Soup Week: Cream of Broccoli Soup

Posted by Sylvia on February 21st, 2007 — Posted in Recipes

Day Three
Cream of Broccoli Soup

  • Broccoli, roughly chopped
  • Chives
  • Tabasco sauce
  • A very small amount of cream

Heat the broth and simmer the broccoli for 10 minutes. Stir in the chives and Tabasco and heath through. Liquidise the result and then stir in the cream. Run the liquidiser again until you have a creamy soup. Warm through before serving.


Soup Week: Chinese Egg Drop Soup

Posted by Sylvia on February 20th, 2007 — Posted in Recipes

Day Two
Chinese Egg Drop Soup

  • Soy sauce (go gently!)
  • Sesame oil (ditto)
  • Spring onion (Green onion to Americans)
  • Spinach leaves
  • Chard leaves, ripped into shreds
  • 1 egg (don’t add until serving!)

If you are preparing this ahead, let the broth cool then add in all the above ingredients and chill. When ready to serve, heat the soup up quickly, then beat the egg and stir it in rapidly so it leaves trails of cooked egg. Serve immediately.


Soup Week: Mexican Chicken Soup

Posted by Sylvia on February 19th, 2007 — Posted in Recipes

As a part of my quest to eat healthy and lose weight, I’ve committed to two course meals every evening. Even when we’re just eating at the computer, I serve a small starter.

Cream of Broccoli Soup
Photo By Giovanni JL

There’s a few reasons for this. One is that it seems luxurious, I feel posh and maybe even a little bit spoilt. I’m always looking to fend off feelings of deprivation (WAH! Why can’t I have a Big Mac?) and this is one of my little tricks to keep me feeling happy about the diet.

There are lots of articles about eating slower, savouring each mouthful, in order to ensure you don’t keep eating after you are full. I think that separate courses, with a quick break in between, helps us to eat slower while tricking us into feeling like we are eating more - there’s a little bit of a break between the courses. It also keeps the main meal from looking pitiful, those initial hunger pangs have already dealt with and so there is less of an urge to overfill the plate with food.

The trick is to keep it simple — it’s not like I have time to do Cordon Bleu cooking on a week night! So I plan out a set of soups at the weekend, ready for serving during the week.

Soup isn’t hard to make, freezes like a dream, and it most of them don’t need any faffing on the night - just heat and serve! The trick is to start with one base and add in flavours and textures to keep them each nicely separate.

I make my own chicken broth and I do recommend it for the very best flavour (luxurious, remember?) but if you must use pre-made stock, then I would take the time to boil some vegetables and herbs in with it for a touch more flavour (and then strain).

Now you need to make sure you have plenty of containers to store it in: I chill soup for the next couple of days and freeze anything that I’m planning to serve more than three days away.

You can get really clever and do double batches, chilling one for later in the week and freezing one for later in the month! But I’m rarely that organised.

Now, how to keep that soup from seeming the same everyday? No problem. This week I’ll be offering you five different soup ideas with a basic list of ingredients to add for each. All of these are healthy but you can feel free to drop items that aren’t allowed on your diet, be inventive!

Then check the simple instructions and you have a new soup! The main time hit is the chopping so I try to do a bunch at once on a Sunday afternoon which limits the amount of fiddly work and, more importantly, the washing up!

This week we’ll do a 5-day menu of soups starting from an admittedly very large batch of chicken stock. The vegetable soups can equally be made with vegetable broth — the main thing is to remember that the stock is a critical flavour, not just a sideline and thus it needs to be of good quality. You have to really like the taste of stock cubes and salt if you want to try to use Oxo.

Day One:
Mexican Chicken Soup

  • Coriander leaves, chopped
  • Tomatoes, chopped
  • Jalapeno chiles, to taste (the soup should have a bit of bite, not cause alarms to go off)
  • Sweet corn
  • Chunks of chicken, bite sized

Mix all the ingredients and add to the pot of boiling broth. Simmer until the chicken is cooked through. This can be chilled or frozen, just reheat. Serve.


Salmonella

Posted by Karen on February 17th, 2007 — Posted in News

Salmonella strikes again. Only last summer, here in the UK, Cadbury was forced to recall a million chocolate bars due to traces of salmonella being found in some of its products.

In November of last year the FSA issued a warning concerning imported eggs.

Now, supermarkets across the country have taken houmous off the shelves after salmonella was discovered in two varieties during routine tests.

From ITV News
Products affected are:

  • M&S own brand houmous, flavoured houmous and topped houmous. All date codes.
  • Co-op own brand houmous and flavoured houmous. All date codes up to February 28, 2007.
  • Sainsbury’s own brand houmous, flavoured houmous and topped houmous. All date codes up to February 28, 2007.
  • Somerfield own brand houmous and flavoured houmous. All date codes up to February 28, 2007.
  • Tesco own brand houmous, flavoured houmous and topped houmous. All date codes up to February 28, 2007.
  • Waitrose own brand houmous, flavoured houmous and topped houmous. All date codes up to February 28, 2007.

Overseas, a salmonella outbreak has been linked to Peanut Butter and now several thousand cartons of imported cantaloupes have been recalled after the fruit tested positive for salmonella.

salmonellaniaid.jpg

 

 Salmonella typhimurium (red) invading cultured human cells.

 Credit: Rocky Mountain Laboratories, NIAID, NIH


Sunflower Seeds

Posted by Karen on February 6th, 2007 — Posted in Recipes, Tips

You can blame Fox Mulder for my penchant for sunflower seeds. Where Popeye failed in introducing me to healthy food (no matter how you disguise it, spinach is spinach is spinach) Mulder succeeded (literally) in tempting me into the art of nutritious nibbling.

seed.jpg

Some lovely facts about sunflower seeds:

  • They are a rich source of potassium.
  • They are high in protein, unsaturated fats, calcium, iron, and phosphorus.
  • They are rich in B vitamins, especially B6
  • They are high in zinc which plays a critical role in the health of the adrenal glands.

It would seem that during times of stress the levels of these nutrients plummet, indicating that the good old sunflower seed can reduce my stress levels (and yours too obviously) allowing me to be calm and composed should Duchovny call at my door.

Sunflower seeds are easy to purchase. Tesco for example sell 100g bags for 33p and 300g bags for 89p. Holland and Barrett sell a 250g bag of organic sunflower seeds for £1.79.

I find they are a great substitute for the chocolate/crisps snack-attacks. They are great for keeping by the side of the computer allowing me to nibble away in a guilt free fashion. They are also the type of snack that can help those trying to give up smoking, whilst at the same time attempting to avoid the nasty weight gain that comes with the quitting. If it’s the hand/mouth thing that tempts you back to the old ciggies then try this out – get healthy whilst getting healthy!

Here’s a recipe for you

Stuffed Peppers

    Ingredients

  • 4 ounce long-grain brown rice
  • pinch of salt (optional) and Black pepper
  • 4 large sweet peppers
  • 3 tablespoons of margarine or butter
  • 1 medium onion, chopped
  • 4 ounce celery – chopped finely
  • 4 ounce sunflower seeds
  • parsley and oregano
  • 2 eggs- lightly beaten
  • green chile – finely chopped
  • 4 ounce grated cheese
    Method

  • Cook the rice until tender. Drain and set to one side
  • Cut the peppers in half, removing the seeds. Parboil for 5 minutes.
  • Oil a baking dish and arrange the peppers.
  • Sauté the onion, celery and sunflower seeds in the margarine (or butter)
  • Remove from heat and stir into the rice.
  • Add the parsley, oregano, eggs, chiles, salt and black pepper.
  • Now fill the peppers with the mixture and put the grated cheese on top
  • Bake in the oven gas mark 4 to 5, 180oC, 350oF for about 20 minutes.