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Showing posts with label celery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label celery. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Sacred Heart Soup detox























I have tried fasting in the past, but I tend to eat too much coming off a fasting or eat too much in the evening and it doesn't really help the "detox" part of fasting. I heard about this soup from a friend whose family had great success. I am anti-diet fads, but detoxing is a great way to flush out the impurities of eating even the least bit of processed food.

This detox does take away my favorite ingredients and that is cheese, but cheese is an over-processed and fat-heavy reason I need to detox. For the most part, the detox is vegetarian and since I don't eat steak anyway I have adjusted the detox for non-meat eaters.

I have also included ingredients that I like, but you can view the entire list of acceptable ingredients at the website Sacred Heart Soup. After the first day's attempt, I needed to cut back on salt. This soup is surprisingly tasty.

Sacred Heart Soup
2 cans Hunt's roasted tomato soup (no seasoning)
1 can whole cut green beans, reduced sodium or salt-free
3 green onions, sliced
2-3 cups vegetable or beef broth (fat free and/or low sodium)
Nestle chicken noodle soup mix, extra noodles
4 stalks celery, chopped
4 carrot sticks, sliced
3 cups chopped kale or Japanese cabbage
1 tbsp soy sauce
black pepper
2 tbsp fresh Italian parsley, chopped
1 tbsp Worcestershire sauce

Spray soup pot with a little PAM. Saute green onions, celery and carrots. Cover with two cups broth. Beef broth offers more flavor to this soup, but I like it with vegetable broth as well. Add soup mix, cover pot and let simmer until vegetables are tender - 10 minutes. Add two cans tomatoes, with juice. Drain and rinse green beans - they tend to be canned with more salt. Add to soup. Add Worcestershire and soy sauce and black pepper and stir. Taste test for saltiness.

Add more broth if needed. Stir in kale or cabbage and parsley. TMI section: if you have never detoxed, it is not a pleasant week. You will detox from every place in your body, including your pores. I don't like cabbage anyway and I fear the consequences of using it in a detox soup. Kale is more nutritious and few side effects. Kale is very cheap and available this time of year.

This will make about six bowls of soup. I eat one for lunch and two at night, which takes out the soup in a day for two people. You can incorporate other foods during the week, but the schedule is strict. I have not been completely on target with the schedule, but this is what I do.

Day One: soup and fruit salad

Fruit Salad: tropical fruits are the mos nutritious and will provide the most beneficial calories
  • fresh cut pineapple
  • naval oranges
  • kiwi
  • mango
  • strawberries
Day Two: soup and vegetable salad and baked potato

Salad:
  • bibb lettuce
  • shredded carrot
  • sliced cucumber
  • sliced radishes
  • chopped tomato
  • one tsp olive oil and vinegar

Baked potato
  • 2 russet potatoes
  • 1/4 cup reduced-fat Greek yogurt
  • 1 tsp dry ranch
  • 1 head broccoli
Microwave potatoes for six minutes to soften. Bake at 400 degrees for 35 minutes. Mix ranch and yogurt and refrigerate. Meanwhile boil broccoli for 3-5 minutes or until bright green. Once potatoes are cool, cut and remove stuffing. Mix potato with yogurt ranch. I KNOW I am cheating by adding ranch, but I am not adding any cheese and yogurt is high in protein. Use a potato masher to mix. Stir in broccoli. Bake again for 10 minutes.

Day Three: soup and salad

Day Four: soup and bananas (at least three) and skim milk

For some reason I am not good about eating bananas raw. For a "dessert" I will slice two bananas and heat them in a skillet for a few minutes until soft but not gooey. Pour into a bowl and had a pinch of coarse salt. They are goooooood.

Day Five: This is the tough day because you are supposed to eat at least three steaks. I do not like steak. If you don't eat steak, then disregard this addition. If you do eat meat, here is what I suggest: beef tips from a reputable butcher. I don't recommend ground beef unless you ground your own because you don't know is going into it. I buy organic beef from a local farmer. I add the beef tips to my soup recipe on day five as well as an additional can of tomatoes. Double the amount of tomatoes on your salad also.

Eat fruit to fight off dessert cravings. Cherries are also a great way to detox this week.

Day Six: soup, salad and beef

Day Seven: add wild rice to soup mix or add cooked vegetables to brown or wild rice.

I lost four pounds, which isn't bad, even for Biggest Loser standards. It's not a noticeable difference for other people, but it taught me a good lesson - I don't need nearly as much food as I think I do. Other people I know have done this diet with great success. You can lose 10-17 pounds in one week depending on how strict you are to the schedule and how much you have to lose in the first place.

Shop of the perimeter of the grocery store. Travel down the aisles only for canned vegetables, juice and spices. The fewer processed foods you consume, the easier your body can handle them. I gulp down my food and don't pay attention to when I get full. I have since been more conscious of when I am full and stop eating immediately. It is just as wasteful to eat food your body doesn't need than it is to throw out food you don't eat.

Good luck and please post success stories if you have them. You will get tired of the soup by day five but if you can make it to day seven you will feel a great sense of accomplishment.

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Wild Rice Casserole

Alright folks, it's Christmas and you can't cut-back ALL year. This is my family's wild rice casserole and I have plenty of friends and family who will contest to the greatness of this dish. It's almost a meal in itself but it makes an excellent side to Christmas dinner. I was introduced to the term "sidesgiving" for vegetarians who don't eat turkey or other meat main courses for Thanksgiving, so this should be a great recipe for those who are having a side dish holiday feast.

In all honesty, this dish does not resurrect well, so I highly recommend making it for a large group and taking it out in one night. Hopefully that won't be a problem ;)

Wild Rice Casserole

2 box Uncle Ben's traditional wild rice
1 pint slice mushrooms
3-4 stalks celery, chopped
1 yellow onion, chopped
2-4 tbsp butter
minced garlic
1 pint heavy cream or evaporated milk or combination of both
1/4 block of Velveta cheese, cubed

Cook rice according to package instructions. For some reason the "quick rice" doesn't work as well with this recipe - probably because it is also baked. So use the traditional recipe box.

Preheat oven at 350 degrees. Melt butter into pan and add garlic, onion and celery. I hardly ever saute using butter, but it just tastes so much better in this recipe. And after all the heavy cream and Velveta, you're not saving much on calories. Once celery is soft, add mushrooms and saute. Season with garlic salt and pepper.

Once rice is done, stir in vegetables. Spread into a 2 quart baking dish - preferably glass - and pour cream over rice. I've always made this recipe with cream, but one year Mom used leftover evaporated milk and it was great and also make the dish more of a traditional casserole. I normally have both in the house during the holidays so a mix is probably best. The rice mix should be well saturated - the rice will still absorb a lot of the cream when it bakes. Evenly spread the Velveta cubes over the casserole.

Bake casserole for 45-60 minutes or until the top starts to brown. Let the casserole sit to cool! I can't count how many times I burnt my tongue waiting for that thing to cool. It's just so good.

Happy Holidays everyone and enjoy all your Christmas goodies.

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Pasta with Spicy Vegetables and Vegan Tomato Sauce

Pasta is a great ingredient for recipes when trying to take out leftovers - pasta stores easily and practically forever. This is a recipe I threw together after days of Thanksgiving turkey leftovers and we needed a turkey break. Additionally, I am featuring a vegan "creamy" tomato sauce that foodie friend recommended.

Vegetable Pasta
8-10 oz. whole wheat penne, or other short pasta (about half a box)
1-2 carrots, shredded
3 stalks celery, chopped
1 small onion, chopped
1 jalapeño, seeded and diced
big handful baby spinach, stemmed

vegan tomato sauce:
5-7 cloves garlic, minced
24 oz. can whole tomatoes or crushed tomatoes
1 cup roasted nuts, such as almonds or cashews
1/2 cup unsweetened soy milk
1/2 cup nutritional yeast (cheese substitute)
crushed red pepper
fresh basil (or frozen)
rosemary

Nutritional yeast is typically used as a cheese or cream substitute in vegan meals. Although referred to as "yeast" it is more of a thickening agent than a leavening ingredient. Toast your nuts at 425 degrees for 7-10 minutes or until fragrant. You will want to use a fatty nut like cashews or almonds, but do not use peanuts. These nuts contain good fats and will make for a heartier sauce.

Saute garlic in olive oil. If you are using frozen basil packed in olive oil, you do not need to add any oil. Add crushed red pepper, rosemary and basil (if using fresh). Once garlic is golden add soy milk, tomatoes and nuts. Let tomatoes heat through and use a submersion blender to cream the tomatoes and nuts. I found it difficult to blend the nuts to a consistency that I liked, so I would recommend crushing your nuts in a coffee grinder or rolling pin (in a plastic bag) before adding to the sauce. If you like a nuttier texture, blend the nuts whole. Once you have a texture you like, stir in nutritional yeast.

Boil pasta according to package instructions. Reserve 1 cup pasta water before draining pasta.

This is also a great opportunity to take out some leftover vegetables or frozen vegetables. I have frozen shredded carrot, leftover celery from Thanksgiving stuffing and a little bit of spinach that was about to go bad. I also have jalapeños growing in our garden, finally. You can add other vegetables that you think will partner well. Carrots, celery and onion, known as mirepoix, are quite universal but add a little sweetness to any recipe. That is why this recipe has a lot of herbs and some spice.

Saute vegetables in olive oil until soft. Stir in tomato sauce and heat to a simmer. Stir in spinach until leaves wilt slightly. Pour modest amount over pasta - add reserved pasta water, or soy milk, if needed.

For a quicker version of this recipe, use spicy Arrabbiata tomato sauce.

Monday, August 2, 2010

Perfect Potato Salad
























How many of you have tried to make your own potato salad? I love potato salad, but I am so picky it's hard to order some and know how it will turn out. Some are dry and tasteless and others are drown in cheese and sour cream. I think I have finally found a recipe combination that works for me, except for one odd quality - it's served warm.

When I think of potato salad I think of BBQ side dishes and eating outside in the summer, but honestly this recipe only works so well because it is served warm. You do have a lot of flexibility in what you can include in potato salads. I don't like many raw ingredients - red onions have an after taste that take days to fade. And hard celery bites in my potato salad is such a turn off. But there are also ways to add some nutrition to this party side that can pretty much go unnoticed by those anti-vegetable family members of yours.

Potato Salad
2 lb. red potatoes
1.5 tbsp cider vinegar
2 eggs
1/4 c. mayo e.g. Kraft's olive oil
1/4 tsp dijon mustard
1/4 tsp celery seed
1/2 tsp onion powder
1/2 tsp garlic powder
2 stalks celery, chopped
1/2 red pepper, diced
1-2 carrots, shredded
1/2 yellow onion, diced
2 tbsp dill pickle relish
paprika, for serving
fresh parsley, for serving

You should definitely use red potatoes for this recipe. Someone did a test to see which potatoes were most absorbing and would take on the most flavors for potatoes salad, and red potatoes won hands down. I know they are cheap but don't use russet potatoes - it will not taste the same. Boil the potatoes for 20-25 minutes or until able to easily pierce with a knife. Let potatoes cool. Cut the potato in half long-ways and then into thirds, or approximately bite-sized pieces. Stir in vinegar and set aside.

While potatoes are boiling, put two eggs into a shallow pot and cover with water. Set stove to high until water boils. Once boiling, cover pot and turn off stove - do not remove pot from heat. Time for 13 minutes. This is Martha's full-proof hardboil egg instructions and you will never have an overcooked egg. Once cool enough to handle, shell eggs and chop.

Mix your mayo and mustard together. Add seasonings. Add relish. Set aside.

In a frying pan add celery, onion, red pepper and carrot. Sauté until celery starts to become soft and vegetables are slightly brown. Add salt and pepper to vegetables.

First mix the warm potatoes and vegetables. Start with half your mayo mix and stir into potatoes. The heat of the vegetables will "melt" the mayo slightly and you will better be able to tell how much more you need. Add egg last. Top salad with fresh, chopped parsley and paprika. Serve immediately.

Some other tips: I like sautéed sweet onion in my salad, but you can also use sliced green onions since it is not so powerful. I am a big fan of dill relish but other recipes called for sliced cornichons if you prefer that taste to dill. Also, I never peel my potatoes, even for masked potatoes. As long as you clean the potatoes you are actually getting more nutrition from the skins. But if you dislike your potato skins remove them once they have boiled and are cool enough to handle.