Showing posts with label carrots. Show all posts
Showing posts with label carrots. Show all posts

Monday, November 26, 2018

Week 48: Roasted Vegetable Soup in Miso Broth

This is a much different soup.  Usually, one of the reasons we love soup is that the flavors blend together.  In this soup, each of the ingredients maintains its own distinct flavor.

I had some leftover cut up vegetables from making a savory vegetable tart for Mom's birthday.  I love roasted vegetables, and I don't like to waste leftovers, and this soup was super easy to throw together.

You can use any roasted vegetables you like.  I used eggplant, zucchini, carrot, onion, garlic, and grape tomatoes, because that's what I had. 

You can see how all of the vegetables hold their own.

Roasted veggies before being put in the soup...

And, just for fun, this is the savory vegetable tart
(alongside a deep dish pizza pie).

Roasted Vegetable Soup in Miso Broth

3 cups mixed vegetables, chopped into about 1 inch chunks
3 tsp miso
2-3 cups hot water

1. Spread the vegetables on a parchment-lined baking sheet.  Bake at about 390 F for 35 minutes or until vegetables are tender and lightly browned.
2. Divide the miso evenly between two soup bowls.  Add a little hot water to each bowl and stir to dissolve miso.
3. Divide the vegetables between the two bowls.  Add more hot water to cover.  Stir to mix it all up and enjoy.

Makes 2 servings.

Monday, November 12, 2018

Week 46 -- Apple Sweet Potato Stew

Hopefully this will be the last soup from my parents' kitchen.  I am moving into my new house and new kitchen as I write this.  In fact, after I post, I have to go dig and find my teapot. 

With my allergies, apples are like gold.  And my usual apple supplier was not in business this year (not to mention they are now two hours away from where I'm living).  Luckily, the tree outside mom's office had an amazing harvest for the first time ever.  We have eaten hundreds of apples off the tree this year, literally.  It's not an easy tree to pick from, so we adopted the habit of going out every day to see what dropped.

This stew makes use of some of those glorious miracle apples.

Mom picking some of these magical beauties.

Hot stew after cold apple picking.

Apple Sweet Potato Stew

1 cup red lentils
1 onion, diced
4 cloves garlic, minced
7 cups water
3 sweet potatoes, diced
3 carrots, sliced
1 Tbsp arrowroot
1 tsp each ginger, allspice, cinnamon, cardamom, turmeric
dash ground black pepper
3 apples, diced
1 Tbsp miso
1/2 cup coconut, (reduced fat, unsweetened)
1/4 cup cashews
2 dates

1. Saute onions and garlic in water.  Add sweet potatoes, carrots, red lentils, and half of the water.  Let simmer until all are tender.  Add spices and apples.
2.  In a blender, combine miso, coconut, cashews, and dates with some of the water.  Blend until smooth.  Add to soup.
3. Dissolve arrowroot into a little water that's left.  Add to soup.  Continue simmering until arrowroot is cooked and stew has thickened.

Makes about 6 servings.

Monday, October 1, 2018

Week 40 -- Sunday Evening Stew

I'm still at my parent's house (just a few more weeks until my new house is really mine), and today my mom took pity on me and gave me a break from struggling in her kitchen.  She made her delicious Sunday Evening Stew with dumplings.  When I could still eat wheat, she used to make a seitan log and cook it on this stew, but now we eat it without the seitan and it's still just as good.

This is a good old fashion stew that's great for serving to people who are afraid that eating WFPB means giving up their traditional comfort foods.

Vegan nostalgia.

Sunday Evening Stew

about 4 cups of chunked gold potatoes
3 small onions, cut in half
4 large carrots, chunked
1/2 cup cherry tomatoes
4 stalks of celery, chunked
2 tsp each sage, savory, thyme, garlic, and onion powder
2 Tbsp molasses
2 Tbsp miso
4 cups water
1 Tbsp gluten-free flour blend mixed with 1 cup water

Dumplings
2 cups gluten free flour blend
1 tsp baking soda
1 tsp baking powder
2 tsp hemp seeds blended 1 cup water
scant tsp lemon juice
a few drops of apple cider vinegar

1. Spread veggies in one layer in large skillet.  The liquid should just reach the top of the veggies.  Let simmer until everything is tender (no need to stir), about 30 minutes.  Save the flour to add after the veggies are tender, then cook until the flour cooks into a gravy.
2. Mix the dry dumpling ingredients.  Mix the liquid ingredients together and then mix into the dry.  Plop the batter on top of the stew, cover, and continue cooking and dumplings are firm.
Let cool before eating.

Makes about 6 servings.

Monday, September 3, 2018

Week 36 -- Not Chicken Soup

I'm now moved out of my apartment and living with my parents until things are settled with me buying a house, so I'm cooking in mom's kitchen for a few weeks.  Mom and I, though we both eat WFPB, have some very different cooking styles (and the different cooking equipment that comes with that), so it's taking some adjustment.

But the perk of living at home for a while is mom-made comfort food when you aren't feeling well.  I was feeling sup-par and mom and I (but mostly mom while I moaned melodramatically from my bed) made the classic comfort food of Not Chicken Soup.

This soup uses one of mom's favorite WFPB ingredients:  soy curls.  We avoided them for years, thinking they were highly processed protein chunks like those "chicken style" tvp chunks we ate in our early vegan days, but they are actually just whole soybeans that are somehow magically transformed into "meaty" strips.  Don't question the magic.

My dad loves his Not Chicken Soup with noodles.  We dove into the Bag O' Pasta that I brought from my apartment and decided to try the green bean vermicelli.  They were very strange looking -- clear and goopy and not unlike a sea creature -- but they tasted surprisingly perfect in the soup.


Tastes like coming home!

A big bag of soy curls ready to be transformed.

Not Chicken Soup

1/2 tsp turmeric
1 tsp sage
1 tsp savory
1 tsp thyme
Black pepper
2 Tbsp parsley
1/2 onion 
3 garlic
3 celery with leaves
4 carrots
1 tsp molasses
2 Tbsp nutritional yeast
Miso 2 Tbsp
Soy curls 1 cup

Noodles (optional)

1.  Chop all vegetables.  Put in pan with seasonings (except miso) and about 3-4 cups of water.  Simmer as long as you can stand it. (Add about 2 more cups of water eventually.  Add it gradually as needed.)
2. Rehydrate soy curls according to directions on the bag.  Add miso and soy curls to the soup and simmer a few more minutes until soy curls pick up some of the flavor.
3. Serve over noodles if desired.

Makes about 3 servings for hungry people.

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 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, June 25, 2018

Week 26 -- Creamy Vegetable Soup


I was in the mood for peas and carrots, but I didn't want a tomato-based soup.  It was a little on the cooler side today and I was home sick dealing with seasonal allergies, so I was craving something hot and comforting.

This soup reminds me of the creamed tuna on toast my mom used to make when I was little, just without the tuna.  It would be very good served over toast or cooked grains. 

This took a while to simmer, but it wasn't very difficult and that gave me time to get this week's baked oatmeal in the oven. 


There's the finished soup.


And here's what it looked like before blending.

Creamy Vegetable Soup


Creamy broth:
1 red onion diced
2 large cloves of garlic diced
1 1/2 carrots diced
2 stalks celery diced
1/4 cup dried mushrooms, broken into pieces
1 can cannellini beans with liquid (or 1 1/2 cup cooked white beans)
4-6 cups water to taste
1/2 tsp each sage, thyme, parsley
1/4 tsp celery seed
pinch black pepper

1 1/2 cups frozen peas
1 1/2 cup diced carrot

1. Water saute onion and garlic until soft.  Add other broth ingredients.  Simmer about 45 minutes.
2. Blend broth.
3. Thaw peas.  Steam diced carrots.  Stir into broth.

Makes about 4 servings.

Monday, June 11, 2018

Week 24 -- Carrot Ginger

I was in the mood for a carrot soup, and I had ginger minced in the refrigerator from a few days earlier (as long as I was mincing it for one recipe, I decided to get it ready for a future meal, too).  When mincing ginger, remember to cut against the grain first.  Then you'll have thin slices that are easy to get as small as you want.  If you cut with the grain first, it will be hard to get tiny pieces.

While I was making this, I was on the phone with my mom.  I said I thought I would add some raisins, because I really like carrots and raisins together.  Mom convinced me that the carrot and ginger would be flavorful enough and that raisins would compete.  I took her advice.

As I do every week, I ate one bowl and put the rest of the soup away for lunches.  On Monday, I brought a jar of soup to work and started to eat it, and, oh boy, was it hot!  The ginger that had been fine when I ate the soup fresh had plenty of time to really meld into the soup.  It was so strong I almost couldn't eat it.  The next day I brought some raisins and sprinkled them into the soup as I ate, and it was perfect.

The raisins are totally optional.  If you can handle some good strong ginger heat, you may not want them.  If you need a little mellower flavor, the raisins add a great contrast that keep the ginger from being overwhelming.


It looks so innocent.  You would never suspect how strong the ginger is.


Carrot Ginger


1 red onion, diced
1 1/2 inch fresh ginger, minced
2 lbs carrots, diced
4-6 cups water
raisins (optional)

1. Saute onion in a little water until translucent.
2. Add ginger, carrots, and half the water.  Simmer until carrots are tender.
3. Puree soup.  Add more water as needed for desired consistency.  Return to heat until warmed.
4. Garnish with raisins if desired.

Makes about 4 servings.

Monday, June 4, 2018

Week 23 -- Lemon Millet Soup

I was at my Mom's house for the day, and Mom mentioned she wanted to try a whole-food plant-based version of Greek lemon and rice soup.

We try to avoid rice because of arsenic concerns, so we decided to use millet.  I thought it worked out well, but Mom says she would try using already cooked millet so it falls apart more in the soup.

We made our own super fast veggie stock, but feel free to replace that part of this recipe with your own veggie stock or a no-salt store-bought stock.

As with many of these soups, I never ate the authentic version, I've only eaten my own recipe, so I have no idea how this compares to the real deal.


We served the finished soup with homemade falafel, salad, and a cashew-cucumber sauce.



Lemon Millet Soup


4 cups veggie stock (1/2 a carrot, 1 stalk celery, 3 cloves garlic, 1/2 cup onion, 1/4 cup mushrooms, parsley, simmered with about 3 1/2 cups water then pureed)
2/3 cup uncooked millet
1 can chickpeas with their liquid (or 1 1/2 cups cooked chickpeas with 1/2 cup cooking liquid)
1 Tbsp lemon juice
2 tsp miso

1.  Heat stock.  Add millet and simmer until millet is over-cooked. 
2. Ad chickpeas, lemon juice, and miso.  Let all come up to temperature but do not boil after adding miso.

Makes 4 servings.

Monday, April 30, 2018

Week 18 -- Purple Soup

I love the taste of this soup, but mostly I love how pretty it is!  The broth is a beautiful clear purple.  I like to chop the veggies ahead and throw them into the crockpot some morning.  This makes a lot of soup for very little work.

I may have already mentioned (in the cabbage soup recipe) how much I love the buttery taste and texture of slow-cooked cabbage.  It is one of my favorite foods.

I like the simple flavor of this soup, but if you're new to low salt eating, you may want to stir a small spoonful of miso into your bowl.


Isn't that a gorgeous color?


My aloe and cacti are hoping I'll share with them.
(I won't.)


Purple Soup

1 medium onion
4 cloves garlic
2 carrots
2 stalks celery
8 oz baby bella mushrooms or white mushrooms
1 small head purple (red) cabbage
1 can white beans

1. Chop all veggies.
2. Drain and rinse beans.
3. Put all in crock pot or slow cooker.  Let cook for about 8-10 hours on low.

Makes 9-10 servings.

Monday, April 23, 2018

Week 17 -- Nacho Soup

I love nachos.  I have several different nacho cheese recipes, depending on the mood I'm in, but they all have one thing in common -- nuts or seeds, so they're high fat.

This soup doesn't have that problem.  It's nut free and the creaminess comes from cauliflower.

The soup is great on its own, but it's even better garnished with salsa and avocado.  I don't currently have any corn-safe olives, but a few sliced olives thrown into the soup would probably be a nice addition.


Here's the finished soup, ready to eat with all the extras.

This is what the veggies look like before cooking and blending.  

Here's the blended soup with the beans, tomatoes, and peppers thrown in.
You can tell my eyes were bigger than my soup pot.  I should have used the stock pot!


Nacho Soup

1 medium onion, chopped
4 cloves garlic, chopped
1 large carrot or 2 smaller carrots, chopped
1 medium head cauliflower, chopped
5 cups water, divided
1 bell pepper, diced
2 tomatoes, diced
1 Tbsp miso
1 Tbsp lemon juice
2 Tbsp nutritional yeast
1 tsp mustard powder
1 tsp turmeric
1 tsp paprika
1/4 tsp black pepper
1/2 tsp red pepper flakes
1 can black beans

1.  Saute the onion and garlic in a little water. 
2. Add the carrot and cauliflower.  Pour in about 1-2 cups of water, cover, and let steam until veggies are tender.
3.  Turn off the heat and add the miso.  Blend the veggies, adding more water to get to desired consistency.  Turn the heat back on to warm soup, but try not to boil it.
4.  Add the seasonings, black beans, tomatoes, and bell pepper.  Let all warm up.
5. Serve with salsa and avocado if desired, or eat as is.

Makes 6 servings.


Monday, April 16, 2018

Week 16 -- Lentil Curry Soup

I love the idea of curry, but I shied away from it for years for two reasons:  first, I can't handle spicy foods (again, I love the idea of them, but they trigger my MCAS), and second, I'm allergic to cloves, which are usually in curry powder.

My mom, however, makes a really good curry soup, with her own curry powder, so I can eat all I want of her food!  You can use commercial or homemade curry powder in this recipe.  The easiest way to make your own is to read the ingredients on a curry powder blend you like.  You can also search online as there are many recipes that can fit your own taste -- spicy or less spicy.

I was home visiting for a few days and she showed me the secrets of her yummy soup, so we made it together for the blog.  Her recipe usually includes liquid aminos and sugar, two things I'm trying to limit.  Our experiment went well -- this soup is delicious! 


I can chop vegetables and take photos at the same time! 
No, actually, Mom is chopping here.


The veggies are starting to multiply.  Soon they might overflow the pan!


More veggies steaming on the stove.


Mom is trying to wrangle all those yummy veggies in the pan.


The finished soup with a big mound of millet.


Ready to eat! 


Lentil Curry Soup

1 onion, chopped
4 medium carrots, chopped in large chunks
3 cloves garlic, chopped
4 medium large gold potatoes, chopped in large chunks
1 cup red lentils
1 bag frozen peas
1/2 bag frozen spinach
2 Tbsp curry powder
Water to cover
4 cups cauliflower
4 dates
1 cup reduced fat unsweetened coconut
2 1/2 cups water
2 Tbsp molasses
1 Tbsp miso

1. Steam the onion, carrots, and garlic in a little water in a large skillet.  Keep covered.  
2. When partially softened, add potatoes and lentils.  Add the peas and spinach.  No need to thaw first, as they will thaw in the soup.  Add curry powder.  Add water to cover.  Cook until lentils are tender (about 10-15 minutes).  About halfway through, add chopped cauliflower.
3. In a blender, blend dates, coconut, water, molasses, and miso.  Add to soup and let all warm up.  (Try to avoid boiling after miso is added.)
4. Serve with cooked millet or other grain, if desired.

Makes 8 servings.


Monday, March 26, 2018

Week 13 -- Cabbage Soup

This is the soup equivalent of an old pair of jeans.  It isn't splashy, but it's comfortable, it's simple, it doesn't take a lot of work, and it's perfect for lounging around.

I like to prep the veggies for this soup on a weekend and then put them in the crockpot on a weekday morning.  I usually use a ziplock bag for my crockpot veggies, and, when I say "a ziplock" I mean one poor ziplock that I wash and use over and over.  I discovered quite by accident that one gallon ziplock fills my crockpot exactly, so it's not only good for storage, it helps me know how many veggies to cut.

This is a great recipe for using up the rest of the cabbage after you've made other recipes.  This time, I used a little less than half the head for a stir fry.  I love cabbage, but I find it annoying to cut, so I always just keep going once I have some momentum and cut it all at once for several recipes.

On a literary note, you've probably read 1984 by George Orwell.  The part of this book I remember the most is the beginning of the second paragraph of the book.  "The hallway smelt of boiled cabbage and old rag mats."  I know it's supposed to evoke a feeling of an old and unpleasant place, but I always think, "Yum!  Boiled cabbage!"  I think of this every time I make this soup.  When I walk into my apartment building at the end of the day I sniff the air and think, "Oh!  One of my lucky neighbors is eating boiled cabbage!" and then I remember that I am the lucky one!  George Orwell obviously never ate this soup.

I used pinto beans for this recipe, but any kind of bean you have in the pantry will taste good here.


There's my trusty old ziplock.  After it's done its job, I wash it and let it try standing up inside out so it can get some well-deserved rest until the next time I need it.


See, one ziplock fills the crockpot to the top.


The finished soup! 

Cabbage Soup

1/2 head cabbage, cut into thick strips
1 onion, diced
3 cloves garlic, diced
3 small gold potatoes, diced
3 carrots, diced
3 stalks celery, sliced
1 cup grape tomatoes, sliced in half
1 can beans, drained and rinsed
10 cups water

1. Chop all veggies. 
2. Put in crockpot.
3. Cook on low for about 8-10 hours.  Sometimes I turn it to high when I get home and let it cook another hour or so.

Makes about 8 servings.

Monday, March 19, 2018

Week 12 -- Lentil Soup #2 and Magic Sprinkles

Happy St. Joseph's Day!  I mentioned last week that I'm not a big fan of St. Patrick's Day, but that is not true for St. Joseph's Day!  This is one of my favorite feasts.  I have a lot of memories of family and church traditions from this.  Who doesn't love a holiday that includes a tradition of sharing cookies with your friends and neighbors?

Another great thing about St. Joseph's Day is that it's traditionally a meatless feast.  And what is our family's traditional meal?  Why, our favorite pulse, of course!  Welcome back, lentils!  

(Our other traditional food is carduni, burdock stems cooked in an egg batter.  We don't eat eggs now, but Mom and I both have our own ways of preparing this.  Mom uses garbanzo batter.  I use silken tofu and, usually, green beans, because I'm too lazy to prepare real carduni.)

This lentil soup is closer to our traditional St. Joseph's Day lentil recipe.  Grandma used to make it with a packet of onion soup powder.  Our family replaces that with savory herbs and molasses.  Mom adds liquid aminos (feel free to add some if you aren't strictly limiting salt -- it does add a lot in this dish, but you can still enjoy it without).

Our family tradition also dictates that you should add water without measuring it.  If the soup ends up thick, you serve it over pasta.  If it ends up thin, you add some pasta to it and eat it with a spoon.

One last St. Joseph's Day tradition is "St. Joseph's Sawdust," a condiment made by frying seasoned breadcrumbs.  To replace that, I make my "magic sprinkles."  These sprinkles are great on pasta any time of year.


So much promise in a bag of lentils...


There's the soup!  As you can see, it's in the middle for thickness, 
so I jarred up some as soup and ate the rest over pasta.


Here are the lentils served over pasta.  It's actually red lentil pasta.
Mom says this is as silly as eating a seitan sandwich. 
I agree, but it's my favorite pasta, so I don't mind being silly! 
There are the magic sprinkles on top and extra on the side.


Lentil Soup #2


1 onion, chopped
3 cloves garlic, chopped
3 carrots, diced
1 lb green or brown lentils, rinsed and sorted
6-8 cups of water
1 tsp each savory, sage, and thyme
black pepper
1/4 tsp red pepper flakes
1 Tbsp molasses

1. Saute the onion in a large soup pot in a little bit of water.  Add the garlic and carrots.

2.  Add the lentils with at least 6 cups water.  You can decide if you want to play lentil roulette and add water without measuring.  It's a fun surprise!  Add the seasonings, too.  Let everything simmer about 30 minutes until the lentils are tender.

Makes about 4 servings.


Magic Sprinkles


4 Brazil nuts
3 Tbsp flax seeds (ground or whole)
2 Tbsp nutritional yeast
1/2 - 1 tsp fennel seeds
1/4 tsp red pepper flakes
2 tsp miso paste

1. Combine all ingredients in blender or food processor.  Process until finely ground and crumbly.

Everyone should eat 4 Brazil nuts each month to keep cholesterol levels healthy, but no more or you'll get too much selenium.  This recipe makes one month's worth of cheesy statin-substitute.  If you want more than this in a month, replace the Brazil nuts with more flax seeds or other nuts.

Monday, February 19, 2018

Week 8 -- Lentil Soup #1

I love lentils.  I was raised on them, and the combination of nostalgia, cheap price, quick cooking time, and, of course, taste, means that I can't get enough of them.

This is the perfect time of year to eat lentils, too, because we've just entered the Catholic season of Lent.  In fact, the word "lentil" comes from the tradition of eating these pulses during the traditionally meatless season of Lent.

Okay, that was a lie.  "Lentil" actually comes from the Latin for "lens" because they're lens-shaped and "Lent" comes from Old English for "spring," but I think that's a pretty strong coincidence, don't you?  It's a sign from the universe that lentils should be enjoyed especially during spring.

I use lentils in many recipes, but this is one of my favorites.  It's very different from our family's traditional lentil soup.  The flavors in this soup were inspired by trying to recreate a restaurant lentil soup that I loved.  There will be other lentil soup recipes to come, because lentils are, dare I say, the most versatile pulse, despite their strong flavor.

By the way, what is a pulse, you may ask?  Well, lentils are a legume (but not a bean).  Pulses are the dried edible seeds of legume family plants including beans, peas, chickpeas, and lentils.  Pulses are super healthy and are full of fiber, protein, and iron.




Look at that bag of green lentils!  So much potential!
You can use cheap brown or green lentils for this recipe.  


I bought the cheaper frozen spinach this week.  I always buy "cut leaf" but the "chopped" was half the price, so I gave it a try.  I know the difference now.  The chopped is great for dips, but I would rather have had the "cut leaf" in this recipe.


I may have burned my mouth a little because I couldn't wait to taste this deliciousness.


Lentil Soup #1


1 cup brown or green lentils, sorted through and rinsed
6 cups of water
1 red onion
2 cloves of garlic
1 stalk celery
1-2 carrots 
1-2 gold potatoes 
2 roma tomatoes
1 cup frozen spinach
2 Tbsp molasses
1 Tbsp apple cider vinegar

1. Start the lentils simmering with about half the water.  Add more water as the soup cooks to keep all ingredients covered.

2. When lentils are just tender, add the vegetables as you chop them.  

3.   When all the vegetables are tender, add the molasses and ACV.

4. Let simmer as long as you can stand to wait.  I was in a hurry and only lasted 10 minutes.  
This soup works well in a crockpot, but don't add the molasses and ACV until just before eating.
(I've heard adding acid while pulses cook keeps them from getting tender, but this may be a myth.)

Makes about 4 servings.

Monday, January 8, 2018

Week 2 -- Broccoli Cheese Soup

I wasn't raised eating a whole-food plant-based diet.  I spent the first two and a half decades of my life eating a relatively healthy version of the Standard American Diet.  We enjoyed occasional junk food, yes, but we generally ate what we thought was healthy: lean meat, low-fat dairy, and, of course, lots of fruits and vegetables.  Like most families, we relied on fast food on busy days, and one of my favorites was broccoli cheese soup.  The sub-zero temperatures this weekend made me nostalgic for that creamy, cheesy, "it has a vegetable so it's healthy" soup.

Today's soup is not as healthy as last week's.  I would consider it WFPB junk food.  But it is so much healthier than traditional broccoli cheese soup, you can't even compare them.  I do make an even healthier "cheezy broccoli" soup with white beans that I'll share another day, but this weekend I wanted the junk food taste.


This soup starts with a veggie-based "cheese" sauce.  It's the same sauce I use for mac and cheese, but thinned out a little.


Add lots of steamed broccoli in tiny bits.


Let it simmer for the true "this sat in the restaurant kitchen all day until someone was
foolish enough to order it" taste.


Sprinkle a little extra paprika on top for a fancy lunch.


Broccoli Cheese Soup

2 heads of broccoli
2 cloves garlic
2 medium or 3 small gold potatoes
2 carrots
1 medium onion
1/2 cup cashews
water
1-2 Tbsp miso (to taste)
1 Tbsp lemon juice
1 tsp mustard powder
1 tsp turmeric
1/2 tsp paprika
fresh black pepper

1. Chop the broccoli and set aside (this gives the enzymes time to activate).  
Chop the garlic and do the same.

2. Chop the other vegetables.

3. In a saucepan, steam the garlic, potatoes, carrots, and onion in a bit of water until tender, 
about 8-10 minutes.

4. Blend the cashews with 1/2 cup water.  Add the steamed vegetables and enough water
to make a smooth cheese sauce.  Blend in the miso and seasonings.  Return this to the saucepan and keep warm but don't boil.  Add water to get to desired thinness.


5. Steam the broccoli separately.  Add the broccoli to the soup.  Let simmer a few minutes, then enjoy.

6. Makes 4 servings.

*Note: if you don't get to chop the broccoli very long in advance, that's okay, because we're adding a bit of mustard powder.  That mimics the enzyme in the broccoli and you'll still get the full nutrition.



Monday, January 1, 2018

Soup 1 -- Dreamsicle

Do you remember Dreamsicles?  They were ice cream bars coated in orange sherbet.  We used to love buying them from the corner store.

This soup is not ice cream, but it does have a creamy orange flavor that reminds me of Dreamsicles.

It's also has a light and fresh taste that makes it perfect for after a week of holiday indulgences.

This is a five-ingredient soup.  That's not to be confused with those "five ingredient" soups that include cans and packaged mixes.  Nope, it's five whole food ingredients, plus water.


For this soup, all you need are carrots, oranges, cashews, onion, and fennel.
Seriously.  That's it.  Well, and water. 
I used 6 carrots, one small to medium onion, one medium fennel bulb, two oranges,
 and half a cup of raw cashews.


Here are the veggies, steamed.  I blend them with an immersion blender.  If you don't have an immersion blender, let the veggies cool a little and then blend in a regular blender.


After blending, I make cashew cream with 1/2 cup cashews and 1/2 cup water.  Add that to the soup, thin with more water to get the mixture to a nice soup consistency, then warm it all up again.


There's a beautiful bowl of Dreamsicle soup!

Recipe:
1 medium onion, chopped
1 fennel bulb, chopped, top parts included
6 carrots, peeled and chopped
2 oranges, peeled, chopped, and seeds removed
1/2 cup cashews with 1/2 cup water
additional water

1. Heat a small amount of water in a medium saucepan.  Add the onion and let it cook until slightly translucent.
2. Add fennel to onion.  Continue to add water slowly as needed to keep a thin layer at the bottom of the pan.
3. When fennel has softened, add carrots.  Add about 1 inch of water.  Cover pan and let carrots steam until soft.
4. Add oranges and make sure mixture is heated through.
5. Turn off heat.  Blend soup.
6. Blend cashews with water.  Pour cashew cream into soup.  
7. Thin soup with more water until you reach desired consistency.
8. Turn heat on and cook about 3 minutes until soup is hot throughout.

Makes 4 servings.