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soup

Beer bread grilled cheese

Beer bread grilled cheese

Date: 2/29/2012

Recipe: http://honestfare.com/beer-and-cheese-sandwich/

Modifications: None.

Time to table: 30 minutes

Servings: 2 adults, 1 toddler

Ben: Love

Erin: Like

Annie: Like

Notes: We actually had some fontina cheese for this, though we had to cut some mold off of it :) The carmelized onions and mustad were awesome additions to the grilled cheese, I’ll certainly be adding those to grilled cheeses in the future. The tomato soup we had was just so-so, from box at the store. I haven’t mastered the technique to make a grilled cheese that actually melts the cheese in the middle without burning the bread on the outside. Oh well, just more opportunity to try it out!

Annie eating her sandwich

Chicken wild rice soup and honey yeast rolls

Chicken Wild Rice Soup and Honey Yeast Rolls

Date: 1/15/2012

Recipe:

Soup: Ingredients:

  • Approximately 7 cups water, 6 tablespoons of “better than bouillion” vegetable broth mix
  • 2 cups finely chopped celery (when we have extra celery, we chop and blanch and freeze in 2 cup portions to have on hand for soups – so one of those bags went in here)
  • 1 carrot, shredded
  • Half an onion, chopped
  • 1 teaspoon dried parsley flakes
  • 1/4 teaspoon garlic powder
  • 1/4 teaspoon dried thyme
  • 1/4 cup butter
  • 1/4 cup all-purpose flour
  • 1 can condensed cream of mushroom soup, undiluted
  • 3 cups cooked wild rice
  • 1 pound cooked chicken thighs, cubed
Directions:
  • In a large saucepan, combine the first nine ingredients. Bring to a boil. Reduce heat; cover and simmer for 30 minutes. (We did this part while cooking the wild rice)
  • In Dutch oven, melt butter; stir in flour until smooth. Gradually whisk in broth mixture. Bring to a boil; cook and stir for 2 minutes or until thickened. Add mushroom soup, rice and chicken; heat through. 

Adapted from:  http://www.tasteofhome.com/Recipes/Chicken-Wild-Rice-Soup

Rolls: http://annies-eats.com/2008/10/29/honey-yeast-rolls/

Modifications: The soup recipe was pretty heavily modified, which is why I posted what we did. I followed all instructions on the rolls, but it didn’t take 2 hours for my dough to double.

Time to table: Soup took about an hour total, because the wild rice takes 45 minutes to cook – but since we combined that with the first step of the soup (simmering for 30 minutes) it wasn’t so bad. Rolls take about 3 hours including all rising time, maybe 30 minutes of active prep time total.

Servings: The 3 of us ate this for dinner, and then froze another dinner portion for all of us. There was enough after that still for one lunch and one toddler dinner. Probably would feed 6 adults. The rolls make 10-12.

Ben: Love

Erin: Love

Annie: Love

Notes: I feel like we need a special category for these rare (but happened twice in a week!) triple LOVE meals. So I am making one, and calling it “triple love” (some are amended from my feelings on a meal during the first trimester of pregnancy. Another note – apparently we mostly love soup). I was VERY skeptical that this would live up to restaurant quality soup, but wow, it definitely did! This soup was absolutely delicious, and paired with fresh baked rolls? Can’t get much better than that on a cold January night! When Annie even chooses to eat the soup after eating an entire roll, you know it’s good. She eats so much better on weekends it’s ridiculous – the big difference being that we don’t give her snacks in the afternoon on weekends – shockingly that results in her actually eating dinner! Anyway, this meal was definitely a winner all around. Kind of surprising for us given the lack of cheese and cream involved!

Chicken Wild Rice Soup

Honey Yeast Rolls

Annie eating soup and bread

Curried lentil and sweet potato soup

Curried Sweet Potato Lentil Soup

Date: 1/8/2012

Recipe: http://denueva.blogspot.com/2011/11/curried-lentil-and-sweet-potato-soup.html

Modifications: I forgot to add the diced bell pepper, whoops. Nicki forgot the carrots, so between the two of us we have a full meal :) We also used the immersion blender to thicken the soup up. It’s easier for Annie to eat and Erin and I prefer blended soups. I also didn’t put nearly as much liquid as it called for (4-5 cups was what we used) – it could have used more probably, especially after eating the leftovers which thicken up considerably, but the batch would have been HUGE if we had added the full 8 cups it called for.

Time to table: 1 hour

Servings: 6 adults

Ben: Like

Erin: Like

Annie: Like

Notes: This was a very easy recipe to make and had enough leftovers to make a second dinner out of, which is always a win in my book. We say Annie “liked” this meal, but the threshold for her to like something has gone way down as she seems to be getting pickier about the food we serve her, which is not cool. “Like” in this case means that she ate a few (5 or so) bites voluntarily and dipped her bread it in before announcing she was all done and wanted fruit.

Curried Sweet Potato Lentil Soup

White chicken chili

White Chicken Chili

Date: 11/14/2011

Recipe: http://annies-eats.net/2008/09/25/white-bean-chicken-chili/

Time to table: 45 minutes

Modifications: I had some diced up bell pepper in the fridge that we added in with the onions, and and I also added a few cloves of garlic.

Servings: 4 adult meals, 1 toddler

Ben: Love

Erin: Love

Annie: Like

Notes: We made this for Annie’s 1st birthday party earlier this year and I’m SO glad that Erin reminded me of it, because it’s awesome. I was a little sad that there weren’t more leftovers, Erin and I both took it for lunch the next day and that was the end of it. Annie has not been eating well lately, so while I say “like”, take that with a grain of salt :) It really just means she ate something, as opposed to nothing at all. She had a few good bites and picked out a lot of the chicken and beans.

White Chicken Chili

Annie at dinner
This was probably right before she spilled this all over herself by messing around with the spoon and hitting her milk. Fun!

 

Lentil Stew with Butternut Squash

Lentil Stew with Squash

Date: 11/8/2011

Recipe: http://www.goodhousekeeping.com/recipefinder/lentil-stew-butternut-squash-recipes

Time to table: 30 minutes prep, 6 hours cook time

Modifications: We used some sort of orange squash from our CSA, not sure what kind it was, but it was nearly identical to butternut squash inside. Looking over the recipe now I see that we forgot to add the parsley, whoops. Didn’t have any rosemary (and I wasn’t buying any for one recipe) so we used dried thyme and sage, like the song says.

Servings: 6 adult dinners

Ben: Like (surprisingly)

Erin: Like

Annie: Dislike, but had a few bites (turns out she likes it, but ONLY if she sees fresh grated parmesan on top before eating it)

Notes: I haven’t been a big fan of the lentil recipes we’ve tried in the past, so I wasn’t really looking forward to this, other than it used the squash we’ve had sitting around for a couple weeks. To my surprise and delight, this was actually pretty damn good!  We topped it with copious amounts of parmesan cheese and I used sriracha in mine, and it was great. Ours turned out very thick, which is how we like soups anyways, so that worked out well.

Edited to add (from Erin): We gave this soup to Annie for leftovers last night – she took one look at it and got PISSED – saying “nooo” and pushing it away, then saying “cheese? cheese?” pointing at the kitchen (where she’d seen the cheese out earlier). I informed her that there was, in fact, cheese IN the soup, but that wasn’t good enough. She took a little break to have a meltdown about this fact in her room, then she came out and asked for cheese again. In the interest of her eating SOMETHING, we grated fresh parmesan on her soup so she could see it and didn’t mix it in. She then proceeded to eat the entire bowl and ask for more. TODDLERS!!!

Lentil Stew with Squash

Corn & cheese chowder

Cheesy Corn Chowder
Doesn’t look like much, but it’s fantastic.

Date: 11/7/2011

Recipe: http://tastykitchen.com/recipes/soups/corn-cheese-chowder/?print=1/#sizeFP

Time to table: 1 hour

Modifications: I added a couple stalks of diced celery because we had some for other meals this week.

Servings: 5 adult dinners

Ben: Love

Erin: Like/Love

Annie: Love

Notes: This was an awesome soup that I’ll definitely make again, I can’t wait for the leftovers tomorrow for lunch (We saved the leftovers for dinner tonight). We didn’t use bread bowls, but I can imagine that would be delicious. We had this for leftovers tonight and I made the mistake of crushing up some crackers in Annie’s bowl. She recognized the crackers and proceeded to pick the cracker pieces out and just eat those. Ugh.

Annie chowing on chowder

Cheesy Corn Chowder

Italian Spinach and Egg Soup

Italian Spinach and Egg “Stracciatella” Soup

Date: 11/2/2011

Recipe: http://www.acouplecooks.com/2011/10/italian-spinach-and-egg-stracciatella-soup/

Time to table: 30 minutes

Modifications: I left the garlic in the soup, cause why not? :)

Servings: 2 adult dinners, 2 adult lunches

Ben: Like

Erin: Like

Annie: Like

Notes: I actually liked this a lot better as leftovers when I was hungover under the weather, with some sriracha. I had this on both weekend days for lunch and it was delicious. We were surprised that Annie even got any of this in her mouth, but she seemed to enjoy it, and picked out the beans to eat specifically. This may have been because we showed her a cracker and put it in the soup… but whatever works.

Italian Spinach and Egg “Stracciatella” Soup

Annie eating soup

White bean soup with andouille and collards

White bean andouille collard stew

Date: 10/28/2011

Recipe: http://www.erinsfoodfiles.com/2011/10/slow-cooker-white-bean-soup-with-andouille-and-collards.html

Time to table: 40 minutes prep, 6 hours cook time

Modifications: We used ground andouille sausage instead of links because that’s all we could get at the grocery store. Not a big difference. We also topped ours with parmesan and added some garlic. Looking at the recipe now, I also realize that I forgot to use the red wine vinegar, whoops.

Servings: 8 adult meals

Ben: Like

Erin: Like

Annie: Like/Dislike (didn’t eat it at dinner, but then ate some for lunch next day)

Notes: If we make this again I would saute the collard greens as the slow cooker doesn’t seem to soften them up enough. Other than that this was a tasty meal that gave us tons of leftovers for work lunches next week. It was a little spicy for Annie I think, when I gave it to her for lunch the next day I added some yogurt and that seemed to help.

White bean andouille collard stew

Potato leek soup

Potato Leek Soup

It doesn’t show well, but this was delicious!

Date: 9/26/2011

Recipe: http://simplyrecipes.com/recipes/ham_potato_and_leek_soup/

Time to table: 40 minutes

Modifications: We used the leeks, but had some other stuff to use up so I threw in celery, onion, and sour cream since we didn’t have any cream/half & half. We didn’t use ham because we didn’t have any and I knew it wouldn’t need it. We also didn’t use any of the fresh herbs, but just threw in some dried stuff we had.

Servings: 2 adult dinners, 2 adult lunches, 1 toddler dinner

Ben: Love

Erin: Love

Annie: Love

Notes: We used the immersion blender to blend the soup up, but we took some out for Annie before that as it’s easier for her to eat larger chunks. She surprised us and ate all of her serving and then we had no more to give her because it was all blended! This soup was awesome and I’m very much looking forward to making this and other soups this fall/winter.

Yummy potato leek soup

Yummy potato leek soup

Country pork and noodles

Country pork and noodles

Date: July 12th, 2011

Recipe: http://community.cookinglight.com/showpost.php?s=81ba9f28aeddc732dbe503a323a83f37&p=1129068&postcount=5

Modifications: I was only making a lunch portion of this, so I cut the recipe down. I substituted sweet potato for the red pepper because that’s what I had on hand. I also added some spinach at the end. I also skipped the black pepper and used chili powder, cumin, and paprika.

Time to table: 20 minutes

Servings: 2 adult lunches

Ben: Like

Notes: This was pretty good, but didn’t get as thick as I had hoped. I’ve been making soup for lunches often enough, so I thought that adding 1 tablespoon of corn starch would be enough to thicken it up a bit and add some variety, but I should have added a little more. This was still a good way to use up some of the leftover pork loin.

Country pork and noodles