Monday, July 30, 2018

Week 31 -- Cheezy Broccoli Soup Powder

This week begins a three-week series of soup powders.  When this blog post goes up, I will be somewhere in California or Nevada on a bus tour.  This tour company involves sleeping out and cooking communal meals.  They say that most of the meals are vegetarian, but with my allergies it's safer for me to prepare my food separately.  I don't expect there to be an abundance of cooking equipment, and I don't want to spend my whole trip cooking, so I am bringing some soup powders I can just supplement with fresh vegetables on the trail.

This is similar to my broccoli cheese soup, but it's simpler to make and has beans instead of nuts. 

After making the soup, you can eat it fresh or dehydrate it into powder.  Spread it on lined dehydrator trays (line with parchment paper or inexpensive reusable tray liners).  Dehydrate until completely dry.  It will be in flakes or chunks.  Blend the flakes/chunks into powder.  Then, when you want to eat some, just add some hot water and let sit a few minutes.


Cheezy Broccoli Soup 

1/2 red onion, diced
2 cloves garlic, minced
2 carrots, sliced
about 3 cups broccoli florets
1 1/2 cups white beans (or 1 can)
water to cover
2 tsp miso
1/2 tsp mustard powder
2 tsp lemon juice
1/4 cup nutritional yeast

1. Saute onion in a little water until soft.  Add other vegetables with about an inch of water.  Let veggies steam until tender.  Add beans.
2. Turn off heat.  Add other ingredients.  Blend with immersion blender until smooth.
3. Soup should be slightly thick.  Spread on trays and dehydrate or thin to desired consistency and enjoy immediately.

Makes about 3-4 servings.

Monday, July 23, 2018

Week 30 -- Orange Sweet Potato

I mentioned last week that I'm moving soon.  This week I'm using up things from the refrigerator.  I had a few oranges left from the winter (they're looking leathery but they're still good inside), and I didn't want to waste them.  Normally this would feel more like a winter soup, but it tasted good on a cool and rainy summer day.

This soup is delicious and simple.  It has just a few ingredients and comes together quickly.

Soup with a swirl of cinnamon.

Orange Sweet Potato

1/2 red onion, chopped
3 medium sweet potatoes, diced (cut off coarse skin)
2-3 oranges, peel cut off and tough membranes removed  (mine were small so I used 3)
water to cover
Optional: cinnamon to garnish

1. Saute onion in a little water.  
2. Add sweet potatoes and water to cover.
3. Add orange flesh.
4. When sweet potatoes are tender, turn off heat.  Blend in blender or with immersion blender.  Add water as needed to get desired consistency.
5. Top with cinnamon if desired.

Monday, July 16, 2018

Week 29 -- Italian Festival Soup

I"m getting ready to move, so I'm using up the weird odds and ends in my freezer.  This week in my freezer I found two gluten-free vegan Italian sausage patties my mom made for me.  You can see my mom's sausage making method in this demo we did for a local tv show:  https://accesschautauquacountytv.org/episode/9dIYrYrLlpg

I grew up attending Italian festivals at churches every summer, and the signature scent at these festivals was always the peppers and onions served on sausage. Forget the sausage, the peppers and onions were the good part!

To make the broth richer I added a cup of tomato sauce I also found the freezer, the remnant of some past pizza-making expedition.

This soup brings back the atmosphere of those festivals.  Sing along to Volare while you eat for the real experience!

I feel like I'm sitting in a wooden folding chair under a tent.

Mmm...can you smell the onions and peppers?

Italian Festival Soup

1 large sweet onion, sliced
2 sweet bell peppers, sliced
4 cloves of garlic, sliced
2 vegan Italian sausages (optional -- replace with one can of beans and some red pepper flakes)
1 tsp fennel seeds (increase to 1 1/2 if using beans instead of sausage
1 cup tomato sauce

water to cover

1. Saute onion in water until soft.  Add garlic and then bell peppers.  
2. Add tomato sauce and water to thin to desired consistency.  Add fennel seeds.
3. Crumble or slice sausages and add.  Simmer about 10 minutes to let flavors meld.

Makes about 3 servings. 

Monday, July 9, 2018

Week 28 -- Crockpot Surprise

This is more a cooking tip than a recipe.  Usually I make this soup every few months.  I've been better this year about using things up, but I still managed to accumulate some sad veggies.  I tend to end up with clumps of frozen veggies in mostly used bags and leftover cut up veggies. 

This is not only a great way to avoid wasting food, it's a great cheap meal for weeks when you're trying to save money, and it's low on effort.

Use any sad vegetables you have: lumps of frozen peas, limp celery, dried up carrots, wrinkly tomatoes, wimpy greens, shriveled garlic, that other half a head of cabbage left over from last week's coleslaw, etc.

I have found that my crockpot holds about 1 gallon plastic bag full of veggies.  I have one bag that I use over and over again (just wash and turn inside out to dry) and I fill it with all of my sad chopped vegetables.

Throw them all into a slow cooker with water and either a can of beans or a cup of red lentils and let it all cook together on low all day.  No matter what veggies I use, this always ends up tasting delicious and flavorful.

There it is, ready to cook.

Hours later, you magically have soup!

Crockpot Surprise

About 1 gallon mixed vegetables, fresh or frozen, chopped
1 cup red lentils or 1 can beans
Water to cover

Put all in crockpot.  Cook on low about 8 hours.

Makes about 6 servings

Monday, July 2, 2018

Week 27 -- Roasted Red Pepper Soup

It's berry season, which means I need to clean out my freezer to make room.  I just bought 10 quarts of beautiful fresh strawberries, most of which are now frozen, though some are dehydrated.

The downside is that the strawberries have basically filled my freezer, and I won't have space for the cherries coming soon, or for the blueberries next month.

I'm allergic to the sprays used on berries, and pretty sensitive.  I suspect it's because berries have such thin skin.  I can't eat any berries from stores, not even "organic," so if I don't fill my freezer in the summer there are no berries to eat come winter.

Anyway, last year I made a big batch of roasted red peppers and froze most of them.  They came in very handy for making grilled "cheese" sandwiches and hummus all year.  I had just a few left, so I knew it was time for a creamy roasted red pepper soup.

There are many places online to find directions for roasting peppers.  It's very easy. I just wash the peppers, throw them on a baking sheet (no oil!), and roast at 400 degrees about 30-40 minutes until soft and charred.  When they come out of the oven, put a bowl over the top of them so they can steam for about half an hour.  Then you should be able to slip the skin right off and gently scrape out the seeds.  If you prefer the grill or stove top method, just do a quick search.    The peppers can be frozen until you want to use them.  This is a perfect fall activity when the farmers market is full of less than perfect, almost too old bell peppers.


It's too bad you can't smell a picture!

Roasted Red Pepper Soup

1 large onion, chopped
4 cloves garlic, chopped1 small-medium head cauliflower chopped4 roasted red peppersWater2 tsp miso, optional

1. Saute the onion in a saucepan with a little water until soft.  Add garlic.  
2. Add about an inch of water.  Toss in the cauliflower and let it steam until tender (about 10 minutes).
3. Add the roasted red peppers, torn into a few pieces.  Add a bit more water to the pan.
4. Turn off the heat.  Add the miso, if using.  Blend with an immersion blender or carefully transfer to a blender.  Add water as needed to make a smooth blend.
5.  Return to heat until warmed through, but do not boil.  Add more water to reach desired consistency.
Makes about 6 servings