With the changing of the seasons, this is a great time to participate in a cleanse – a stepping out of your food habits and giving your body a break from working so hard on digestion.
The ancient Eastern wisdom of Ayurveda recommends simplifying both physical and emotional elements in your life. For the physical, you can avoid canned and frozen foods for a week, opting for very simple foods, like soup, rice and beans, or just vegetables, focusing on one type of simple food for the whole week. For instance, make one giant pot of soup and eat it all week. If you can, omit cheese, milk, and coffee. Drink only water and tea.
On the emotional/mental side, this is a wonderful time to take extra special care of yourself. Get a massage, make sure your house is clean to refresh yourself visually, use a sauna/steam room every other day, go outside in nature as often as possible and enjoy the quiet, listen to gentle music, release any negative emotions, turn off the TV, and find a yoga class or other gentle exercise to get your energy moving. Ayurveda recommends cleansing for one week, though many other cleanses you can find go anywhere from 7 days to 28 days. It’s all a matter of finding what works for you and your schedule, but still refreshes your system for the new season.
It is part of our American culture to rush ahead always, constantly pushing ourselves on from one thing to the next. Our bodies are naturally in tune with the changing of the seasons and even the changing from day to night. This is an important time to recharge- to let yourself get ready for the new season and take a little breath.
The most nurturing way you can kick off your cleanse is to make some homemade soup completely from scratch. It is not difficult to make soup stock, it just takes some time to stick close to the kitchen mainly to stir and initially to chop. Please enjoy this step by step recipe from last year, towards the middle of the post. It even has pictures. The top is a little embarrassing, as it’s titled “Get Silly and Make Some Soup (from Scratch)!” But enjoying yourself and having some fun is important, too!
Also, the post is labeled as “Day 13” of a 21-day Cleanse from Kathy Freston’s book Quantum Wellness Cleanse. If you are interested in participating in a 21-day cleanse, start here and follow day-by-day. You’ll find the cleanse posts in July and August 2012. There are recipes each day to support the cleanse, as well.
However you decide to do it, this is the time to honor your body, your emotions, and the seasonal change from summer to fall.
*This article was originally published in the Geauga Family Farms CSA Newsletter in my weekly column, Creative Cooking for an Organic Life.
This post is linked to Party Wave Wednesday at HolisticSquid.com!
Showing posts with label homemade soup. Show all posts
Showing posts with label homemade soup. Show all posts
Wednesday, October 16, 2013
A Refreshing Way to Welcome Fall
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Tuesday, February 5, 2013
Caffeine's Catty Side and Lemony Lentil Soup
Once again, I’ve underestimated my old friend, caffeine. What a sneaky frenemy. She is so toxic! No matter how nice she croons; begging me to take just one little sip, she’s just waiting to make me feel like crap again. Bitch.
So, I caved for just a moment, thinking, “What harm would one little cup do?” I was having breakfast with friends, everyone was drinking coffee, blah blah blah, excuses. I slipped and took a sip.
No matter how many times I prove it to myself, I still can’t believe it. Two days later and I’m sleeping like crap with exponentially increased anxiety and grumpiness. SERIOUS grumpiness. I’m waking up groggy and wishing for “just a cup today.” After just one cup of coffee!!! And I really only drank half. I wish I’d at least made it a salted caramel mocha – this crappy feeling is totally not worth a regular, boring cup of coffee. When will I learn????
As I mentioned in an earlier post, Caffeine is evil. Seriously, she is smiling while plotting behind your back.
Kathy Freston shares (in Quantum Wellness Cleanse) that Caffeine:
I just made my own lentil soup and was so excited that I wanted to share with you. This was much easier than most soups I make. It's very flavorful. I’ve always dreamed of making soup as good as Aladdin’s and I think I’m pretty close. Let me know!
Laura’s Lemony Lentil Soup (Vegan & Gluten-Free)
Serves 4-6
Ingredients:
1 TB extra virgin olive oil, plus 2 TB for later
3 medium onions, diced
1/8 cup white wine
2 potatoes, peeled and diced
2 stalks celery, diced
2 cloves garlic, diced small
1 tsp oregano (dried)
1 tsp basil (dried)
1 tsp parsley (dried)
1 bay leaf
1 tsp Kapha seasoning (optional – my favorite Indian spice – you can buy it from the Chopra center)
6 -8 cups vegetable broth (I started with 6 and added more as the lentils ate the broth)
½ lemon, peel washed thoroughly
1 apple, cored and quartered
1 ½ cups lentils
½ cup spinach
¼ cup fresh chopped parsley
Salt and pepper to taste (I barely needed to use any at all.)
1. In a stock pot, add 1 TB EVOO and sweat onions on med-low for 10 minutes, medium for 10 minutes, then back to low for another 10 min. Stir often to avoid burning or sticking to the pan.
2. Deglaze by pouring in white wine and stirring the onions.
3. Add celery, potatoes, garlic, and lentils and toss with the remaining 2 TB of EVOO.
4. Add dry spices (save fresh parsley for garnish).
5. Add broth.
6. Add lemon, apple (if desired), and bay leaf.
7. Simmer for 1 ½ to 2 hours, stirring occasionally.
8. Stir in spinach and remove from heat. Let sit for a couple of minutes and add more veggie broth if too thick.
9. Serve topped with fresh parsley.
So, I caved for just a moment, thinking, “What harm would one little cup do?” I was having breakfast with friends, everyone was drinking coffee, blah blah blah, excuses. I slipped and took a sip.
No matter how many times I prove it to myself, I still can’t believe it. Two days later and I’m sleeping like crap with exponentially increased anxiety and grumpiness. SERIOUS grumpiness. I’m waking up groggy and wishing for “just a cup today.” After just one cup of coffee!!! And I really only drank half. I wish I’d at least made it a salted caramel mocha – this crappy feeling is totally not worth a regular, boring cup of coffee. When will I learn????
As I mentioned in an earlier post, Caffeine is evil. Seriously, she is smiling while plotting behind your back.
Kathy Freston shares (in Quantum Wellness Cleanse) that Caffeine:
- Is a central-nervous-system stimulant
- Affects perception, mood, and behavior
- Raises dopamine, increasing feelings of pleasure, but depleting future stores of dopamine, making you need more and more
- Blocks adenosine receptors, which calm you and help you sleep, leading to anxiety, restlessness, and inability to sleep (but it does not take away the need for sleep.)
- Exhausts the body by stimulating adrenaline production, also raising cortisol (stress hormone)
- Extended overuse of caffeine leading to stress fatigue and high levels of cortisol can lead to: lowered thyroid function, cognitive problems, decreased bone density and muscle tissue, higher blood pressure, lowered immunity, raised inflammatory reaction in body
I just made my own lentil soup and was so excited that I wanted to share with you. This was much easier than most soups I make. It's very flavorful. I’ve always dreamed of making soup as good as Aladdin’s and I think I’m pretty close. Let me know!
Laura’s Lemony Lentil Soup (Vegan & Gluten-Free)
Serves 4-6
Ingredients:
1 TB extra virgin olive oil, plus 2 TB for later
3 medium onions, diced
1/8 cup white wine
2 potatoes, peeled and diced
2 stalks celery, diced
2 cloves garlic, diced small
1 tsp oregano (dried)
1 tsp basil (dried)
1 tsp parsley (dried)
1 bay leaf
1 tsp Kapha seasoning (optional – my favorite Indian spice – you can buy it from the Chopra center)
6 -8 cups vegetable broth (I started with 6 and added more as the lentils ate the broth)
½ lemon, peel washed thoroughly
1 apple, cored and quartered
1 ½ cups lentils
½ cup spinach
¼ cup fresh chopped parsley
Salt and pepper to taste (I barely needed to use any at all.)
1. In a stock pot, add 1 TB EVOO and sweat onions on med-low for 10 minutes, medium for 10 minutes, then back to low for another 10 min. Stir often to avoid burning or sticking to the pan.
2. Deglaze by pouring in white wine and stirring the onions.
3. Add celery, potatoes, garlic, and lentils and toss with the remaining 2 TB of EVOO.
4. Add dry spices (save fresh parsley for garnish).
5. Add broth.
6. Add lemon, apple (if desired), and bay leaf.
7. Simmer for 1 ½ to 2 hours, stirring occasionally.
8. Stir in spinach and remove from heat. Let sit for a couple of minutes and add more veggie broth if too thick.
9. Serve topped with fresh parsley.
Saturday, August 4, 2012
Day 13 - Get Silly and Make Some Soup (from Scratch!)
This cleanse and the lifestyle changes it embodies, are
meant to inspire a “joy of living, not fear of dying.” Not only do we hope to live longer, but also
to live better.
Now you’ve been on the cleanse long enough to stop thinking
about it so intensely and have a little fun.
Today, spend as little time as possible thinking about the cleanse. For today, dismiss the advice and warnings
and stop thinking about the things you are not
eating. Instead, get excited about what
delicious meals you will have today.
Hopefully, you’ve been spending some extra time on yourself
to rest. Now, spend a little more time
on FUN and get a little silly.
In our busy lives, it’s easy to feel guilty when giving time
to ourselves. But we are no good to
anyone else when depleted. What’s left
to give when you’re pushing so hard?
Kathy writes, “By taking fun seriously, we regain a quality
of innocence. We shake out leftover
tensions, and get our minds off the heavier subjects of life.”
Today, take some time to watch a funny movie, run around
outside with your dog, play MarioKart, dance and flail wildly to your favorite
song.
Anyone who has ever seen me when “I Like It” by Enrique Iglesias
is playing knows what I do to let loose in my living room. I flail like a marionette with a drunk
puppeteer. And I giggle the whole
time. And it feels great! Yes, a little embarrassing, I’m not sure why
that’s the song that does it for me. But
if you haven’t already, find the song that makes you silly, giggly, and
provides a surge of energy. It’s great
after a long day to dance with abandon!
Kathy suggests making a list of your 7 favorite things to do
and try to slot one in each day for the next week. Even if it has to be 5 minutes, the smile on
your face and lightness in your heart will brighten the rest of your day.
“When we get silly, we feel the weight of our
responsibilities slipping away and we feel free,” according to Kathy (and I
agree emphatically.)
If you promise not to laugh, I will share some of the silly
things I have done to assist you in case you’re having trouble getting
started:
- I have a Little Mermaid coloring book. I color with crayons. It’s very soothing and still as fun as ever.
- Sometimes I play dress up. Like wearing my wedding dress to knight my cat as the queen of my domain. It’s on video. True story. And it was not on Halloween.
- Occasionally, my husband and I drink tea in our fancy china teacups with saucers while playing scrabble and speaking in British accents.
So as you can see, I’m kind of an authority on silliness…but
it really does make me feel free, joyful, and innocent. It helps me to be grounded in the moment,
enjoying life in my own little world.
Today’s Meditation:
“I am happy, and I am free!
I rejoice in my innocence and celebrate the gift of life. No matter what is going on, I can laugh. I can be silly. This levity makes my spirit soar. I am happy, right now, and I am free!”
If you love being in your kitchen and cooking, this will be a great
weekend recipe for you. Whenever
possible, I like to make my own vegetable soup stock. If you don’t have the time to make the stock,
you can use canned vegetable broth to make this soup, but it feels very
empowering to make the entire meal from scratch! It’s healthier for you, too.
It’s not that it’s so long that you are cooking, but it’s a
lot of chopping and you need to be near the kitchen to stir for some time.
Please note: While I’m
chopping up the ingredients for the stock, I like to dice the ingredients for
the soup, too, and put into a container in the fridge as long as I’m making it
in the next 24 hours. This way, you get
all the chopping done at once.
Laura’s Comforting
& Sweet Vegetable Soup
For the vegetable stock (if using pre-made broth, skip this
step)
1 TB olive oil
1 large onion – red is great, sweet is too, skin washed and
saved – chopped large
3-4 large stalks celery + some leaves, chopped large
3-4 large carrots, chopped in large chunks
1 yellow bell pepper, chopped in large chunks
2 leeks, chopped large
1 red or yellow apple, washed well, core & seeds removed,
chopped into quarters (this gives the stock sweetness)
3 cloves garlic, chopped large
1-2 tomatoes, diced large (you can use a can of diced
tomatoes, too)
1 pattypan or ½ butternut squash, chopped large and seeds
reserved
½ sweet potato, diced large
8 cups water
Spices:
1 TB garlic powder
1 tsp marjoram
Fresh pepper
2-3 Fresh rosemary sprigs
- Heat the olive oil on medium. Add the onions and cook for 2 minutes. Add the carrots and celery and cook for another 3 minutes. Add the pepper, leeks, squash, sweet potato, spices and garlic. Cook for one minute, then add the tomatoes, water, onion peel, and apple.
- Bring to a boil, then reduce to very low. Cover and simmer, stirring often.
- Cook for 1.5 to 2 hours, until carrots are soft and all veggies are falling apart.
A tip on the stock:
You can really throw in any veggies that you have and are in the mood to
eat. Try not to use too many green ones
besides the celery and leeks, though, as it can make the stock bitter. The onion skin gives the broth good color and
richness. The apple is important for
sweetness without sugar (but don’t use a green apple).
(Pattypan squash, in case you were wondering) (Mmmm, homemade broth)
Now you can start making the soup (or refrigerate for later
use – will last one week.)
For the soup:
1 TB olive oil
½ large onion, diced
3 large carrots, diced
3-4 stalks of celery, including heart and leaves from heart,
diced small
5 cloves garlic, diced small
1 jalapeno or Serrano pepper, diced small
½ yellow bell pepper, diced small
½ sweet potato, diced into bite-sized chunks
1 pattypan squash or ½ butternut squash, diced into
bite-sized chunks
1 tomato
¾ cup red lentils
¼ cup gluten free soup noodles (I used annelini from corn)
Spices:
½ cup parsley – fresh and chopped- plus 2 TB for just before
serving
1 tsp marjoram
1 TB garlic powder
1 Bay leaf
1 TB oregano
1 TB Kapha Surya mix (mixture of turmeric, cinnamon,
coriander, ginger, and mustard. Amazing
in soups and anything with rice, lentils, and/or sweet potatoes: http://store.chopra.com/productinfo.asp?item=427)
- Heat the olive oil on medium in a large stock pot. Add the onion and sauté for 2 minutes. Add the carrots and celery – sauté for 3 minutes. Add bell pepper & jalapeno or Serrano, stir. Add sweet potato, squash, lentils, and garlic, stir. Add spices, then tomato and stir. Now ladle in the vegetable stock (you can use 6 cups if you want to save some for making rice or anything else later.)
- Bring to a boil, then reduce heat to very low. Cover and simmer for 45 minutes. Add the soup noodles and about 2 teaspoons of salt, along with some fresh pepper. Simmer another 20-30 minutes. Taste and check if you need to add more salt.
- Serve sprinkled with fresh parsley, along with salt and pepper to taste.
Note: Since I had the
seeds from the squash, I cleaned them and roasted them in the oven with a spray
of olive oil and a sprinkling of salt & garlic powder. Then I topped the soup with the toasted
seeds, too. Delicious!
You can make any variation of this soup with veggies you
need to use up or to suit your mood. I’ve
used zucchini, yellow squash, black beans, green lentils, and regular
potatoes. The beans really change the flavor, but are
good when you’re in the mood for them.
I hope you enjoy this nice, homemade recipe!
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