky in case you'd like to post a soup recipe this week too.




Have a great week!

Saturday, November 29, 2008

Soup's On! Saturday: Turkey Broth




For Soup's On! Saturday! I just want to remind you to use your turkey bones to make healthful broth. We are having company for dinner tomorrow and I am using ours in place of chicken broth in a delicious recipe. Chicken and turkey broth is often interchangeable, though turkey does have a taste all it's own. The week after Thanksgiving is a great time to experiment with this.

If you click here you can view my post about using chicken for three meals. I can get many more out of a turkey! It also contains the link to the article "Broth Is Beautiful" if you want a reminder about how to make the best broth you can.

I am not using Mr. Linky this week, but I'd love to see your soup recipes, especially those using turkey, next week!


Saturday, November 22, 2008

Soup's On! Saturday: Cream of Dill Pickle Soup


Do you see how suh-weet it is? My Fairy Blogmother made a button for me for Soup's On! Saturday! And she made me a little one too, so if you want to include a little bloggy bling in your side bar or in your SOS post, you can go to my sidebar and pick up the code.

While you are at it, you can also pick up the code for my Tiara blog button. Aren't they Uh-Door-ubble? Fairy Blogmother has been busy! Now we're talking TWO tiaras. Okay, so what if one of them is floating in a bowl of soup? If you do pick up a button will you tell me so I can go see how adorable it looks on your pages?

This week's soup is one I searched for for years. Wait, that looks awkward.

It is a recipe for which I had searched for many years. Still awkward.

I wanted this recipe for years and, despite searching high and low, I was unable to attain it. Okay, that's better. Proper without sounding too stuffy.

A few years ago -- okay, it was quite a number of years ago, I had this soup which sounds very unlikely to be as delicious as it really is.

My friend Evelyn was the leader for a pretty big Christian Women's Club in the Northwest. I did not attend her group but, this particular evening she had asked me to be the guest music. The evening I sang we went to a lovely restaurant called The Trianon in SW Portland (I sang Sandy Patti if that gives you an idea of how long ago it was. I think I was about 12, right?). It was a pretty fancy evening, and they had menus printed for the occassion. When I glanced over my menu and saw this printed, I was dubious - to say the least.

Cream of Dill Pickle Soup

But everyone was served the same thing, so my steaming bowl came whether it sounded appealing to me or not, and I decided to taste it. It was delicious!

As I mentioned so eloquently above, I was unable to locate the recipe anywhere. And, since the Trianon closed down, I had not even been able to find a restaurant that served it. Now I can find several recipes, but this lady says her recipe is THE Trianon recipe. Can you believe it?! I was so surprised to finally be able to find this, so many years later.

Are you curious? Are you brave? Do you trust me? I wonder if my friend Sarah at House of Homer will make it for the next girls night?

Cream of Dill Pickle Soup
3 Tablespoons Butter
1/4 cup very finely chopped Onion
1/4 cup White Wine
1 and 1/8 cup Flour (or to desired thickness. Sub thickening agent of your choice, be aware amounts may vary.)
5 cups Chicken or Vegetable Stock
1 and 1/2 cups Dill Pickle Juice
2 teaspoons dried Dill Weed (I prefer using fresh to taste)
1/2 cup Heavy Cream, Whipping Cream or Milk (experiment with sour cream or plain yogurt)
Salt and Pepper to taste
Julienned Dill Pickle for garnish

Melt butter in your soup pot, add onion and saute until soft. Add white wine until almost all liquid evaporates. Reduce heat to low and stir in flour (do not brown). Whisk in water and pickle juice. Keep stirring to a boil then add dill weed. Stir in cream or milk, season with salt and pepper to taste. Garnish individual bowls with julienned dill pickle.


I will admit I just found this and have not made it yet. But it is tried and true alright. I'd say that yearning for it since the days of singing Sandy Patti to a cassette soundtrack qualifies:) And, as soon as I am off this RX diet, I'll be making it myself. Much to the shock of my family. But I bet they like it...

Have a surprisingly good week (after you link and comment of course),



Saturday, November 15, 2008

Soup's On! Saturday, Pumpkin Chili

(photo from Vegan Visitor where original recipe is posted)


Where I live, in the Pacific Northwest, a storm blew through this week and it rained quite a bit, but the air continued to stay somewhat balmy, especially for how wet is was. Although, thinking of my husband who has been in Florida for work all week, maybe "balmy" isn't the right word.

Today the weather is sunny, but not warm. Looking over the valley below us, nestled between the pockets of fog, there is an ever changing patchwork in varying shades of vibrant autumn hues.


Fall is beautiful and the pictures I see through my window are changing daily. Ah, Autumn. (By the time I took this picture the fog had evaporated. Did I say "ever changing"?) Do you see Mt. St. Helens in the background to the right?


Last week my friend Julie C. posted a link to her blog for a delightfully seasonal Pumpkin Chili. Those of us who know her have the secret code to get in. But woe to you who do not! So I decided to post it here on my blog for this week's Soup's On! Saturday (If you are a first time visitor to this blog, you can read about Soup's On! Saturday here). Oh, and if you are looking for past week's recipes, I am working on a link list. Look over to the right, in my sidebar, for the links I have so far.

I made this chili this week and it was yummy. I had to adjust the spices because my (old) coriander was not fragrant or flavorful and did not provide any flavor at all. But I am a huge fan of cumin so didn't mind any extra cumin flavor.

Julie said she didn't have carrots, I didn't have celery when I made it. We both started with dry beans too. It turned out well for both of us. So don't be shy. If you have beans of any variety, dried or canned, and you have pumpkin, you can play around with this recipe. You can view the original recipe by clicking on the link under the picture above.


Would you please pray for my friend Elizabeth? She has recently found out about some health problems which are looming large. They have to make decisions about how to proceed with treatments, as well as how to deal with all of the challenges it may bring. Please pray for a miracle of healing, for peace and for clarity. And maybe you could even leave her an encouraging comment so she knows you are praying for her:)

Enjoy Julie's recipe below and then link your own, or email it to me so I can post it here.

Have a wonderfully cozy week. May you find rest in knowing you are being held by the Creator of the Universe.



Pumpkin Chili

2 Tablespoons Vegetable Oil
1 Onion, finely diced
2 Medium Carrots, peeled and finely diced
1 Stalk Celery, finely diced
3 cups Tomato Sauce
3 cups Fresh Tomatoes, skinned and chopped or 1 - 28oz can diced tomatoes
5 cups beans, soaked and cooked (I mixed red and pinto beans this time)
(could sub 2- 19oz cans beans, drained and well rinsed)
1/2 teaspoon Salt
Crack of Black Pepper, to taste
1/2 teaspoon Dried Thyme, scant
1 teaspoon Ground Coriander Seed
1 Tablespoon Ground Cumin
1 Cup Dice Pumpkin, roasted


Preheat the oven to 350ºF.
Clean and cube half a good baking pumpkin.
Using about 1 tablespoon of the olive oil lightly cover the pumpkin, tossing to coat.
Roast in the oven for about 30 minutes or until tender.
Heat the remaining oil in a large stockpot and add the diced onion, carrots and celery.
Sauté the vegetables until slightly softened and the onions are transparent.
Add the chopped tomatoes, sauce and spices then bring everything to a simmer.
Stir in drained, rinsed beans and continue to simmer for an additional 20 minutes or until the carrots are soft.
Add the cubed pumpkin.



Saturday, November 8, 2008

Soup's On! Saturday: Happy Fall Squash Soup

Sorry I am so late -- just in case droves of you were all lined up to post your link. I am working on my pantry for Pantry Raid "after" pictures for Monday and lost track of time.

You can read about Soup's On! Saturday here.

My soup for today used some of the chicken broth I posted about last week. I wasn't sure I'd like it, but I did.

Happy Fall Squash Soup

1 squash of your choice (I used acorn squash), cooked and pureed
1/2 brick cream cheese
about 6 cups chicken broth (more or less to desired thickness. Can also thicken first with flour or cornstarch)
1 teaspoon cumin
1/2 teaspoon chili powder
salt to taste

Heat all together until it is hot and cheese is melted. Serve with toasted pecans, cilantro and sour cream on top. I also added cabbage cut very small and some chicken pieces.




Saturday, November 1, 2008

Soup's On! Saturday: Chicken Tortilla Soup

Thanks for stopping by. I hope you find some recipes you will keep in your own recipe box and use for years to come. I know I am adding to my own collection with some really yummy soups.

If you haven't stopped by before, you can read all about Soup's On! Saturday here.


A couple weeks ago I gave you a quickie Chicken Tortilla Soup recipe because, well, I was in a hurry! This week I am giving you my regular recipe for it. It takes a little bit more time than the quick version, but is still a fairly easy meal to make. It uses several canned ingredients, but it sure is the best Tortilla Soup recipe I have found.


We love soups with toppings, so this one is a definite hit. Before we ladle the soup into our bowls, we scrunch some tortilla chips on the bottom of the bowl. Then we ladle the soup in, and top it with avocado, green onion, sour cream, cilantro, maybe just a few more tortilla chips, and cheese. Jack cheese is especially good on top.

My oldest son likes to add jalapeno too. He likes spicy things. He ate a habanero, a really spicy kind of pepper, when he was on a trip to Mexico, on a dare. I think it was one of the spiciest peppers there are.
If your whole family likes spicy food, you could throw in some jalapenos (or habaneros!) too, while cooking.


Chicken Tortilla Soup

3 Cloves Minced Garlic

1 Chopped Onion

3 Tablespoons Unsalted Butter (I just use what I have and it works fine)

2 Tablespoons All-Purpose Flour

3- 14 Ounce Cans Low Sodium Chicken Broth

4 Cups Half and Half

1 10.75 Ounce Can Condensed Cream of Chicken Soup

1 Cup Fresh Salsa

1- 15 Ounce Can Creamed Corn

6 Boneless Skinless Chicken Breasts, cooked

2 teaspoons Cumin

1- 27 Ounce Packet Dry Fajita Mix (or make your own fajita seasoning mixture and you can use sea salt and add or leave out things according to your taste)


Saute onion and garlic in butter for 5 minutes. Add flour, stir well, cook 1 minute more. Add broth and Half and Half. Bring to boil, reduce heat to low. Add everything else, cook for 15 minutes more after it boils.

I am looking forward to getting some more of your recipes. I am running out of tried and true soup recipes and will be be trying some new ones myself this week so I will have something to post next week.

Have a comfy, cozy, sitting-by-a-warm-fire-on-a-cool-autumn-day kind of week!


Friday, October 24, 2008

Soup's On! Saturday: Versatile Chicken Soup

If you are new here, please read my newly rewritten info about Soup's On! Saturday. Thank you so much for stopping by. I hope you find a recipe -- or a few, and that you stop by again.


I remember My Older and Wiser Sister telling me years ago that she got three meals out of a chicken. She told me she made the chicken itself for one meal, used the leftover chicken in burritos or whatever, then used the bones -- and whatever else is left, to make soup. I took that to heart and began squeezing as many meals as I could out of one chicken.


These days I have a large family, and one chicken pretty much is stripped, like a school of piranha got to it, within minutes. And I have since been more educated on the
benefits of using broth in general. So I try to use any stripped meat bones, of any kind, to make broth. The burritos, well, they will need their own protein source!


In my
Menu Plan Monday a couple weeks ago I posted a recipe I received from a friend (which I also found online) called Sticky Chicken. Boy howdy, my family loves that. I made it nice and spicy that night for my spice lovers. And that pile of bones that was left afterwards is the picture I had in mind as I typed the piranha comment above! It was picked clean. I don't know that I have ever seen bones in this house picked so clean.

But there were still lots of wonderful juices in the pan as well as the bits tucked here and there, of meat and liver type stuff. So I made a bone broth overnight. The next day I added some fresh veggies (cabbage is my fave) as well as some cooked brown rice and some spices. My older son especially appreciated eating some of this nice, warm soup when he got home late from a long day at college, and even commented that it was really going to "hit the spot".

The next day was a Saturday and I was afraid there wasn't enough rice left in it to really make a meal, so I found a recipe online for Whole Wheat Dumplings and threw those in, along with one extra box of chicken broth just to make sure I had enough. It was a hit, and I made my chicken last for three meals:)

Most of you probably have heard (or seen) me mention the book Nourishing Traditions:The Cookbook That Challenges Politically Correct Nutrition and the Diet Dictocrats.
It is a fascinating read and really opens your mind to a whole new way of thinking about food and the way you prepare it. This link, to an article called Broth Is Beautiful, takes you to an article by Sally Fallon, the author of that book. The article is very interesting and explains some of the reasons why your Grandma always wanted to give you chicken soup when you didn't feel well.

Below, for my soup recipe this week, I am posting her recipe for making a good broth. I am adding my own italics/bold to a few parts I found especially helpful or interesting.
Then you make it your own. Add rice, noodles, dumplings, more meat, veggies, herbs and spices (such as basil or lemon pepper) tabasco sauce -- or whatever makes it be your family's chicken soup.


"Stock or broth begins with bones, some pieces of meat and fat, vegetables and good water. For beef and lamb broth, the meat is browned in a hot oven to form compounds that give flavor and color--the result of a fusion of amino acids with sugars, called the Maillard reaction. Then all goes in the pot--meat, bones, vegetables and water. The water should be cold, because slow heating helps bring out flavors. Add vinegar to the broth to help extract calcium--remember those egg shells you soaked in vinegar until they turned rubbery (Tiffany notes, use about a half tablespoon of vinegar per quart of chicken broth. You really don't taste it).

Heat the broth slowly and once the boil begins, reduce heat to its lowest point, so the broth just barely simmers. Scum will rise to the surface. This is a different kind of colloid, one in which larger molecules--impurities, alkaloids, large proteins called lectins--are distributed through a liquid. One of the basic principles of the culinary art is that this effluvium should be carefully removed with a spoon. Otherwise the broth will be ruined by strange flavors. Besides, the stuff looks terrible. "Always Skim" is the first commandment of good cooks.

Two hours simmering is enough to extract flavors and gelatin from fish broth. Larger animals take longer--all day for broth made from chicken, turkey or duck and overnight for beef broth.

Broth should then be strained. The leavings, picked over, can be used for terrines or tacos or casseroles. Perfectionists will want to chill the broth to remove the fat. Stock will keep several days in the refrigerator or may be frozen in plastic containers. Boiled down it concentrates and becomes a jellylike fumée or demi-glaze that can be reconstituted into a sauce by adding water."

Please don't forget to look at the other recipes linked here throughout the week.

Have a wonderfully healthy, wholesome and comforting chicken- soup- for- the- soul kind of week!




Soup's On Saturday Info




Welcome to my blog and to Soup's On! Saturday!

Isn't soup just about the most comforting comfort food? My family enjoys eating soup often, especially during the cooler months of the year. Where we live, in the Northwest, we are known for R-A-I-N. It keeps things so beautiful and clean smelling, especially out where we live. But it can also sometimes feel like everything is wet and muddy, all of the time. That is definitely soup weather!

For anyone who might be visiting for the first time, Soup's On! Saturday is a place for you to come and find tried and true soup recipes, and a place for you to post or link your own favorite soups.

Each Saturday, sometime around 9:00am, I post the Soup's On! Saturday post for that week, along with the Mr.Linky for you to include your own post.

1. Read my current Saturday's post and comment if you wish.

2. Go to your own blog and post a soup recipe your family loves (please make sure it is one you have actually tried!).

3. Come back and give the permalink to your specific post about soup. (If you go back to your blog and click on the title of your soup post, or click on your time stamp, it will take you to that specific post. Then cut and paste the URL that is in your browser, come back here and put your name in the first blank and paste your URL in the second blank)


OR, post your recipe in my comment section. You can also tell us the name of a store-bought soup that you love that fits with that week's theme (if there is one).

OR send me your recipe and I will post it here for all to see, under your name and link it on the Soup's On! Saturday page.



4. Look at the other soup links and see if you just found a new favorite.

5. Comment Love is appreciated, especially if you tried someone's soup. You can give comments on this site or on the specific site where you saw a great recipe.

6. Stay cozy:)


Please don't forget to tell your readers about Soup's On! Saturday and link it with my adorable button (html text to link it can be found in my side bar, made by my Fairy Blogmother, Darcy) so they can come too!


Saturday, October 18, 2008

Soup's On! Saturday, Cheeseburger Soup



I am barely making getting this up here before my 10 am deadline. Eeek. Well, when a kid needs to be taken to a Junior High trip to the pumpkin patch, some things just get shoved aside for awhile.

If you don't know a thing about Soup's On! Saturday, click here and read all about it. Basically, you come here to look at soup recipes, post your own recipe on your blog then come back here and post your link (the link specific to your soup post) in the Mr.Linky below so others can go to your blog and look at your recipe. And then you leave comments on as many blogs as you like, especially recipes that sound good or that you try. Feel free to leave how you changed it up for your family too. We all know that each family has specific tastes and like to try new things!

This week I am providing a link for a recipe rather than typing it out. I have subscribed to Taste of Home since 1995 (when I was 14;) and this is a recipe I found there and have made for my family for several years. It is pictured above, straight from their website. Personally, I don't think the picture looks that great. It looks very familiar and not because it is a soup I make. My friend Jenny N. might be familiar with it right now in her house. But it really and truly is yummy and my kids especially love it. Some of my family members make it for their families too and it has even won an award at our annual Christmas Soup Cook-Off (I will write more about that another time!).

So go and look at this recipe for Cheeseburger Soup. If you know me or have been reading here long, you'll probably know right off one thing I change when I make this, in addition to a few specifics I might sometimes mention. Can you guess? Who knows me best?


Might I just mention that I made Theresa's Taco Soup from last week and that my entire family loved it? (I took a picture but my email won't open up so I can't get it. I will post it later if/when I can get to it). As I told her, anything with taco seasoning and ranch seasoning is sure to please! And I will also add that Theresa is my only big sister. She isn't very big though. I am bigger. Uh-hem. But I am younger, always will be -- and I can lose weight. But, as you can see, I will never, ever be as tiny as my eensy-weensy, "big" sister!

I am very proud of my "big" Older and Wiser sister. You should look at their blog and see some about the humanitarian aid they have participated in for many, many years, including living in a foreign country for 15 years.
Or you can read about their escapades as a family, or about how she, darn right, had a meeting with the Governor of Alaska yesterday. You betcha!

She is one of my closest friends and best cheerleaders. And a wonderful example to me for all most of my life. Excluding the days when she would pinch me and give me Charlie Horses for copying everything she said. And when I was "accidentally" annoying when my mom forced me to be a chaperone on her car rides with love interests. When she told me I had a big nose and called me Tif-Fanny-Butt.

But she's a little older now, and more mature. So now she just smiles when I copy her. And mostly she endures graciously enjoys my chatty thoughtful company.
If you need to book any travel from anywhere, please check out her Way2MuchFun link too. It is a travel booking website similar to other online travel reservation companies. She has started this home-based business to supplement their income since they work for a humanitarian aid company.

Now, go post a soup recipe on your own blog and come back here and link to it. Or include your recipe in my comments section. Or email me your soup recipe and I will post it here, giving you full credit. And, if you do make a recipe linked here, please let us know!

Have a week full of autumn beauty!



Friday, October 10, 2008

Soup's On! Saturday: Quick Chicken Tortilla Soup


Soup's On! Saturday
If you haven't been to Soup's On! Saturday before, you can read about it here.

I am all about doing my best to cook healthy and mostly- from- scratch- food for my family. But tonight I was busy. And I will be busy all day tomorrow. I am spending my day, UH- Gin,, with Mandisa and Nicole C. Mullen (polishing fingertips on shirt now). So what if I am sharing with, like, 14,000 other women?

I am going to wait in line for as long as it takes to try to get Mandisa to sign my girl's CD. In addition, I am really going to try to work up the nerve to ask her if she will say hello to my girl on the phone. Nervy, yes. But so priceless. My girl will be pleased into Never Never Land, forever and ever. You see, my girl and I, we voted for Mandisa every week when she was on AI. Dial. Vote. Hang up. Dial. Vote. Hang up. Avoid boys who want to use the phone to vote for another. Dial. Vote. Hang up. And so it went. Over and over and over and... We love 'Disa.

Nicole Mullen sings a song that brought me great comfort at one of the most difficult times in my life. So it is with great joy that I finally get to see her in person. She is a character. She wore Converse Boots. CONVERSE BOOTS, I say. Red ones (wasn't it you Deanna that told me someone you know is wearing pink ones to their own wedding?).

I digress. How shocking.

So aaaannnyway, as i was saying, my time is at a premium, as shown by the time stamp on this Early To Bed, Early To Rise Girl's midnight post. Which made me think of a quick and delicious Chicken Tortilla Soup recipe my treasured high school friend gave me a few years back (hi JL). So I thought I'd post it as my recipe tonight, since I know some of you are also busy. In fact, maybe you are one of the 14,000 I must share our 'Disa with. If you see me in line, please show compassion for my 7 year old daughter and make way.

(I will be posting another, less quick, recipe for this same soup on another day)


'Disa Fan Chicken Tortilla Soup
4-6 cups Chicken Broth
1/2-1 Cup Chopped Onion
2-3 Uncooked Chicken Breasts, chopped up
Can Diced or Chopped Tomatoes
Can of Diced Green Chiles
Can of Green Enchilada Sauce
Cumin, they say 1 teaspoon. I say at least twice that as I am a cumin fan.
Garlic to taste (approx. 1 Tablespoon)
Grated Mozarella or cheese of your choice
Tortee-Ya Chips

Saute onion and garlic with some olive oil and the cumin until soft. Add chicken, enchilada sauce, green chiles, diced tomato and chicken broth. Let cook at low boil until chicken is done, 30-45 minutes (it is much better if you do NOT precook the chicken as it releases it's juices into the soup while cooking).

Put chips and cheese in a bowl and serve soup over top.

You could also serve with the delicious cornbread I talked about yesterday.

Did I mention this is quick and easy?

I also want to tell you we had Em's Potato Soup and it was luscious. I added even more basil, and had extra ham so used that too.



Then we topped with fixins. Thanks Em!



Link away! Make sure you check comments too, for more recipes as some post there. Oh, and please make sure you tell your readers to come here to see even more soup recipe links:)


Wishing you a blessed Autumn,




Saturday, October 4, 2008

Soup's On! Saturday: Escondido Wedding Soup

If you are new to Soup's On! Saturday, you can read more details here.

The rains have come and they say Fall is really here this time. With temperatures in the low 90's this past week, I think I have a taste of what you hot weather dwellers feel. Though I have been glad for the gradual easing out of my summer attitude and into feeling ready for Autumn, I think now I am ready to hunker down and enjoy the Fall weather.

Several years ago my friend Sarah served Wedding Soup at a gathering of some kind. It was so long ago, I don't even remember what it was for. I have never been a huge fan of meat, and this soup had meatballs. But when I ate it, it was so comforting, savory and delicious.

I hated to ask her for her recipe. I have no idea if it is top secret, as it is her specialty. Well, one of them. So I searched around and made a few different recipes. And, if you know me, you know I am the annoying "why?" type. So I had to look into why a soup would be called Wedding Soup. It doesn't even have rice in it for goodness sakes!

Some people think it is because people brought different ingredients to a wedding to make a soup. But Wikipedia says it may be because some Italian words, minestra maritata, were confused. They were meant to say that meat and vegetables go well together, but someone misinterpreted it and it eventually became "wedding". If you too are a "why?" person, you can read more about it here.

So, back to my recipe attempts. I made some very tasty Wedding Soup recipes -- and I found some very interesting ones too. But none tasted like Sarah's. I don't know if it is because hers has some secret ingredient, or if it is just the Everything Tastes Better When Someone Else Cooks Phenomenon. So I finally decided I was going to go an entirely different route. So I mixed a recipe with another, added my own (are you getting tired of me saying that? I never can seem to stick to a recipe. I guess it is one way I can still be somewhat creative even in the midst of a life too busy for all of the creative type activities I used to enjoy more frequently) and came up with a recipe we love.

Well, for you who want a regular Wedding Soup recipe, you can find one here.

And for you who want to try a very Old Country one, using pig or chicken liver and lard, you can find one here.

Or you can try my new fangled one below, Escondido Wedding Soup. It has lemon in it, so I named it after my aunt's area in California, where she has lemon trees in her yard.

Or maybe Sarah will link hers, or at least post a link telling us it is Top Secret...


Even if it's still in the 90's where you live, may you enjoy the comforts of home this week, even without a crisp Autumn day!

Link away!



Escondido Wedding Soup
(sorry to be a broken record, but again, I don't precisely measure so these are my best estimations according to my notes)

In large bowl, mix together following ingredients until well combined:

~ At least one pound ground meat, half of it ground sausage
~ 2-3 Eggs, beaten
~ 5-8 Tablespoons Breadcrumbs
~ 5 Tablespoons Grated Parmesan Cheese
~ At least 4 Tablespoons Fresh Basil, or 2.5 Tablespoons dried
~ 2 Tablespoons Chopped Fresh Italian Parsley (optional)
~ 4 Green Onions, Sliced

If mixture seems too gooey, add more meat and breadcrumbs. Too dry, add more egg.

Form into balls. I make each ball about 2 Tablespoons or so. If you make them too big they take longer to cook through.

In large stockpot, add:

10 Cups Chicken Broth (you can vary this. I add alot because my family is large. Make sure you don't overfill. The meatballs will make the level rise considerably so start with less until you see how much your pot can handle)
Bring to boil.
Drop in meatballs. The above recipe will make more than will fit into the pot at one time. Put in as many as you can fit, still leaving room for ingredients below. My family loves the meatballs so after I serve up everyone's first bowl, I continue to add meatballs so they can cook while the first serving is eaten:)

Once first addition of meatballs is done they will begin to float. Add ingredients below to pot, return to boil and cook 10 minutes more or until orzo is tender. Before serving, cut open a larger meatball to be sure it is cooked through.

4 Cups Spinach (I add more)
1 lemon zested (you may want more or less, so try one first)
1.5- 2 cups orzo style pasta (little rice shaped pasta)


Serve in big bowls or individual soup pots, sprinkle generously with parmesan cheese.

Add more meatballs as desired:) I also sometimes add more broth, as needed to cook more meatballs