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Category: soup recipes

Chicken Soup for the Soul

Hi there to you all,

There seems to be lots of people out there at the moment that are feeling under the weather so I want to suggest something to get you fighting fit as soon as possible; Chicken Soup.

I love chicken soup and it's one of the first things I ever remember eating, especially if I wasn't feel well. I love it especially when it's home made or even better made by my mum. It's nutritious, easy to make and delicious.

My mum used to go on about the healing powers of chicken soup and often referred to it as Jewish penicillin. But is it really an effective cure for the common cold?

Dr Stephen Rennard, a specialist in pulmonary medicine, put his wife's grandmother's recipe to the test. He concluded that chicken soup inhibits inflammation of the cells in the nasal passage, reducing the symptoms of a cold. Chicken soup also contains an amino acid that is similar to a drug used to treat some respiratory infections. Other doctors say that most soups promotes mucus secretions that "soothe sore throats and coughs, and trap bacteria".

What seems probable, however, is that while chicken soup doesn't cure a cold, it may alleviate some of the annoying symptoms that accompany a bug. At worst, the soup provides a hot, comforting meal and rehydration. So slurp up when you're feeling a little under the weather or you want a good comforting meal :)

So, I asked my mum to share with all of you, her very own recipe for chicken soup. Take it away mummy...

My Mum's Chicken Soup

Ingredients

  • Chicken: You can use a fat boiling chicken or packets of chicken wings or drumsticks and/or a whole roasting chicken.
  • 2 large onions, quartered, with the skins left on (helps to colour the soup)
  • 2 carrots in chunks
  • 1 leek, sliced
  • Celery stalks & leaves cut in large slices
  • Parsley
  • 2 bay leaves
  • Salt and pepper
OPTIONAL:
  • Turnips and/or parsnips
  • Sliced fresh ginger
  • Some strands of saffron (again helps to colour the soup)
  • A very small piece of shin of beef (ask your butcher) - this seems to give a "kick" to the final product

I do vary the recipe according to what I have in the house at the time and how I feel when I'm buying the ingredients.  In this way, it never tastes the same - they say variety is the spice of life and I enjoy tasting the different ways that the soup turns out !

Put the chicken (and beef if used) in a large pot and add water to cover plus a bit more.  Bring to the boil and remove any scum.  Then add the vegetables and seasoning.  Simmer, covered, on a very low heat for 2 1/2 hours, adding water if necessary.

If you are using a whole chicken, lift it out after about an hour, remove the meat so as not to overcook it and keep it moistened with a little soup for a second course.  Return the carcass and bones to the pot and continue cooking for another hour or so.  If you are using a boiling chicken, it needs at least two hours' cooking.

Strain the soup.  If you want to remove the fat floating on the top, you can mop it up with kitchen paper or make the soup a day ahead and keep it covered in the fridge, then skim off the congealed fat with a spoon.  Serve very hot, sprinkled if you like, with a little finely chopped parsley.

And if you really want excitement - try these:

Matzo Balls

  • 2 eggs separated
  • 75g. (3 oz.) medium matzo meal (most supermarkets stock this)
  • Salt

Beat the egg whites stiff.  Fold in the lightly beaten yolks, then the matzo meal and salt, and continue to mix gently until amalgamated.  Chill, covered for 30 minutes.  Then roll into 2 cm (3/4 inch) balls and drop into plenty of boiling, salted water.  Simmer for about 20 minutes.  You will see them swell and rise to the top of the pan.  Just before serving, heat them up, then lift them out and drop them into the boiling soup.  If you try to cook the matzo balls in the soup rather than the water, they will soak up the soup and you will end up with far less soup than you had before !

Or you could buy a packet of Matzo Ball mix from a delicatessen or kosher grocer - then all you have to do is follow the instructions on the packet.

ENJOY!

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... 

Basic Soup Portions

Serves: 4-6. Cooking Time: 15-30 minutes

Be adventurous and make up your own soups with your favourite ingredients and seasonings. See what you have in the fridge or store cupboard, use leftovers and take the opportunity to buy fresh foods that are cheap and in season.

What you need: 

• 500g-1kg/1lb 2oz-2lb 4oz solids: vegetables, canned tomatoes, sweetcorn, beans, potatoes, rice, onions, garlic, pasta, etc.

• 1-1.5 litres/1½-2½ pints meat or vegetable stock, seasonings, spices and flavourings

How to do it: 

1. Simply sauté the chopped onion, garlic and any other hard vegetables in a tablespoon of oil, or soften and turn them a light golden brown, which brings out their sweetness and flavour.

2. Using a non-stick pan and covering it while you sauté the vegetables, so that they sweat as well as fry will mean using less oil, (you can speed up things by leaving out this stage and simply cooking all the ingredients together but it won’t taste as good).

3. Next add any softer vegetables (like tomatoes) and beans, rice, pasta, etc., plus the stock or water and simmer until everything is tender.

4. Taste and adjust seasonings. Decide whether you want to eat rough and chunky, blended with hand held blender bar until roughly chopped with a bit of texture, or completely liquidised until it’s velvety smooth.

Soupy Suggestions... 

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.