Remember the excitement during school on Friday morning? It appeared to be either a sharp-shinned or Cooper's hawk...
How magnificent it appeared, sitting in the tree fluffing it's feathers.
Then it was back to school! ;-)
Love from,
Mum
Sunday, January 10, 2016
Chicken Soup with Dumplings
January, high winds, heavy downpours.... This isn't typical winter weather, but it
still calls for a fire in the woodstove and warm chicken and dumplings soup for
dinner. Justine took this opportunity to
learn how to make soup and dumplings, and what a wonderful job she did!
The recipe:
1 medium onion, chopped
3 small carrots, chopped
1 tsp. dried thyme
2 cloves garlic, minced
2 quarts chicken broth
2 cups chopped, cooked chicken
1 cup frozen peas
Before starting, be sure to remove the fat from the top of the homemade broth.
Heat olive oil in the soup pot (enough to thinly coat the
bottom). Cook the onion and carrots until soft.
Add the thyme and garlic and cook for another minute. Carefully add the chicken broth (be careful to watch out for the steam as you
add it to the pot!) Then add the cooked chicken and frozen peas.
Cover, bring to a boil, then turn to low and simmer while
you put the dumpling dough together.
(Jasmine is hoping some of the chicken will land on the
floor!)
For the dumplings:
1 1/2 cups flour
3/4 tsp. baking powder
3/4 tsp. salt
3 T. butter
3/4 cup milk
I use the dumpling recipe from an old Betty Crocker cookbook I picked up from the free shelf at the local library. Since we don't use shortening as the recipe calls for, though, we substitute butter.
Stir together the flour, baking powder and salt. Then cut the butter into the flour mix until it resembles coarse
crumbs.
(Now Jasmine is blatantly begging!)
Carefully fold in the milk.
(Don't stir or mix too vigorously as it may cause the dumplings to be tough.)
Before adding the dumplings to the soup, taste the soup and
add salt and pepper to taste. Then spoon
the dumpling into the soup.
Cover the pot and keeping the soup simmering, to cook the
dumplings for 10 minutes. Then uncover
and cook for 5 more minutes.
See all those dumplings?
That's because we doubled the recipe.
The girls both just recently discovered they like dumplings and one
recipe wasn't enough! We also needed
enough to go with the leftover soup the next day and this dumpling recipe
stands up well to being reheated.
(Oh, and Jasmine, the clean-up crew, did her job well!)
Some Notes
For making any soup, you can follow the same method above. It's a good way to use up bits from the
fridge and freezer The basic method is
as follows::
1. Saute root veggies
until soft (onions, leeks, turnips, carrots, parsnips...)
2. Add garlic and
herbs
3. Add broth
4. Add meat and/or more
tender veggies to cook (potatoes, squash, corn, peas, beans...)
That gives you a basic method for making soup. Soup is a great way to use up veggies and
meat in the fridge and freezer. Remember
it is essential to use homemade broth for a good, healthy soup. Take the time to make your own broth! You can still make a fairly quick soup if
your broth is frozen. It may just take a
little gentle coaxing to get the frozen broth up to temperature in the soup pot
before adding your meat and tender veggies
There are other techniques you can employ as well, such as
using an immersion blender to make a smooth soup and pouring in some kefir or
yogurt before serving to make it creamy.
(Be careful to slowly add some hot soup to the kefir or yogurt while
whisking to temper the kefir/yogurt before adding it to the soup, or it may
curdle.)
Here's to warm, happy, healthy tummies!
Love from,
Mum
Friday, January 8, 2016
Chicken Broth, Remouillage, Bouillon
...and doggie's dinner!
If you don't have enough room in the freezer to store the
broth, make bouillon cubes! Cook the
soup down to 1/3 it's original volume.
Stir in some beef gelatin if you have it, though this isn't absolutely
necessary. Pour into an ice cube tray
and freeze overnight. Once frozen, pop
out the cubes and store them in the freezer. (I've seen information online for cooking the broth down until it becomes very thick, then drying it and storing it dried. This is called portable soup and perhaps someday I'll try making it.)
This bouillon is good for boosting soup flavor without adding more
liquid volume. It also works well to place one or two cubes
in a mug and reconstitute them with
hot water and add a pinch of salt and sage and twist of lemon to taste. Good to sip those winter colds away!
After years of trying different broth recipes,
I've found this method and combination of ingredients yields the best
results.
What you need:
2-3 pounds organic chicken (whole or pieces (bone-in,
skin-on) or bones from a roasted chicken)
1 medium onion
2 medium carrots
3 stalks celery
a small handful fresh thyme sprigs
2 bay leaves
1/4 cup apple cider vinegar
First, you need to chop the meat.
Place the chicken pieces in a crock pot (or in a large pot
for the stovetop).
Roughly chop the veggies.
As long as it's clean, you can leave the onion skin on.
There's no need to chop the herbs.
Put all the veggies and herbs in the crock pot.
Add apple cider vinegar.
Fill the crock pot with water.
Cook on high until just boiling. Depending on your crock pot or stovetop, this
can take several hours.
Then turn down to simmer for at least 3 more hours or until
it smells just right!. (Sometimes, if I
don't have time to strain the broth, I will leave the crockpot on warm overnight
or if using the stovetop the pot, on the "warm" burner.
Strain into jars and refrigerate overnight. If not using right away, freeze the
broth. Be sure to pour the broth into a
freezer-proof container. Mason jars may
burst in the freezer.
REMOUILLAGE
Now, the reserved veggies and meat/bones can be brothed
again. Simply put them back in the crock
pot with another 1/4 apple cider vinegar and fill the pot with water. Go through the same routine: (1) bring to a boil; then (2) simmer for a
few hours. Strain and quickly cool the
same way you did the first broth. Once
again, save the strained veggies and meat!
This second broth is a remouillage which can be used for cooking rice,
pasta or adding to condensed soups or for replacing the water in homemade baked
beans.
DOGGIE'S DINNER
Even if you choose not to make a remouillage, the meat and
veggies have lost alot of flavor in the brothing process, but can be separated
from the bones and chopped finely then added to the dog's bowl!
BOUILLON
hot water and add a pinch of salt and sage and twist of lemon to taste. Good to sip those winter colds away!
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