Showing posts with label chicken soup recipe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chicken soup recipe. Show all posts

Thursday, May 21, 2020

Carole's Italian kale, white bean and vegetable soup

After several creative sessions in the kitchen, I came up with this recipe for a healthy, delicious, nutrient dense soup. Kale is loaded with vitamins K, C and A. 

The other vegetables in this recipe are bursting with vitamins and nutrients too.

Among their many important functions, vitamin K is essential for bone health, vitamin C supports our immune system, and vitamin A is necessary for eye health.

Even though our bodies process beans as carbohydrates, cannellini beans have a fair amount of protein and fiber. And if you decide to use bone broth, it will add more protein. 


Carole Jakucs Italian Kale, white bean and vegetable soup - 2020 - image subject to copyright.

Carole's Italian Kale, White Bean and Vegetable Soup

Ingredients:

  • 4 tablespoons olive oil
  • 1 (16-oz) bag of peeled, baby carrots, sliced or chopped (about 2 cups)
  • 3 – 4 large celery stalks, rinsed and chopped (about 2 cups)
  • 1 medium sweet or yellow onion, chopped (about 2 cups chopped)
  • 1 bunch of kale rinsed, remove large stems and finely chop the remaining leaves (about 6 loosely packed cups of kale leaves)
  • 1 (32-ounce) container chicken bone broth, chicken broth or vegetable broth
  • 2 (15.5-ounce) cans cannellini beans (drained), you can substitute great northern beans if you don’t have cannellini beans
  • 1 (28-ounce) can diced tomatoes (with juice)
  • If you like potato in your soup, you can add one medium potato, skinned and finely chopped (this is optional)
  • 1 tablespoon freshly minced garlic
  • 2 – 3 tablespoons Italian seasoning, to taste
  • Salt and pepper, to taste

Instructions:

  • Heat olive oil for one minute over low heat in a 5 or 6-quart pot. Add onions, celery, carrots and cook for 4 minutes, stirring frequently.
  • Add kale and cook for an additional 4 minutes, stirring frequently.
  • Add broth, cannellini beans, diced tomatoes, potato (if you decide to use), garlic, Italian seasoning, salt and pepper. Bring to a gentle boil. Reduce heat and cover keeping a gentle simmer. Cook with lid for 25 – 35 minutes, or until carrots are tender. 
Carole Jakucs Italian kale, white bean, and vegetable-soup - 2020 - image subject to copyright.

Try this soup and enjoy. Wishing you good health!


Thursday, December 8, 2011

The Healing Effects of Chicken Soup - Carole's Recipe

Home-made chicken soup is a great winter meal. It has also been scientifically proven to temporarily help thin out mucus secretions and reduce inflammation in the respiratory tract. It contains an amino acid (from the chicken) as well as the oregano, thyme, garlic, all in this recipe; which are also helpful for these symptoms. It’s especially great to eat if you are battling a cold or flu.  

The leftover chicken can also be used again to make fresh chicken sandwiches on a good whole wheat bread, or , to shred over some  organic Romaine for a healthy chicken salad. Fresh home- made chicken is free of added nitrates (unlike a lunch meat), low in fat and, if prepared with little or no salt, great for anyone on a low salt (and a low fat) diet. Try to purchase chicken that is organic and raised without added hormones and antibiotics.

Chicken: One whole “cut up” chicken. If you can’t find it cut up, you can use a whole chicken. You will need to wash the inside very well which includes removing the pack of organ meat and scraping out the lung tissue and rinsing well again. Using a whole chicken is usually more economical, but also, more work to clean, and it tends to break apart while you remove it from the pot after cooking, leaving small fragments of bones in the stock that need to be removed. Any meat with bones can result in pieces of bone in the final product, but it tends to occur more often with whole chicken, so be extra careful if you go the whole chicken route regarding bone fragments.

Or, you can purchase a small package of thighs and a small separate package of breasts; the best chicken soup is made with both white and dark meat. *I remove all the skin and as much fat as possible regardless of which type of chicken I use. Skin is difficult to digest and both skin and high fat diets are not healthy for us.

Ingredients in addition to the chicken:
·         One large onion cut into quarters
·         One cup of baby or regular carrots sliced (change amount to your liking)
·         2-4 stalks of celery sliced (change amount to your liking)
·         2 -4 cloves of fresh garlic, chopped (or, 1 – 2 Tablespoons)
·         Oregano 3 Tablespoons
·         Basil, 3 Tablespoons
·         Garlic Powder, 1 Tablespoon
·          Salt and pepper to taste (*you don’t need much salt, if any, with all the herbs above. This is especially important if you are on a salt restricted diet.)
·         Parsley, 1 Teaspoon
·         Thyme, 1 Tablespoon.
·         Or, if you don’t have all the herbs separately, find a high quality Italian Seasoning Mix which can include many of the herbs above. (Look for one without MSG).
·         Filtered water; for a good sized pot of soup, you will want to use a larger stock pot/sauce pot;
A 5 quart size is what I usually use and filled about 3 /4.
·         Noodles (see below) one package

Try to purchase either fresh herbs, or organic (no pesticides) herbs in glass containers.  Plastic containers can leach out some of the nutrients from the herbs.

Place all of the chicken and water above in a large pot. Bring to a light boil, then reduce heat, loosely cover, then simmer for at least 45 minutes. Then add your vegetables and simmer for another 45 minutes. The total time the chicken should cook is approximately 1 to 1 ½ hours; you may need to simmer longer depending on the amount of heat in the stove top (size and power of the burner).  *Check that the chicken is fully cooked before shutting off the heat.  *I like to add the vegetables about half way through the total cooking time so they don’t overcook to retain more nutrients.

Once the soup is done, you can remove the chicken and any bones that broke off and may be in the broth. Add your prepared and drained noodles to the soup. (Most of these smaller noodles double in size, so you want to allow enough space in the pan for mixing at the end, or use less water).

Noodles (chef’s choice), prepare the noodles in a separate pan following the package directions.  However, the Italian style noodle called, “Acini de Pepe” works really well with this soup. You can use egg noodles too.

Variations: Some people prefer shredded pieces of chicken in their soup and some don’t, wanting their chicken on the side. I take out the meat and place it on the table so if someone wants a piece of chicken either on the side or shredded in their soup bowl, it’s handy and they can have it either way. You can also serve hard boil eggs for use in the soup at the table as a variation.

Food preparation safety tips: Make sure you that if you are setting your whole chicken in a sink for cleaning, that it is in a freshly scoured sink that has been cleaned with bleach based product and rinsed extremely well.  *After cleaning raw chicken, clean all surfaces it touched with a bleach based product to remove any possible contaminants from the raw chicken and to prevent any illness causing bacteria from getting on any other foods, new utensils etc. Any utensils or boards used with the raw chicken should be washed well with soap and hot to warm water (better yet, rinsed and washed in the high heat of a dishwasher if you have one) before using on anything else.

Enjoy your soup and continue any medications you may have already been prescribed if you are ill.

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