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Category Archives: Soups & Stews

Kielbasa & Northern White Bean Soup


If I sit too long at the computer desk, my right hand extended and clicking away, it gets so cold that I can make Dennis gasp by sneaking it under his shirt and tucking it under his arm (I love to do this). I’ve broken out my box of winter clothes in storage and swapped them for the summer clothes that were in my drawers.  (This is a habit I inherited from my mother, which comes in handy since we have a small house and don’t have room for even my meager amount of clothes.)

Currently, I’m wearing fuzzy Frosty the Snowman pajama pants, thermal underwear, and my right hand is very cold.

Do you know what these signs indicate?  Yup, it’s officially soup weather!

This one is delicious(!) & nutritious so you can’t go wrong with it.  I subbed butter beans for the northern white beans but I woudln’t recommend it.  Go with the northern.  And check out the original blog to see how beautiful this soup can look if you have a good camera, camera skills, are a better cook, and used the right kind of beans.

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I’m compelled to explain that my broth is murky b/c I only had beef broth on hand, and the beans are hiding b/c I only used 1 can.  You can kind of see hints of them if you look hard enough.

Kielbasa & Northern White Bean Soup

Adapted from Cooking, Dunkin Style

Olive Oil
1 package of turkey kielbasa sausage, sliced into 1/4″ rounds
2 cans northern white beans, drained & rinsed
1 (32-oz) carton chicken broth
1/2 onion, diced
4 stalks celery, diced
5 medium carrots, diced
2 cups shredded cabbage (optional–I just happened to have some leftover from the moo shu noodles)
1 bay leaf
Salt and pepper to taste
Rosemary and Thyme to taste
1/2 a bag of SpinachPlace 2 tbl olive oil in your soup pot and saute the sausage until caramelized, remove and set aside.

Place the vegetables into the pan, adding more oil if needed and saute till the onions are translucent (about 10 minutes)

Add your sausage back in, then the beans, cabbage and chicken stock.

Add the bay leaf, salt, pepper, dash of thyme and some rosemary.

Bring to a boil, then reduce heat and simmer until the carrots are crisp-tender.  Stir in the spinach and cook until wilted, about 5 minutes.

Salmon Corn Chowder


This is a wonderful & nutritious chowder that strangely reminds me of clam chowder, even though it’s salmon instead of clams!  I used grilled salmon, which I would recommend in place of the canned. I also recommend using a tablespoon of cornstarch in addition to the flour to thicken the soup.  This goes great with the honey whole wheat cornbread, too!

*Please forgive the magazine photo–my camera is broken and the ones I took with my .0000000001 mp back-up camera make it look like the stew was partially digested.  Not appealing at all!

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Salmon Corn Chowder
Clean Eating, September/October 2009

2 medium Russet or Idaho potatoes, peeled
2 carrots, peeled
Olive oil cooking spray
1 stalk celery, diced
1 medium yellow or white onion, diced
1 tsp extra-virgin olive oil
3 T whole-wheat flour
1 c skim milk
1 32-oz container low-sodium chicken broth
2 6-oz cans salmon packed in water, without bones or skin
2 c corn, freshly shucked or frozen
1-2 tsp paprika
Sea salt and fresh ground black pepper, to taste
1 T dill, finely minced

Place potatoes and carrots in a medium saucepan; cover with water.  Boil over medium-high heat for 8-10 minutes.  Drain potatoes and carrots in a colander and pour cold water over.  Let cool for 5 minutes.  Remove potatoes and carrots and dice.

Meanwhile, preheat large stockpot over medium-high heat for 2 minutes.  Mist with cooking spray.  Add celery & onion and sauté for 2 minutes or until onions become translucent.

Add oil and flour, whisking briskly.  Add milk, whisking in a ¼ cup at a time.  (This will create a roux, or thickener, for your soup.)

Add broth and cook for at least 5 minutes.  If soup seems a little thin, add more flour (no more then 1 T), a ½ tsp at a time, and whisk briskly.  Add salmon, diced potatoes and carrots, corn and paprika.  Reduce heat to medium-low and let simmer for at least 10 minutes.  Season with salt and pepper.

Add dill just 1 minute before serving.

Nutrients per 1 ½-cup serving: Calories: 210, Total fat: 4.5 g, Sat Fat: 0 g, Carbs: 25 g, Fiber: 3 g, Sugars: 6 g, Protein: 16 g, Sodium: 270 mg, Cholesterol: 0 mg

Emu Stew

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After I posted about the benefits of bison, my friend Erin recommended I try ostrich because, like bison, it is similar in taste to beef but much lower in fat.  So I was thrilled to find emu for sale at the farmer’s market last Saturday.  Not ostrich, but close enough!  Since I already have 3 lbs. of ground bison in the freezer, I opted for the stew meat, which was $6.50 for a pound. I also bought a nice leg bone for Jessie.  As you can see, they were also selling the egg shells and they also had the feathers & beauty products made from the rendered fat.  I loved that they weren’t wasting any part of the animal.

  

Since I bought stew meat, I decided to make STEW of all things.

After thawing it out in the fridge, I put the meat into my crockpot from 1980 (seriously, it’s probably older than that) and dumped in all the broth I’d stockpiled in the freezer for the last six months–there was beef, turkey and chicken.  I didn’t care–it all went in the same pot.  I don’t cook meat a lot and I don’t cook a lot of it at once, so I didn’t have a ton of broth–it all added up to maybe four cups.  I chopped up garlic, tarragon and sage from my Dad’s garden and added some fresh rosemary from the farmer’s market, set it on low and let it cook for 24 hours.  In a normal crockpot, it would have been done in probably 8 but this is a crazy retro crockpot that cooks on super low and takes forever.  Which is a good thing when it comes to low-fat meats like bison and emu–you want to cook them low and slow or they will get tough.

Today, after the meat had cooked 24 hours, I drained the broth off and put it in a stock pot.  I turned it on high and dumped in chopped potatoes, carrots, onion & half of my package of baby portabellos with a teaspoon of salt.  Oh, and some more fresh herbs–including oregano now that I have it, along with some dried thyme and basil.  I forgot I had fresh basil. :(

After that cooked for ten minutes (turning it down to medium once it started to boil), I added in chopped red, green & yellow peppers, the rest of the shrooms, and chopped asparagus.  After that cooked five minutes I stirred in some frozen peas, corn & green beans and a can of drained tomatoes.  After stirring in the meat, it was time to eat!

I realize most people would have put the veggies in the crockpot along with the meat, but I never do this.  I hate it when soup is all one color and looks dreary.  I like my vegetables to be colorful and still have some life in them so I never leave the crockpot in charge when it comes to vegetables.  With soups/stews, I usually put the slower cooking veggies in first, like potatoes and carrots, and quicker cooking veggies like peppers & tomatoes in at the end.  I do cook the onions longer b/c I don’t care if they’re mush–they’re just there for flavor b/c you can’t see them anyway and cooking them longer renders the most flavor.  And I divided the mushrooms b/c I wanted the flavor to really infuse the stew so I cooked half longer and half later so that they weren’t as “well done.”  I like to add frozen veggies at the end so that they’re cooked with the residual heat of the stew while they’re cooling it down to a more acceptable temperature.  The meat goes in last after the burner is off so that the amount of cooking time added to the meat is negligible.

I served the soup with the terrible dinner rolls I made last night.  They’re really dense (I added too much flour) so they were perfect for sopping up the broth.  It was the best stew I have ever had and I seriously couldn’t tell I wasn’t eating beef.  Neither could Dennis. Slow-cooking made it perfectly tender, and we loved all the flavor-packed vegetables and the herbalicious aroma.

With all the vegetables I added, this made enough stew for six big servings, which is really stretching that pound of meat and making it worth every cent!  Plus, preparing it the way I described, will give you a huge bowl for 271 calories!  Now that’s the kind of meal I SHOULD be eating on a regular basis.

Fresh Corn Chowder

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Take advantage of the abundant fresh corn available and cook up a double batch of this delicious chowder, freezing half for a simple meal this chilly fall or winter.

Fresh Corn Chowder
Serves 6

8 medium-sized ears of corn
4 slices thick-cut bacon, cut into 1/2 inch pieces
1 medium-sized onion, finely chopped
2 cloves garlic, minced
3 tbsp all-purpose flour
3 cups chicken broth
2 medium-size red skin potatoes (about 3/4 pound), cut into 1/4-inch pieces
2 tsp minced fresh thyme or 1 tsp dried
2 cups milk
1 cup heavy cream
1 tsp salt
1/4 tsp black pepper
1 1/2 cups shredded cheddar cheese

Directions

1. Cut kernels from 4 ears of corn (about 3 cups of kernels); set aside.  Working over a bowl, grate remaining 4 ears of corn on the large holes of a box grater.  Scrape pulp from cobs (about 3/4 cup) using the dull side of a knife; set aside.

2.  In a large pot over medium-high heat, cook bacon for about 6 minutes or until crisp.  Remove with a slotted spoon and drain on a paper-towel-lined plate.

3.  Add onion to pot and cook for about 4 minutes, stirring occasionally, or until golden brown.  Add garlic and cook for 1 minute.  Add flour and stir constantly for 2 minutes.

4.  Whisk in chicken broth.  Add potatoes, thyme, milk and grated corn and pulp.  Bring to a boil.  Reduce heat to medium-low and simmer for about 10 minutes or until potatoes are tender.  Using a potato masher, press down on the chowder about ten times.

5.  Add whole corn kernels, bacon and heavy cream and cook an additional 5 minutes or until corn is tender but still crunchy.  Stir in salt and pepper.  Ladle chowder into bowls.  Top each serving with 1/4 cup shredded cheddar.

Fully Loaded Buffalo Chili & Sweet Corn Muffins

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I made up a batch of chili along with the some sweet corn muffins and thought I’d share my recipes b/c both were fairly easy and were very tasty.  Enjoy!

Fully Loaded Buffalo Chili
Makes 4-5 BIG servings

1 lb. ground buffalo (or beef)
2 tsp. chili powder
1 clove minced garlic
2 cans chili-ready beans
2 cans black beans
4 cans chili-ready diced tomatoes (if you only have plain then add some more chili powder to your taste)
2 cups chopped celery
1 cup chopped green pepper
1 cup chopped yellow pepper
1 cup chopped red pepper
2 cups chopped onion
1 can sweet yellow whole kernel corn

Brown the meat in a skillet along with the chili powder over medium heat.  Put everything into a stock pot, including the meat, and simmer over low heat for two hours.  Or get it hot fast and cook it over medium heat for about 30 minutes so you can eat it with less waiting time.  But I like to slow cook it for the flavor development.  Serve with Sweet Corn Muffins (below).

 

Sweet Corn Muffins
Makes 12 muffins

Head’s up! This isn’t your typical dry cornbread.  It is extremely moist and extremely easy so if you are lazy and like things on the sweet side like me, you’ll love ’em!

2 boxes Jiffy corn muffin mix
1 (14.5-oz) can creamed corn

Mix the two ingredients and bake according to package directions. Allow to cool slightly before serving.