Posts Tagged With: recipes

Super Breakfast Miso Soup

Soup for breakfast you say?  I thought it kinda strange too when my husband told me about the soup he used to eat while living with Japanese roommate during college. For years he would reminisce about the breakfasts they would have together ~ delicious, healthy and convenient Japanese soups complete with dried little fishes floating around in the bowl.  A recent journey into a grain-free diet has brought him back around to having nutrient rich soup for breakfast and this recipe is his own creation.  It is chock full of goodness from nettles and shiitake mushrooms to miso and seaweed.  What better way to start your day?

Normally I love to have yogurt with berries and ground flax seed for breakfast or some nice veggies scrambled with eggs and cheese, and so do my kids.  Seaweeds and shiitake mushrooms are a bit hard for me to handle even though I want to love them, really!  Yes, I am a reforming picky eater. So when my hubby started making this soup I observed him with interest and a bit of jealousy along with a healthy dose of happiness that he was making such a great start to his day.  And just the other morning, I took the plunge and tried his soup.  One taste made my body light up and I found it was delicious!  (Just like I tell my kids, you never know if you will like something until you give it a try…)  The last two days I have indulged in a big bowl of this delicious soup early in the day.  My energy has been a steady, wonderful hum and I don’t feel hungry until noon, pretty amazing!

This morning hubby man taught me to make this very special soup so I could share it with all of you!  He doesn’t really measure anything exactly so this is the best interpretation of his method based on my careful observation.  He also uses the frozen veggies and dried herbs for convenience.  Feel free to substitute fresh ingredients in their place, though you may need to adjust the quantity.  If you can find little dried fishes to add to your soup, go for it!  Please let us know where you found them, we can’t find them anywhere which is kind of a bummer for my husband.

Ingredients ~

Makes about 2, 16 ounce bowls of soup

  • 2 to 3 cups of Water
  • 1/2 to 1 tsp. Wakame Flakes
  • 1/4 to 1/2 cup frozen Spinach
  • 1/2 cup sliced, frozen or 2 big dried Shiitake Mushrooms
  • 1/2 to 1 tbsp. (scant) Dried Nettles
  • 1/4 block of cubed Tofu, optional.  We use a great sprouted tofu that is easier to digest than regular tofu.
  • A splash or a squirt to taste of Bragg’s Liquid Aminos (optional)
  • 2 Eggs
  • 2 big tbsp. Miso Paste

Method ~

Stage One

Create Your Broth

nettles and shiitakes

Add to a sauce pan:

  • 2 to 3 cups of water at least 2″ deep
  • Sprinkle in about 1/2 to 1 teaspoon wakame flakes. These expand hugely as they get saturated with the water, pretty cool.
  • 1/4 to 1/2 cup frozen spinach
  • 1/2 cup sliced shiitakes or 2 big dried ones ~ “I like shiitakes!”
  • About 1/2 to 1 scant tablespoon dried nettles, as if you were making a light nettle tea in a cup.

Ideally you would lightly boil this for about a 1/2 hour, otherwise just get it to an active simmer and move on the stage two.  While you are waiting for your soup to cook is a great time for a cup of  tea and  writing in a journal or a nice round of yoga.

Stage Two

Tofu and Bragg’s

tofu cubes

Turn down heat a bit and add to the sauce pan:

  • Add 1/4 block of tofu cubed  (or you can add this in the first stage)
  • For a little flavoring, add a squirt of Bragg’s to tweak out the flavor

If you are pressed for time, you could combine stages 1 and 2.  Both of these ingredients are optional so you can skip this step all together if you want.

Stage Three

The Eggs

Drop two eggs into the soup kinda swirling it around as you drop it.  Now you have two sources of protein, egg and tofu!

Then break up the yolky parts a little, if you can find them.  ”Some times you can’t find them and I don’t know what happens then.”

Bring to another simmer to make sure egg gets fully cooked.

My Hubby is a self-admitting heat-adjusting fanatic… and he is, he can take 20 minutes to make a piece of toast in the oven carefully watching and adjusting the toasts placement as well as the temp of the oven.  So you may not need to increase the temp here, just make sure your eggs are fully cooked.

Stage Four

The Miso and the Broth

smeared miso

Take a nice big tablespoon of miso and smear it around the inside of your bowl.  If you just add the miso as a big blob in the bottom of the bowl, it may not dissolve and you may go crazy trying to hunt it down to mix it in.  This way is fast and makes it easy to mix the miso into the soup.

Finally add the broth to your miso smeared bowl.  You want to be sure that the soup has cooled a bit and is not boiling so as to keep the cultures in the miso vital and alive.

Carefully mix in your miso into your amazing broth and enjoy!

miso soup

For a bit of helpful info about soy check out:

Soy And Women’s Health: The Truth About Soy Benefits And Safety by Aviva Romm

Special News!  This week I am guest posting about using herbal medicines safely over at Natural Living Mama.  Hop on over and check it out!

Shared On:  Simple Meals Friday

Categories: Food Is Your Best Medicine, Kitchen Creations, Natural Family Care | Tags: , , , | 3 Comments

Natural Living Monday #15 ~ Brussel Sprouts With Toasted Pecans, Balsamic and Parm

Brussel sprouts are tiny cute little members of the cabbage family and when I was a kid, I hated them!  But now I love them and so do my own kids, which I think is pretty cool.  Here is a tasty recipe for making your brussels sprouts and eating them too.

Ingredients ~ measurements are not exact and don’t need to be… follow your intuition and taste buds on this one!

  • 1 to 2 pounds of brussel sprouts, washed, trimmed and halved
  • 2 to 4 cloves of garlic, minced
  • olive oil
  • about a 1/3 cup of pecan halves roughly chopped
  • balsamic vinegar
  • parmesan cheese
  • salt and pepper to taste

Instructions ~  Coat the bottom of a nice big pan with olive oil, lightly saute the garlic for a minute or so.  Place the brussel sprouts cut side down in the olive oil and roast the brussel sprouts slowly over medium low eat until they start to become dark and caramely.  Flip and cook on the other side until the brussel sprouts begin to soften and re acooked through, season with salt and pepper to taste.

tiny

Mean while place the pecans in another pan and slowly toast over low heat until the nuts become fragrant and toasty brown colored, stirring often.

nuts

Next toss the nuts and brussel sprouts together.

DSCN3627

Finally, I highly recommend topping with a generous drizzle of sweet balsamic vinegar and some parmesan cheese.  This is seriously tasty!  I hope you enjoy it should you decide to embark on this cooking adventure.

DSCN3637

And now….

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Categories: Food Is Your Best Medicine, Kitchen Creations, Natural Family Care, Natural Living Monday Blog Hop | Tags: , , , , , | Leave a comment

Herbal Guacamole

People either love them or hate them, yet as far as I know there is nothing else in the world like the lovely avocado.  Tasty creaminess that adds just the right touch to so many dishes.  In our house it is often the avocado that pulls everything together.  It wasn’t always so for me.  As a child I would find them lurking in the taco salad my mother so often served.  Like a little bits of pale green nastiness they would taunt me as I zealously hunted them down and banished every piece from my meal.  As I got older my tastes changed and I found myself wanting to like avocado.  Finally the answer came for me… salt.  Salt!  So simple, it brings out a special flavor in the avocado that makes it absolutely delectable.  And all you need is a little, just a sprinkle to make the avocado’s tastiness shine.  Whew!  I am grateful I figured that one out because now I love avocados and I am not sure I could live with out them.

I found avocados to be the perfect baby food for my children.  Just cut one open and smash it up right in the peel.  Tasty nourishing baby food.  Luckily my kids never had my avocado aversion and they like them even without salt, go figure.

My favorite thing to make with avocados is guacamole, of course.  I love to add as much flavor to my guacamole as possible with herbs.  Forging out in my yard (as well as at the farm stand and grocery store) I search for any savory addition for my guacamole.

Favorites are ~

  • Herbs like chives, parsley, thyme, cilantro, and even basil
  • Flowers like spicy nasturtiums, borage, and chive flowers
  • Veggies like arugula, tomatoes, and peppers

This year my garden isn’t in the best shape.  We had a lot of construction right around our back yard and I found it wasn’t much fun gardening with loud construction equipment rumbling right over my shoulder.  Yet, I still managed to get a few lovely herbs planted and flourishing.  And, with the help of my local farm stand, I found enough to make a nice version of my family’s favorite dip.

Ingredients ~

  • Ripe Avocados
  • Herbs ~ I used cilantro, chives, thyme and parsley
  • Fresh Limes
  • Garlic
  • Salt, of course!

Method ~

Prep your ingredients.  Chop the herbs up nice a small.  I use a lot of herbs when I make this (probably about a 1/2 to 3/4 cup of chopped herbs to each avocado)  and my kids still love every bite, even my 6-year-old who doesn’t like “leaves.”  How great is that?  Not only are my children eating avocados often with veggies for dipping but they also are getting lots of amazing green leafy herbs all chock full of goodness.  It is enough to make my heart sing!

Mince the garlic.  How much you use depends on how much you like garlic.  My husband and I like it a lot so we use 1 to 2 cloves each.  I mince the garlic with salt to help get the garlic’s juice’s flowing.  Then I leave it on the side so my hubby and I can add it to our guacamole because raw garlic is too spicy for my kids.

Next, smash the avocados up on a plate, I use a potato masher for this.  My kids love helping with this part.  It is really fun to see the avocado turn into little green tubular shapes.

Then just mix in your herbs with a squeeze of lime juice and so salt to taste.  Easy,  healthy and delicious served with raw veggies, crackers or chips for dipping.  Yum!

Avocado Nutrition ~

Despite their bad past reputation avocados are in fact good for you.  Each bumpy skinned fruit  is packed with heart healthy fats, fiber, vitamins and minerals including B vitamins, vitamin E, and potassium as well as antioxidants.  So eat up and enjoy!

Categories: Herbs For Cooking, Kitchen Creations | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Fairy Crowns And Mint Magic Cookies

A cool rainy afternoon is a cookie baking afternoon at our house.  A time for ruminating in the kitchen over a delicious, comforting delicacy.  Because the heat of summer  has been so intense this year, I know we must seize this particular cool afternoon… it could be the last one like it for a while.

Out to the moist green mint patch we go, scissors in hand to harvest the best part of our cookie, fragrant stems of fresh peppermint.  Like a bit of musty earth magic this lush mint patch comes back each year to gift us with both pleasure and health.  It needs little assistance from us as it grows each year to a fragrant loveliness that is unparalleled elsewhere along our south fence.  We harvest mint continually through out the summer to make delicious yummy treats.   Because mint is so healthy it is good adding it to all kinds of foods to boost nutritional value and flavor.

Harvesting

In our patch we find deep green lobed leaves emerging opposite of each other from square stems.  That is right, square stems!  Square stems and opposite leaves are characteristic of all mint family members, which means a plant that fits this description is very likely related to mint.  Plants like basil, lavender, and sage all have square stems with opposite leaves.  It is fun to twirl the stem between fingers feeling for all four distinct corners.  We harvest the stems in just a way so as to encourage the mint to grow compact instead of stretching high to the sky thus becoming long and leggy.  By cutting the stem right above a pair of leaves, the plant makes use of dormant buds waiting atop each leaf and like magic, grows two whole new stems where there once was just one.  The mint then becomes bushy and seems to maintain its happiness as the heat of summer intensifies.

Back into the kitchen with our lush parcel of herbs, the mint tickles our noses with its delightful scent.  Garbling the mint, I look through the bundle and remove anything that is not supposed to go into our cookies: buggy faded leaves, other plants that had made their way into our mint patch and been plucked inadvertently or anything else I don’t want in our tasty confection.  The kids watch me impatiently waiting to get down to some real cookie baking.

Fairy Crowns and Wands

As I am sorting through the mint, I hand Violet a big leafy stem, ” would you like a fairy wand?”

“Oh yes please!” Violet exclaims.

“Can I have one too?” Nyssa wants to know.

Off they go to play while I finish cleaning up the mint.

The kids are busy casting spells while sniffing their peppermint.  A simple stem can be a wand or woven together multiple peppermint stems turn into fancy fairy wands and lovely garland crowns.  This is a very sensory filled craft project which for a child in the right mood, can provide hours of creativity and play.  Adding dandelions, roses, hollyhocks or any other beauty from nature only makes these toys more magical.  Lace and long trailing ribbons are fanciful additions.

Herbal Waters

While they play Nyssa dances by and reminds me of another favorite and simple way to use mint when she asks to make her own mint water.   Herbal waters are one of the simplest and most delicious ways to use fresh herbs.  This is a great way to harness the cooling properties that peppermint offers during the heat of the summer.  Simply place a stem or two of plant material in a glass of water, wait a bit and then enjoy a subtle but very tasty drink that harnesses peppermint’s cooling properties.  Create herbal waters with many other fresh herbs like lemon balm, lemon thyme, hyssop, pineapple sage, and even basil!  Really any tasty herb that strikes your fancy is the perfect choice.

Chocolate Peppermint Cookies

Now for the cookies.  With the girls back in the kitchen,we start pulling leaves off the clean and sorted mint stems.  Making a big pile, I give the girls each a pair of kid scissors and ask them to snip the leaves into little bits.  As they do this I begin to assemble our baking ingredients.  Being an extreme chocolate lover, almost every cookie I bake has chocolate in some form or another.  For these cookies I  just find a great recipe for chocolate chip cookies and add the fresh mint.  Any favorite recipe can be used.  I like to be sure of using the best of organic ingredients: whole grain flour (usually wheat and barley), butter or coconut oil are delicious, the darkest chocolate chips, turbinado sugar and homemade vanilla extract.  I like to use a lot of mint, usually about 1 to 2 cups added to whatever chocolate chip cookie recipe we are using.

The amazing news is that peppermint is not only yummy but also safe to use and very nutritional being high in vitamins and minerals.  Plus with many wonderful medicinal properties that support digestive health, relax the nervous system and relieve spasms peppermint makes it a great addition to treats for family and friends.  Simply amazing!

For this particular batch of cookies we used Pamela’s Baking and Pancake Mix. One of our family member’s has recently become gluten-free, and I have found this great mix turns out yummy treats every time we use it!

Well, the cookies came out perfect. Flecks of green a mist gooey chocolatey chunks melting in our mouths as we giggle and savor the perfect afternoon.

Shared On: Foodie Friends Friday

Categories: Herbal Crafts And Projects, Herbs For Cooking, Herbs For Kids and Mamas, Kitchen Creations, Peppermint | Tags: , , , , , , , , | 6 Comments

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