Tampilkan postingan dengan label soups. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label soups. Tampilkan semua postingan

GREEN DAIKON AND JUMBO CARROT SOUP

Diposting oleh good reading on Jumat, 24 Februari 2012


A healthy low sodium soup:  Green daikon and jumbo carrot soup

I drink this broth (not the meat and veggies) primarily when I'm detoxing.  There is no added salt in the soup.  It is both flavourful and filling.  I believe that this soup would fit into a GAPS diet as well as many of the other diets out there that aim to address gut and other immunological issues in your body. 

Dried dates and longans naturally sweeten the soup


Well, in any case, we never drink it for anything else but for the fact that it is very yummy.  It's a savoury broth that is clear.  I use a special skimmer to remove all the fat from the broth.  If you don't have that, you can refrigerate the broth and then remove the congealed fat from the surface before drinking it.  
Green daikon (lo bak) and jumbo carrots are cut in large chunks.  Wash and peel the carrots and daikon.  Regular white daikon and carrots will do if you cannot find the special green daikon or jumbo carrots.    Most Asian supermarkets will carry these specialty veggies that don't taste that great on their own but are especially good for flavouring soups.  Turn your root veggies 1/3 turn as you chop them to get these lovely chunks.


ALWAYS use both NORTH AND SOUTH almond seeds.  My mother told me to always use both in a soup for balance.  I shudder to think what would happen if we ingested a soup made with only one type of almond seed! ;p  These are not regular almonds you eat out of hand but a type of almond seed used specifically for Chinese herbal soups.  Both are required as they have opposing effects on the body...if you believe in that sort of thing.  I just know the soup tastes yummy if you use both.  
You can find these almonds (tiny pit-sized almond shaped seeds) in an Asian herbalist's shop of the dried goods section of any Asian market.  They are extremely common and dirt cheap to buy (as are the dried dates and dried longan above).



You must use pork bones for the broth.  The first (and nastiest) step is you must boil the bones to remove the scum and blood.  Remove any sinew or other nasties too while you're at it.  I generally bring the bones to a boil in a large pot, boil the bones for a few minutes and then drain them in a colander under cold running water.  I wear rubber gloves and scrub the bones of the gunk and discard all the nasty looking bits of fat and stuff while I'm running the water.  It generally takes me several minutes to clean the bones.  The soup bones are then placed into a fresh pot of water for the soup.  Never dump raw pork bones into your soup broth as you'll have a disgusting smelly mess to deal with and the soup will taste musty.


Here's my soup cauldron.  
Boil, boil, toil and trouble...

Chinese soups require 2-4 hours simmer time.  My soup pot is like a crock pot and is made of specialty Purple Clay that is from China.  I think it's the same clay they use in those lovely little teapots.  It makes fantastic soup and relieves my stovetop space.  I just plug it in and forget about it.  I fill my pot up 3/4 of the way with water and then dump in all the ingredients.  Generally, I leave it in there for 3-4 hours and it simmers gently the whole time.


You can eat the cooked veggies and the meat from the soup bones if you wish (my family loves it), but oftentimes the flavour has been sapped out of the veggies and is infused into the broth.  My daughters generally eat the carrots on the first day and they don't seem to like the carrots the next day.  


This is only one of a myriad of slow simmered soups made from combining fruit, veggies or dried herbs, roots and seeds.  There's one using green papaya and chicken feet, another with apples (for coughs) and some herbal ones using sticks of herbs and stuff.   I can't read Chinese, but I go by how they look.  These soup broths are generally very popular in Chinese families during dinner time.  Old grandmas in particular know how to make these.   For some reason women are praised for their abilities to make these soups but when you really think about it, there's not much technique other than the cleaning of the bones.  You just dump everything in a pot with water and simmer it for a long time.  It's not as if you're slaving over a hot stove or anything.  Families make these soups on a daily basis.  I think that drinking a bowl of soup before a meal may take the edge off of hunger and force you to eat less (a simple diet aid) and the broth definitely will hydrate you. As for medicinal properties...my doc says he doubts it.  These are not the icky herbal decoctions that people use in TCM in any case.    

The recipe?  I never use one.  Just grab a handful of each of the dried fruits and herbs I have pictured above.  I used 4 large carrots and 4 large green daikon and 2 pounds of pork bones for the soup.  My pot is huge and I covered the whole thing with water.  Skim off the scum as it's cooking.  You don't have to do this much if you've washed the bones properly.  If you have enough veggies and bones, you won't need added salt.  It'll be plenty flavourful.  Don't add salt if you can help it.  The dates and longan will add sweetness.  
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HOMEMADE WONTON SOUP

Diposting oleh good reading on Minggu, 06 Januari 2008

a steaming bowl of homemade wonton soup is food for the soul
It's getting harder and harder to feed Bib. She's almost a year old and wants to eat everything we're eating--but of course she's not allowed to have certain foods yet because they're either choking hazards or have potentially allergenic ingredients. This makes eating out kind of difficult. BUT we still manage to go out every week for Dim Sum or Dinner. Stomach and I figure we have to train them early because that's pretty much our sole form of entertainment nowadays.

fresh wonton wrappers (a.k.a. wonton skins) can be readily purchased at any Asian market or major grocery stores in the refrigerated section

I haven't officially introduced egg whites to Bib because I think she breaks out with nasty eczema when she eats meals that suspiciously have that ingredient (like velveted chicken in restaurant stir-fries). Some baked goods are also off-limits. Poor thing!

wonton filling: i like to crank up the nutritional value of my wontons with bok choy

I've been trying to feed her things that have veggies, protein and carbs all in the same meal. It's not easy. Dark leafy veggies are a hard sell unless they're disguised somehow. So here I am hiding them in the wonton filling. You know...kind of like multi-tasking. Or is that multi-eating? One of my favourite solutions for a quick healthy meal that the kids love: Homemade Wontons in Chicken Broth. Bebe loves hers with udon noodles too. I like mine with bok choy in the broth (no noodles--they're redundant in my opinion).

homemade wontons: no eggs, no seafood, no weird chemicals and perfect for a toddler's meal

Here's my step-by-step method for making wontons. I like to freeze them on the sheet pans for about an hour and then dump them all into a ziploc bag. When we feel like having Wonton Soup, we take however many we want (still frozen) and plop them into chicken broth to cook. Add a package of instant noodles and veggies and you have a full meal!

a tray of wontons ready for the freezer (or soup pot!)




WON TON SOUP
(makes 38 wontons)
1/2 lb ground pork
2 baby bok choy, finely chopped (about 1/3 cup total)
1 1/2 t cornstarch
1 1/2 t sesame oil
1/2 t. salt
dash of white pepper
2 T finely chopped green onion
1 t. shaoxing wine
pinch of sugar
One (380g) Package fresh Wonton Skins
Bowl of water for use in closing the wrappers
Low Sodium Chicken Broth (I use Campbell's in the 1 litre tetra-pak)
  • Combine all ingredients except wonton skins,water and broth in a bowl. Mix well with a spoon.
  • Using a small teaspoon, measure out a scant teaspoon of filling in the centre of each skin.
  • Dip a finger into the bowl of water and trace your finger along 2 adjacent edges of the skin.
  • Fold the wonton skin to form a triangle, with the filling in the centre; gently pressing out any air and ensuring a nice seal
  • With the dumpling pointing away from you, fold the long edge until you can just see the top corner of the dumpling
  • Dip a finger into the bowl of water and trace some water onto the two opposing sides that will be pinched together.
  • Gently pinch the "arms" of the wonton to close and seal.
  • Place on parchment-lined cookie sheet; cover lightly with plastic wrap until you have finished forming all the dumplings
  • You can cook the dumplings by boiling them in chicken broth. They're done when they float to the top.
  • Any leftover raw wontons can be frozen
  • Variations: add veggies, instant noodles, chinese bbq pork, fish balls etc.
  • Deep fried variation: dip in sweet and sour sauce or sweet thai chili sauce
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CHINESE SOUPS--A PANACEA?

Diposting oleh good reading on Rabu, 22 Agustus 2007


If you're Chinese, most likely you grew up with soup on the dinner table. The brothy concoction had little twigs and indistinguishable ingredients floating about and though you questioned what they were, you never got a straight answer.

Well, I have figured out what some of those herbs are and have some of the recipes right here if you feel like making them. Most of these herbs have mild medicinal value and need to be ingested everyday on a longterm basis in order for you to receive any benefit. However, older Chinese people swear by them and for some reason these soups make you feel good. This is most likely due to the chicken soup effect. You know someone took the time to wash the ingredients, prep them, slowly simmer them an (hopefully) skim the fat off the top! This process can take a couple of hours up to 4 hours depending on the type of soup. All this work for broth! Most people do not eat the the herbs and other ingredients because all the flavour has been sapped out of them and has instead been infused into the broth.

This is a decadent form of hydration. I asked my doctor about the medicinal benefits of drinking Chinese soup and he replied that if it made you feel better, that's great. He says that all soup does is hydrate you. Look at it as part of the 8 glasses of water you're supposed to be drinking in a day.

All of these dried herbal ingredients can be found readily in the multitudinous Chinese Herbal shops that you see in Chinatown and Asian malls and markets.

4 FLAVOURS SOUP
1/4 cup nut of lily , slivered (lily bulb/ bai he)
1/4 cup lotus seeds
1/4 cup seed of sui sut (fox nuts/qian shi)
1/4 cup dried sliced chinese yam
1-2 lb pork soup bones

  • Bring a large pot of water to boil and dump in the pork soup bones. Bring the water to a boil again. You do not have to cook the bones well. You are simply cleaning the pork bones of the blood and gunk that initially comes out. Bring the pot of water and bones to the sink and dump the contents into a colander in the sink. Wash the bones well in cold water (picking away any gristly,fatty yucky stuff that comes out) and wash the pot out very well with soap and hot water. This process is always the first step in creating a clean broth.

  • Fill the clean pot with enough fresh water to cover the soup bones and other ingredients. I usually eyeball it and ensure I have a few inches of water above the ingredients.

  • Bring water to a boil; reduce heat and simmer, covered for 1 1/2 hours to 2 hours.
GINSENG SOUP
1/4 cup American Wild Ginseng (Xi Yang Shen)
1/4 cup small dried red dates, Chinese Wolfberry (Gou Qi Zi)
2 lbs pork soup bones
Clean and prepare soup bones and stock as above


  • Bring all ingredients in the water to a boil again; reduce to a simmer, covered for 1 1/2 hours

FRESH LOTUS ROOT SOUP


2 fresh lotus root
1 cup raw, shelled peanuts
2 lbs pork bones
optional: 1/4 cup Chinese Wolfberries


  • Clean and prepare soup bones and broth as usual, skimming and removing any scum


  • Peel and clean lotus, chop diagonally in 1 cm thick slices


  • add washed peanuts to soup


  • Add lotus to the soup


  • Stir in wolfberries; bring to a boil; reduce to simmer, covered for 2 to 3 hours


WATERCRESS SOUP
one large bunch of watercress
1 piece dried orange peel, (tangerine peel/chen pi)
3 sweet dates, (chinese jujube/hong zao/da zao)
1/4 cup dried bitter apricot, (chinese almond/xing ren)
2 lbs pork soup bones



  • Clean and prepare soup bones and broth as described above

  • Add washed, peel, dates and chinese almonds

  • Bring to boil; reduce to simmer, covered for 1 hour

  • Add washed chopped watercress and simmer for 1/2 hour to 1 hour

3 CARROTS SOUP
1 large carrot
1 daikon radish (lo bak)
1 green daikon radish
1 T chinese almonds
3-4 dried dates or chinese jujubes
2 lb pork bones



  • Clean and prepare pork bones for the broth.


  • Clean and peel all the radishes and carrot; cut into large 1 1/2 inch chunks.


  • Wash almonds and dates and place all the ingredients into the pot.


  • Bring to boil; reduce to simmer, covered for 3-4 hours



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