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View Full Version : Nutritious home soups -hmmmm!



shootingstar
10-08-2011, 06:05 PM
Just made a big batch of..roasted tomato soup.

It's not a cream soup, has a consomme soup. But that roasting does deepen the tomato flavour along with roasted onions and garlic. I'm getting hooked on this recipe!

With some chopped fresh basil when serving it, perfect for my fall dinner...it's Thanksgiving in Canada this weekend. :)

redrhodie
10-08-2011, 06:22 PM
Happy Thanksgiving! That sounds great.

My bf made really yummy soup the other day with butternut squash, escarole and white beans. It was very hearty and chunky, and I loved the combination of flavors.

OakLeaf
10-08-2011, 06:46 PM
I'm glad it's starting to be cool enough for soup. Stock, and scraps for stock, have been crowding my freezer! I made white beans too last night, with rappini from the garden. :) And some orzo only because I took too many containers of stock out of the freezer and it was too thin without the pasta. :cool:

goldfinch
10-08-2011, 07:11 PM
Recipes please!

Owlie
10-08-2011, 08:05 PM
I'm glad it's starting to be cool enough for soup. Stock, and scraps for stock, have been crowding my freezer! I made white beans too last night, with rappini from the garden. :) And some orzo only because I took too many containers of stock out of the freezer and it was too thin without the pasta. :cool:

And it was 77 here today...

Shootingstar, recipe? Please?

I am looking forward to making soup, though. There's beef stew in my freezer from last week, but I'm hoping to roast a chicken now and again...

bluebug32
10-08-2011, 08:09 PM
Ooh, I love tomato soup. My DH and I are currently hooked on Amy's tomato bisque. But it's always more fun to make your own!

shootingstar
10-08-2011, 08:19 PM
Oh. Well, my partner made up this recipe and I took it on later. :D

So forgive imprecise measurements, but use your tastebuds:

Roasted Tomato Soup
4-6 medium size ripe tomatoes. Cut up into large chunks
1/2 large onion (red onion is better. But any will do) Chopped in narrow slices.
4-5 garlic bulbs
Optional: Half red pepper or more, cut roughly in 2-inch slices.


Oil a large glass baking dish generously. Lay all veggies in dish so that they are packed in 1 layer. Not double.

Bake in 425 degree F pre-heated oven. About 50 min. or more. Tomatoes will soften nice and soft, juicy.

During tomatoes roast-baking inside oven, make a simple veggie stock by boiling 3 cups of water or more. Put in veggie powder stock ( 1-2 heaping tablespoons.) Set aside.

When tomatoes are finished roasting, take out and pour into another deep container to mash up or use immersion hand blender.

Pour mashed up or pureed tomato mixture into a deep pot. Add veggie consomme. Stir and heat at medium heat for about 10 min. or so.

Garnish with fresh chopped basil and serve. (Makes 2-3 large bowls of soup.)

____________________
Recipe is open to more creative variations. Yea, I did a faux pas --shortcut veggie consomme. :o

VeganBikeChick
10-09-2011, 12:40 AM
It's definitely getting to be soup/stew season! I made a veggie potpie stew last week and just today made a Smoky Split Pea soup. The smoked paprika gave it such a wonderful smoky taste!!

shootingstar
10-09-2011, 08:47 PM
If desired, a chicken soup stock would be a nice substitute also.

A variation of chicken soup stock based soup, then:

Tomato Egg Drop Soup: Heat up chicken soup stock and slide in 1 sliced tomato. Break 1 egg into hot soup and stir quickly. Egg will break apart and cook within 3 min. in hot soup on stove.

There's your protein and meal all in one. It's actually a good soup to have when one has a cold/sick and is weak.

Totally different would be what he makes, but I just haven't gotten around to doing it:

Butternut squash soup --different variations --sometimes with 1 pear or apple. Or with grated, finely minced ginger root. Or with curry.

Beet soup --I really am afraid of making a mess with red beets, so I let him deal with them. With variations --a bit of ginger root. Use a veggie stock base.

zoom-zoom
10-09-2011, 10:36 PM
My favorite soup is healthy, but not low in fat or calories. It's really easy, too, as it uses canned pumpkin, chicken broth, a pound of sausage (I like spicy), heavy cream, sliced mushrooms, italian seasoning, and minced garlic. Super easy.

indysteel
10-10-2011, 04:13 AM
I love soup this time of year. Two weeks ago, I made Italian lentil, last week was chili. This week is apple, carrot, sweet potato and red lentil, and I'm making a white chicken chili for camping this coming weekend.

Dannielle
10-10-2011, 05:43 AM
I've been on a total soup kick the past month. I make a big batch in the crockpot nearly every morning. Got some going now, in fact. :)

limewave
10-10-2011, 07:08 AM
Two soups I make regularly throughout the fall/winter: Butternut Squash Soup and Veggie Soup.

Butternut Squash: Sauteed onions, red and green peppers, grated carrots and ginger in some olive oil. Add a package of frozen squash (after I thaw it) and some veggie stock. 1/2 cup soy milk. A squirt of Agave Nectar. Sea Salt. Fresh ground pepper. Cayenne pepper and Curry. Cinnamon and nutmeg. Mash together with an submersion blender. Garnish with either toasted coconut or fresh parsley. Sometimes I add black beans to make it heartier.

Veggie Soup: sauteed potatoes, onions, carrots, celery in olive oil. Add veggie stock. One large can of Tomato sauce (organic, natural--I don't like chunks of tomatoes so I use the tomato sauce). Add in whatever frozen veggies are in the freezer: green beans, peas, corn, etc. Chop up some Kale and toss it in. Fresh Parsley. Salt, Pepper. And a pinch of curry. I like curry. It gives the soup a little bit of heat to warm your toes on those blistery cold Michigan days.

zoom-zoom
10-10-2011, 07:14 AM
Now I have a hankering for curry! :D

alexis_the_tiny
10-10-2011, 07:17 AM
Mmm, soup! I really love potato based 'cream' soups. Broccoli, sweet potato and mushroom (separately, of course!) were my favorites. Lately though, I've been experimenting with soups that are a little more similar to the Cantonese ones my mother made while I was growing up. The other day, I made a carrot, potato and sweet corn soup in a base that's somewhat similar to Tonkotsu ramen broth, it was delish. Savory, slightly sticky with collagen and full of veggies. Mmmmm...

Dannielle
10-10-2011, 07:20 AM
I love curry in soup, too. :) One soup in my rotation includes curry powder and cauliflower, onion, celery as a base (lots of cauliflower). Then I toss in whatever other bits of veg I have on hand...turnips, zucchini, rutabaga, carrots, cabbage or some other form of leafy green.

I use cabbage in soup a lot...good fiber and nutrients with low calories. And it's affordable. I don't eat grains (so no noodles or rice...cruciferious veggies add good bulk to a soup) or much in the way of starchy foods (so no potatoes for me either) so my grocery bill can easily spiral out of control with the massive amounts of produce I eat lol. Cabbage (and cauliflower!) help keep it in check.

limewave
10-10-2011, 07:40 AM
I should try a cauliflower soup! I bet I would love that. I'm going to put it on my list of recipes. The weather is supposed to start cooling down again towards the end of the week :)

OakLeaf
10-10-2011, 07:53 AM
Haven't made potato soup yet this year, but Deborah Madison's caramelized version is my favorite. You slice onions and potatoes very thin and sauté them in olive oil until there's a nice thick brown crust on the bottom of the pot, then deglaze it with stock and simmer until everything's tender. I like to purée it with a stick blender (pulse so the potatoes don't get gummy) before adding chopped greens, but you can leave the potatoes chunky.


ETA: Speaking of curry, I haven't tried this yet: http://dinersjournal.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/09/15/the-minimalist-creamy-curried-celery-root-soup/ but if I find any celery root at the farmers' market, this is on my list! I try to minimize dairy and I'd expect this soup would be fine without any, but if you wanted the added fat, coconut milk would probably work well with the flavors, or maybe the earthiness of unsweetened hemp milk.

Becky
10-10-2011, 07:58 AM
For those of you who own immersion blenders for soup-making: what model/features do you recommend?

Dannielle
10-10-2011, 08:07 AM
http://www.amazon.com/Proctor-Silex-59735-Immersion-Blender/dp/B00023XDJ0/ref=sr_1_5?ie=UTF8&qid=1318259105&sr=8-5
I have this cheapie immersion blender and it's served me well for years. I almost exclusively use it for soups. I don't love a totally smooth soup and this suits my tastes perfectly as it's not so powerful that I'm left with baby-food soup lol. I like a "thicker than broth" base with some chunkiness.

For the soup I make with cauliflower/curry I usually add Greek yogurt to my bowl before serving to creamy it up and serve as my serving of protein. It's so good!

OakLeaf
10-10-2011, 08:32 AM
Well, my old one just died and I went through all that decisionmaking. The one I wound up with is the Kitchen Aid KHB2351. I'm not 100% thrilled with it (mostly because the blender blade isn't super sharp), but it's okay. FWIW my criteria:

(1) Absolutely necessary -
* Removable blender arm. Trying to clean a cheap immersion blender while keeping the motor part out of the water is just not worth the money it saves IMO.
* Chopper attachment. I use that as much or more than the stick part, for emulsifying salad dressings, making tahini, and grinding certain spices.
* Dishwasher safe attachments. What can I say, I'm lazy. :o

(2) Highly desirable but I was willing to compromise -
* Higher wattage motor. (The one I wound up with is only 200W, which I had to call Kitchen Aid to find out since it isn't anywhere in the product literature. I would have preferred at least 300W and blenders are available up to 500W.)
* Non-polycarbonate chopper bowl (and shake container if supplied). I wasn't too worried about that from a personal safety standpoint since I don't generally let foods sit in the containers for any period of time, but from the standpoint of reforming the industry, it was on my list.
* Sealed bearings/bushings on the attachments, and two sets of bearings/bushings on the blender arm to minimize wobbling and wear.
* A brand name I trust.

(3) Nice, but not necessary:
* Not made in China. (I gave up on that one. I couldn't find a single hand blender at any price point that wasn't. But if you find one post it here!)
* Whisk attachment. The holidays are coming up, and whipping cream or egg whites by hand is a chore and a half ... still, it's probably better not to have the temptation to burn coal to do those tasks. :o
* Available from a local merchant.


There wasn't a single blender I found that met all of my points. There were others I strongly considered. Now that I have the KA, I like that it's very quiet and easy to clean, I dislike the dull blade and bulky handle. The mid-range price point I thought was a reasonable compromise.

HTH...

Dannielle
10-10-2011, 08:59 AM
yeah it definitely depends on the other gadgets you already have in your kitchen. I have a Ninja blender/chopper (love it!!) and a Cuisenart food processor so my immersion blender needs are minor.

Becky
10-10-2011, 09:25 AM
Oak- Thanks for the very thorough list of considerations. It gives me a great place to start my search.

spokewench
10-10-2011, 10:33 AM
This is one of my favorites. chop 1/2 large onion, 2 stalks celery, 3 carrots, 2 garlic cloves, saute in canola oil, add whole chicken thighs, chicken broth, to cover, plus a little bit, pepper, bay leaf, 1 can of tomatoes or two-three medium chopped fresh tomatoes. cook till chicken is tender; take the chicken out; shred it and return it to the soup pan. add some chopped potatoes, cabbage (chopped in strips); chard (chopped in strips). When the cabbage and potatoes are tender, let the soup cool just a bit, and add 1/4 cup of sour cream (don't want it to curdle when you add it). If you like a russian flavor, add a little bit of caraway seed when cooking. This is almost a russian borscht recipe. I have been known to add roasted golden beets since they don't turn the soup pink. I've tried red beets, but the pink colored soup kind of turns me off but it really does not ruin the taste. Still tastes good!

Yummy!

shootingstar
10-10-2011, 11:20 AM
Mmm, soup! I really love potato based 'cream' soups. Broccoli, sweet potato and mushroom (separately, of course!) were my favorites. Lately though, I've been experimenting with soups that are a little more similar to the Cantonese ones my mother made while I was growing up. The other day, I made a carrot, potato and sweet corn soup in a base that's somewhat similar to Tonkotsu ramen broth, it was delish. Savory, slightly sticky with collagen and full of veggies. Mmmmm...

I'm not as enamoured of a soup with potato in it. This might be due to having grown up on non-cream, non-potato soups as a kid. Dearie might occasionally throw in a potato but to me, it seems to leach the sweetness out of a ie. squash soup or other types of soups. Though with leek, it would be nice.

Recently he made a kohl rabi dish which required him to lightly boil the kohl rabi before braising it. So I used the kohl rabi stock and made a lovely Chinese noodle consomme soup with fuzzy melon (savoury melon) and lotus root. See here. (http://cyclewriteblog.wordpress.com/2011/09/28/lotus-flower-from-root-to-flower-to-seed-it-feeds-our-senses/) It was lovely and with 2 bowls, that was supper! The lotus root, etc. is something my mother occasionally added and works best for consomme soups.

Setting aside consomme soups, pureeing a celery root with squash or with leek, is an intriguing touch. (Roasted celery root is lovely as a side dish.)

Oak: We have a Braun immersion hand blender. (Braun as you know, is a favourite brand of the Germans.) Of course, it works best if the food has already been softened alot and cut into small pieces.

OakLeaf
10-10-2011, 01:18 PM
Oak: We have a Braun immersion hand blender.

They don't make those in a 110/120V North American version any more.

carlotta
10-10-2011, 02:36 PM
I love making soups! Especially when I have all day around the house and I can take my time and build flavors in it...there's nothing like a pot of stock simmering away and making the apartment smell good :)

I made one yesterday that's sort of an Italian-ish soup. Started with the chicken stock--chicken carcass/bones, celery, onion, garlic, carrot, parsnip trimmings, fennel tops, pepper corns, bay leaf.

Once that was done, I sauteed some good pancetta with onions, red bell pepper, fennel, carrots and parsnips until everything was a little carmelized, then added a can of diced tomatoes, a can of cannelini beans (wish I would've taken the time to cook those from dry...the canned ones were lacking in the texture department), and all the stock, simmered for 30 minutes or so, then added a big pile of shredded kale.

Made some pesto with the end of my basil, some parsley, cheese, walnuts, garlic and olive oil and stirred a spoonful of that into my bowl....mmmmm! And I have a massive container of leftovers for us to eat this week :)

jahnin24f
10-11-2011, 09:52 AM
I love soup out of veggies and minimal spices. Just a plain sweet, little salt and without creamy taste is the best for me.

itself
10-15-2011, 06:49 PM
I have a Vitamix, and tried their version of butternut squash soup and it didn't come out so good. Looking forward to hearing more recipes.

azfiddle
12-02-2011, 07:25 AM
We tried a new recipe to use up some of the leftovers and broth we made from the Thanksgiving turkey- Caribbean turkey soup

4 cups of stock
1 cup of orange juice
2 cups of diced cooked turkey
1 sweet potato, peeled and diced
1 onion, diced
1 green pepper diced
1 teaspoon cider vinegar
1/2 teaspoon dried thyme
1/4 teaspoon ground ginger
1/4 teaspoon ground allspice
1/4 teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg
salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste
Chopped cilantro (coriander leaves) for garnish
lime wedges for garnish

Add all ingredients into a pot, bring to a boil then reduce heat and simmer about 20 minutes, until veggies are cooked.

*We didn't have either cilantro or lime, and it was still delicious. I'm sure they would just improve it.

shootingstar
12-02-2011, 11:52 AM
Interesting recipe. How did the orange juice change the flavour of this soup, azfiddle?

azfiddle
12-02-2011, 02:25 PM
It was just barely tangy and had a very light flavor. We really liked it