C is for Carrot-Ginger Soup

C is for Carrot-Ginger Soup . . .

Carrot-Ginger Soup

Here’s a great way to eat more carrots and enjoy a sunny bowl of goodness on a cold January day!

Carrot Ginger Soup

Ingredients

  • 2 Tbls vegetable oil
  • 1 medium onion, thinnly sliced
  • 1 pound carrots, peeled and shredded
  • one 3″ piece of fresh ginger, peeled and grated
  • 1 red potato, peeled and diced
  • 1/3 cup chopped cashews (optional)
  • 1 tsp salt, or to taste
  • 1/2 tsp ground coriander (optional)
  • 1/2 tsp ground cumin (optional)
  • dash ground cinnamon (optional)
  • 1 tsp curry powder (optional)
  • splash orange juice (optional)
  • 4-6 cups vegetable stock (see recipe below for homemade gluten-free veggie stock)

 Directions

  1. Heat the oil in a big soup pot.
  2. Sauté the onions over medium-high heat, stirring occasionally. When the onions start getting tender, add the shredded carrots.  After a few minutes, add the potatoes, ginger, and cashews (if using).  Cook and stir for a few more minutes.  Add the salt and whichever of the other spices suit your fancy.
  3. Once the spices start releasing their aromas, stir in the stock and the orange juice (if using).  Bring to a boil.
  4. Simmer over medium heat for 30 minutes, or until the veggies are all tender.
  5. Remove from heat.
  6. Purée using immersion blender, food processor, or regular blender.

Serve and Enjoy!
Makes 2 quarts

Notes

  • I had not intended to add curry powder, but when I went to add the cinnamon, much more “dashed” out than I had intended and the soup smelled too much like cinnamon.  Adding the curry powder covered it just enough so that it didn’t taste like dessert.  (BTW, both my cinnamon and the curry powder come from Penzey’s Spices . . . check them out for a great herb & spice selection!)
  • Many recipes for carrot soup add some dairy (plain yogurt, half-and-half, sour cream) or coconut milk either at the end of cooking or when serving.  It will help cool the spicy punch of the curry.  I’m avoiding dairy so I omitted it, but feel free to add some if you are able.  The soup tasted fine without it.

Vegetable Stock

  • 2 Tbls oil
  • 1 onion, thinnly sliced
  • 4 large carrots, peeled and sliced
  • 4 ribs celery, diced
  • 4 cloves garlic, minced
  • 2 red potatoes, peeled and diced
  • 1 bay leaf
  • 2 tsp dried basil
  • 2 tsp dried oregano
  • 2 tsp dried thyme
  • salt and freshly ground pepper to taste
  • 10 cups water

Heat the oil in a big soup pot.  Sauté the onions over medium-high heat, stirring occasionally.  When the onions get tender add the carrots and celery.  Cook and stir for a few more minutes.  Add the potatoes and garlic.  Cook and stir.  Add the bay leaf and spices.  Stir to release aroma.  Finally, add the water.  Bring to a boil.  Lower heat to a simmer and cook for 1-1/2 hours.  Cool.  Strain out the vegetables with a slotted spoon.  Place 3-4 layers of cheesecloth in a strainer and strain the stock.

Makes 2 quarts.  Store in frig, use within a few days, or freeze.

Note

  • Most of the time I want a clear stock, so I remove and discard all of the vegetables.  Occasionally, I leave some of them in and purée the stock rather than straining it.  If you do that, remember to locate and remove the bay leaf first!

P.S.  The focaccia in the photo was made using the recipe in Annalise Roberts’ Gluten-Free Baking Classics, 2nd Edition . . . an excellent source for recipes for GF baked goods.  More on my GF baking adventures in a future post.

 

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A is for Amaranth

Eat More Whole Grains!

We all know we should . . . and after 6 weeks of GF baking using mostly rice/tapioca/potato starches “Eating More Whole Grains” is an important part of my New Year’s path of Health through Good Food.

This morning I decided to have amaranth for breakfast.  (Technically not a “grain” but  just click on that link to all the nutrition info . . . it definitely counts in this category!)

First I tried popping it as recommended by Gluten-Free Girl.  Unfortunately, all that resulted was little pieces of amaranth flying all around my kitchen.  I probably should have watched this video from the Whole Grains Council first:

How to Pop Amaranth (with Kara!)

Next time I’ll try that!

Instead, after cleaning up the mess, I followed the directions on the Arrowhead Mills bag of Amaranth:

Arrowhead Mills Amaranth

Combine 1 part Amaranth and 3 parts cold water in a pan.  Simmer for 25 minutes.

What resulted was a creamy breakfast cereal reminiscent of the Wheatena/Malt-O-Meal I used to eat (long, long ago).  I stirred in some maple syrup and warm soy milk and am still feeling full hours later.  Even better, I know I got a breakfast high in fiber, protein, iron and many other nutrients.  (Unfortunately, I ate it without taking a picture first . . . SORRY! 🙂

For more on what to do with amaranth, check out http://www.versagrain.com/amaranth.html

Enjoy!

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Happy New Year!!

2012 New Year’s Resolution:  To Heal Myself Through Food

Yesterday I threw out 10-15 POUNDS of flour—whole wheat, all-purpose, bread, semolina, fine-Italian, rye, corn meal and a few others I’m forgetting.  One bag of whole wheat flour was unopened, dated as packaged in Fall 2010.

The wheat-flour purge made room on the shelves and in the frig for all the OTHER flours I’ve been accumulating: rice flour (brown, sweet white, superfine brown), sorghum, teff, millet, tapioca, potato (both starch & flour), almond meal, garbanzo bean flour, . . .

You see over the past year I discovered (on my own, no help or thanks to doctors) that I am “sensitive” to wheat, corn, and dairy.  No, I don’t drop dead if I eat these things—though I once ate so much popcorn followed by a plate of nachos that I had shortness of breath!—but I definitely feel better (in my head, sinuses, lungs, and gut) when I don’t eat them.

SO, after almost a year of elimination/challenge diets, experimenting with taking things away and adding them back, my New Year’s Resolution for 2012 is to REALLY go gluten-free, corn-free, and dairy-free.  (At least as much as humanly possible—more on the challenges of “corn-free” later.)  More important than what I am “giving up,” I resolve to pursue healing through good food.  This blog will record my progress.

HAPPY NEW YEAR!!

 

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