Category: Cabbage Soup Diet

If you can boil a potato you can make soup

If you can boil a potato you can make soup, even if you’ve never tried before. Now that there are good quality fresh soups sold in cartons, it’s easy to enjoy soup more often, but they are expensive to buy. You can make your own in large batches and freeze some in individual portions ready for when you need to eat in a hurry.

The Facts
For the past few years various soups have been associated with diet programmes, the ‘Cabbage Soup’ diet being the most famous: The Cabbage Soup diet (or yummy yum diet, as it’s also known) still attracts a big following by promising ten pounds of weight loss in a week. As only two pounds of that could possibly be fat there doesn’t seem to be much point in it and certainly doesn’t sound like fun.

But don’t let that put you off your soup, because soup is great and there’s even some evidence that it really can help you lose weight.

In a recent study normal weight women are given a lunch of either chicken and rice casserole, chicken and rice casserole plus a glass of water, or chicken and rice soup. The soup contained the same ingredients as the casserole, but the women who ate the soup felt much fuller on fewer calories. Drinking water with the casserole made no difference. Interestingly, the ones who ate the soup didn’t go on to make up the calorie deficit later in the day.

Elizabeth Bell, one of the researchers, said, ‘A lot of the explanation is physiological. The women were presented with a huge bowl of food and it felt like a lot. If it could trick normal weight women, who successfully regulate their food intake, then it could be more successful with overweight women whose food regulation is less good.’

That seems to show that the best way to lose weight is to eat normally but, where you can, substitute vegetables and watery things for fat and high energy, dense food. But it doesn’t have to be cabbage soup – in fact, the more variety you can introduce into your soup the better.

Making your own soup... 

Soup Suggestions

• Red pepper, fresh or canned tomato and carrot with garlic and paprika.

• Squash or pumpkin chowder with onion, potato, ginger and lime.

• Pasta, potato and pesto soup – another rustic one which cooks in time it takes to have a shower!

• Carrot and coriander with onion, parsnip and lentils or a can of cannelloni beans – very filling.

• Sweet potato, onion, garlic and a can of creamed sweetcorn with fresh coriander, lime juice and paprika or chilli.

• Leek, potato and onion with chicken stock and low fat crème fraiche or quark. This can be left chunky or whisked until smooth and velvety.

• Canned ratatouille and a drained can of cannelloni beans, cooked with vegetable stock, garlic stock, garlic salt and sweet paprika pepper – a real store cupboard standby that takes less than five minutes to make.

• The quality of the stock you use really determines the finished flavour of any dish, especially in the clear soups that are more of a meal in a bowl. Noodle bars are very fashionable places to eat but it’s quite easy to cook in the same style at home. Simply cook Japanese ramen or soba noodles in good quality stock and add your own choice of flavourings at the end of the cooking process. Some suggestions might be shredded chicken or fish, spinach leaves, pak choy, sliced mushrooms, bean sprouts, sliced leeks, celery or carrot, chopped fresh chilli, ginger and coriander leaves.

Special thanks to Raymond Camden for this blog platform: BlogCFC.