- I feel like my days have been loaded with thoughts of food and weight and body-analysis.
- What can I eat? What shouldn't I eat? What do I want to eat?
- Is it warm enough to go outside?
- Should I do yoga on the Wii? Obviously, but I don't really want to.
- My yoga pants are obviously not for yoga.
- Is this how I want to spend the rest of my life? Constantly thinking about food?
- Is the alternative somehow better? Not thinking about food, but then, not really being comfortable in my own skin?
- Who has time for this over-analyzing? Obviously, I do.
- One step forward, 9 steps back.
- Get out and hike a bit with 30 extra pounds of wiggling, giggling Finn strapped to my back.
- Slip and fall (but don't get hurt). Enjoy the view. And then stuck in the house because sub-zero temperatures and wind make going outside a suicide mission.
- When do I get to feel comfortable? 10 pounds? 25? When I hit my 40 lb goal?
- And when I get there, then what? It's probably best not to worry about that right now.
- Let's just focus on getting there.
- Focus on getting off of this plateau that I'm perched on and can't seem to jump down from.
- One step forward, 9 steps back.
- Should I dare to cut back on the carbs again?
- I hate cutting things out - denying myself. I lack will-power.
- Maybe I'll focus on telling myself I don't want something rather than I can't have it.
- Mind games. Weight loss is a mind game if ever I saw one.
- Baby steps to the elevator.
- Maybe those 9 steps back will be baby steps and the one step forward can be a giant step.
- Thank you for listening, I'm going back to my menu planning now.
Showing posts with label Weight Watchers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Weight Watchers. Show all posts
Monday, January 21, 2013
On my mind today...the weight of things.
Labels:
health,
Heather,
Instagram,
weight,
weight loss,
Weight Watchers
Thursday, January 17, 2013
Getting my crap together.
Today is day 3 of making a valiant effort to feel better on the outside and day 410 of trying to feel better on the inside.
I showered this morning - after I worked out (Uriah really had to kick my butt into gear this morning because it was damn cold outside, but as usual, I am so glad he did). I curled my hair and I applied some make-up. I am wearing jeans today, but I dressed it up with a shirt and a sweater that cannot be classified as a cardigan. I did not put on any perfume, but I did apply deodorant, so I think that counts.
Yesterday I wore a skirt. I don't know if it was the purply-flowyness every time I moved or the apron I put on to make play dough and never took off, but sometime after lunch I was possessed to clean Abby's room (13 year olds are such slovenly humans.). I kept expecting the cast and crew of hoarders to show up at my house at any moment. The girl throws nothing away. Old magazines that she's torn pictures out of? Found them. Ripped up pieces of construction paper? Found those, too. I found socks and hair bands and a zillion bobby pins. Don't get me started on what was underneath her bed. And also, clothes that no longer fit (although her dad has the same penchant for hanging onto things he wore in high school, so at least I know where she gets it from.). I cleaned and de-cluttered and set a standard of cleanliness that will, hopefully, slowly leach into other corners of our house (hello, closet by the door that has random junk shoved in it from when we moved. You are next.).
All in all, this getting dressed in real clothes and putting on make-up and doing my hair is making me a domestic goddess. Who would have thought?
As for feeling good on the insides, that is a slow damn process. I wish weight came off as quickly and as easily as it goes on, but I am fueling that process with more fruits and veggies. It started when I was visiting my sister after my prince of a nephew was born. They had a huge bowl of cut-up oranges and grapefruits in their refrigerator (quick fuel for a new mom, why didn't I think of that?) and they pulled it out with just about every meal. Last week I was visiting with one of my MomFriends during a much-needed play-date and she was talking about how they were visiting family over the holidays and her girls snacked on a huge veggie tray that was out - they'd just grab a piece as they ran by. It finally clicked in my head: what an awesome way to get more fruits and veggies into the small humans with little effort!
So last week I got a cantaloupe and a watermelon from the store. I cut them up and put the chunks in a huge bowl. Between Finn, Abby and I we polished that fruit off in 2 days! I couldn't believe it. Finn and I made a trip to the grocery store earlier this week and he helped me pick out a bunch of fruit - we picked out oranges and apples and pears, Finn requested cantaloupe again, and we got grapes, blackberries and bananas We cut it all up (I let Finn use a butter knife to "help" me), tossed it with some honey, lemon and lime juice and I pull it out for every meal and let them take as much fruit as they want. They take a lot.
It has been a huge success, plus it's a quick go-to snack for me or when my sweet tooth is singing loud and clear. I'm going to need to get more fruit tomorrow. Abby has requested strawberries this time, and I really don't even care about the price of fruit in this off-season (Strawberries? Watermelon? In January?!) because I know it's not going to waste and it's healthy.
Next week I'm going to give some cut-up veggies and fat-free dill dip a try and see if we have similar snacking success.
Today is day 3 of making a valiant effort to feel better on the outside and day 410 of trying to feel better on the inside.
I showered this morning - after I worked out (Uriah really had to kick my butt into gear this morning because it was damn cold outside, but as usual, I am so glad he did). I curled my hair and I applied some make-up. I am wearing jeans today, but I dressed it up with a shirt and a sweater that cannot be classified as a cardigan. I did not put on any perfume, but I did apply deodorant, so I think that counts.
Yesterday I wore a skirt. I don't know if it was the purply-flowyness every time I moved or the apron I put on to make play dough and never took off, but sometime after lunch I was possessed to clean Abby's room (13 year olds are such slovenly humans.). I kept expecting the cast and crew of hoarders to show up at my house at any moment. The girl throws nothing away. Old magazines that she's torn pictures out of? Found them. Ripped up pieces of construction paper? Found those, too. I found socks and hair bands and a zillion bobby pins. Don't get me started on what was underneath her bed. And also, clothes that no longer fit (although her dad has the same penchant for hanging onto things he wore in high school, so at least I know where she gets it from.). I cleaned and de-cluttered and set a standard of cleanliness that will, hopefully, slowly leach into other corners of our house (hello, closet by the door that has random junk shoved in it from when we moved. You are next.).
All in all, this getting dressed in real clothes and putting on make-up and doing my hair is making me a domestic goddess. Who would have thought?
As for feeling good on the insides, that is a slow damn process. I wish weight came off as quickly and as easily as it goes on, but I am fueling that process with more fruits and veggies. It started when I was visiting my sister after my prince of a nephew was born. They had a huge bowl of cut-up oranges and grapefruits in their refrigerator (quick fuel for a new mom, why didn't I think of that?) and they pulled it out with just about every meal. Last week I was visiting with one of my MomFriends during a much-needed play-date and she was talking about how they were visiting family over the holidays and her girls snacked on a huge veggie tray that was out - they'd just grab a piece as they ran by. It finally clicked in my head: what an awesome way to get more fruits and veggies into the small humans with little effort!
So last week I got a cantaloupe and a watermelon from the store. I cut them up and put the chunks in a huge bowl. Between Finn, Abby and I we polished that fruit off in 2 days! I couldn't believe it. Finn and I made a trip to the grocery store earlier this week and he helped me pick out a bunch of fruit - we picked out oranges and apples and pears, Finn requested cantaloupe again, and we got grapes, blackberries and bananas We cut it all up (I let Finn use a butter knife to "help" me), tossed it with some honey, lemon and lime juice and I pull it out for every meal and let them take as much fruit as they want. They take a lot.
It has been a huge success, plus it's a quick go-to snack for me or when my sweet tooth is singing loud and clear. I'm going to need to get more fruit tomorrow. Abby has requested strawberries this time, and I really don't even care about the price of fruit in this off-season (Strawberries? Watermelon? In January?!) because I know it's not going to waste and it's healthy.
Next week I'm going to give some cut-up veggies and fat-free dill dip a try and see if we have similar snacking success.
Labels:
health,
Heather,
Instagram,
parenting,
weight loss,
Weight Watchers
Tuesday, October 2, 2012
Soup-er! (Yes, I did go there.)
Soups to try:
I've started making a big pot of soup on either Sunday or Monday to get me through the week for lunch. It’s quick, easy to heat up and Finn eats it, too, so it’s a good extra serving of vegetables for him.
The key to really good soup, I think, is homemade stock. I obviously don’t sit around and make stock all day, because, really, who has that kind of time? Actually, who am I kidding, some days I do have that kind of time because I stay at home. But it is hands down the easiest, best thing in the world, albeit a little bit time-consuming. Everyone makes stock different; I make mine the way my mom taught me – vegetables, slow simmering, and a whole chicken carcass. I usually make chicken stock when we've had a whole, roasted chicken for dinner – and it can even be one of those rotisserie chickens from the grocery store. I clean most of the remaining meat off, which I set aside to use for chicken salad sandwiches or, if I’m making chicken soup, I’ll add that later, after the broth is done. Then I put the bones in a big ole soup pot, add chopped celery, onion, carrots and a couple of cloves of garlic and fill the stock pot with water. Add some herbs – I use oregano, thyme, basil and a bay leaf and bring it all to a boil. Then I turn the heat back, put a cover on it and let it simmer on low until the broth has reduced by about half.
Usually at this point I’ll turn the stock off and let it cool down to room temperature then stick it in the refrigerator over night. The point is to let the fat from the chicken congeal on the top so that the next morning I can skim it off…you want a little bit of that fat as you’re simmering the broth because fat adds flavor, but you don’t need all of it and it can make for kind of a greasy broth if there is too much. And we all know that at this point, the less fat, the better (my bum will thank me come beach season!). Then I put that big pot back on the stove and bring it up to a low simmer for maybe about 20 minutes to a half an hour and then strain all of the chicken bones and vegetables out, leaving a really nice, intense broth. And then I freeze it in 2 cup portions for use later.
The same theory applies if you get a soup bone from the grocery store for beef broth or a ham bone for ham broth. I've never made fish stock, so I’m not entirely sure how that process would work (I’m sure Uriah can give me a tutorial on that some day when I'm less busy doing stay-at-home mom things.). You can also use whatever veggies you happen to have in the house. I've added red onion, leek, and green or red peppers to my broth before because they were in the fridge and needed to be used. Don’t worry about saving the vegetables from your broth to use later in your soup; you've already leached all of their good flavor out and into the broth – which is also why you want to remove most of the chicken from the bones and add it in later. Even if you’re making vegetable soup or chicken noodle soup, you want to discard the simmered veggies and use fresh in your soup.
Sometimes, however, I don’t have the patience for all of that simmering and straining and cooling and skimming, so I just make my broth, strain out the veggies and bones and then use the broth to make my soup the same day. It’s just as good and if I have leftover broth, I freeze it.
Today was technically my first day of Soup for Lunch, although last week for my lunches I ate the Ham & Pot Liquor Soup I made when my parents visited. The ham soup is a little bit spicy, so Finn wasn't sold on it; today we had a fall vegetable soup that I made yesterday with some chicken broth I found in the freezer and some veggies I had in the refrigerator. I deliberately left out any sort of barley or noodle filler in my soup this week – I wanted just a broth with vegetables soup to kick my healthy eating into gear. I paired my big bowl of soup with some low-fat cottage cheese and a banana, over-all a relatively healthy, filling lunch. I think tomorrow I’ll have a salad with it and maybe on Thursday I’ll add an open-faced ham sandwich with low-fat cheese and spicy mustard. I realize that for some people, eating the same thing for lunch 5 days in a row can get a little bit boring (and I’m one of them) so the sides I put with my soup need to be different each day and a healthy supplement.
So that’s soup week one… I've added the Ham & Pot Liquor soup recipe below – it’s really good if you don’t mind a little heat; you can always cut back on the hot sauce for a less spicy soup. The vegetable soup recipe is really easy and made my whole house smell amazing yesterday. I’m planning to work my way through the list of soups between now and Thanksgiving and then add some more for the weeks after Thanksgiving.
Today I felt much better about my choices than I have in a while…and more in control of what I’m doing. I logged everything I've eaten and pre-pointed out my dinner, so I know that I can afford a small snack this evening if I need it and if it’s before 8 pm. I didn't work out hard, but I did walk a bunch this morning taking pictures of Sarah and Michael, so I feel pretty good about getting some movement into my day today.
One day at a time...
Remove and discard stems and discolored spots from kale; rinse with cold water. Drain and tear into 1-inch pieces. Cover kale with cold water and bring to a boil in a large Dutch oven. Remove from heat; drain. Cover again with water and bring to a boil. Drain, reserving liquid.
Toss ham with hot sauce. Cook in oil in Dutch oven over medium-high heat until browned. Add onion and garlic and saute until tender. Stir in kale, potatoes, and remaining ingredients; bring to a boil. Reduce heat and simmer, stirring occasionally 45 minutes.
*Original recipe called for collard greens - couldn't find them, so I substituted kale. I've never had kale before, but it was really, really good.
**I used dried black-eyed peas because Uriah couldn't find them in the canned aisle (probably looking with his man eyes.). Soaked the peas overnight and then added 2 cups to the broth to simmer and cook through.
***The original recipe doesn't say to use the cooking water from the collards/kale, but I think it gives a little bit of extra flavor to the soup; if you don't have 2 cups, add water to make the full amount. You could just use 2 cups of water if you forget to reserve your cooking water, though! Sometimes I like to get a little over-zealous...
8 servings
Adapted from Southern Living Christmas Cookbook, 2005
Fall Vegetable Soup
Melt butter in soup pot over medium heat, add leeks and saute until tender. Add squash, carrot, parsnips and broccoli; stir to combine with leeks and saute 3 minutes. Add broth, water and herbs. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat and simmer until vegetables are tender. Salt and pepper to taste.
4 servings
- Lighter Italian Wedding Soup
- Asian Chicken & Watercress Soup
- Veggie Split Pea Soup
- Sweet Potato and Chipolte Soup
- Mushroom & Barley Soup
- Onion Soup with Cheese Toasts
- Chicken Posole
- Butternut Bisque
- Broccoli Rabe & White Bean Soup
I've started making a big pot of soup on either Sunday or Monday to get me through the week for lunch. It’s quick, easy to heat up and Finn eats it, too, so it’s a good extra serving of vegetables for him.
The key to really good soup, I think, is homemade stock. I obviously don’t sit around and make stock all day, because, really, who has that kind of time? Actually, who am I kidding, some days I do have that kind of time because I stay at home. But it is hands down the easiest, best thing in the world, albeit a little bit time-consuming. Everyone makes stock different; I make mine the way my mom taught me – vegetables, slow simmering, and a whole chicken carcass. I usually make chicken stock when we've had a whole, roasted chicken for dinner – and it can even be one of those rotisserie chickens from the grocery store. I clean most of the remaining meat off, which I set aside to use for chicken salad sandwiches or, if I’m making chicken soup, I’ll add that later, after the broth is done. Then I put the bones in a big ole soup pot, add chopped celery, onion, carrots and a couple of cloves of garlic and fill the stock pot with water. Add some herbs – I use oregano, thyme, basil and a bay leaf and bring it all to a boil. Then I turn the heat back, put a cover on it and let it simmer on low until the broth has reduced by about half.
Usually at this point I’ll turn the stock off and let it cool down to room temperature then stick it in the refrigerator over night. The point is to let the fat from the chicken congeal on the top so that the next morning I can skim it off…you want a little bit of that fat as you’re simmering the broth because fat adds flavor, but you don’t need all of it and it can make for kind of a greasy broth if there is too much. And we all know that at this point, the less fat, the better (my bum will thank me come beach season!). Then I put that big pot back on the stove and bring it up to a low simmer for maybe about 20 minutes to a half an hour and then strain all of the chicken bones and vegetables out, leaving a really nice, intense broth. And then I freeze it in 2 cup portions for use later.
The same theory applies if you get a soup bone from the grocery store for beef broth or a ham bone for ham broth. I've never made fish stock, so I’m not entirely sure how that process would work (I’m sure Uriah can give me a tutorial on that some day when I'm less busy doing stay-at-home mom things.). You can also use whatever veggies you happen to have in the house. I've added red onion, leek, and green or red peppers to my broth before because they were in the fridge and needed to be used. Don’t worry about saving the vegetables from your broth to use later in your soup; you've already leached all of their good flavor out and into the broth – which is also why you want to remove most of the chicken from the bones and add it in later. Even if you’re making vegetable soup or chicken noodle soup, you want to discard the simmered veggies and use fresh in your soup.
Sometimes, however, I don’t have the patience for all of that simmering and straining and cooling and skimming, so I just make my broth, strain out the veggies and bones and then use the broth to make my soup the same day. It’s just as good and if I have leftover broth, I freeze it.
Today was technically my first day of Soup for Lunch, although last week for my lunches I ate the Ham & Pot Liquor Soup I made when my parents visited. The ham soup is a little bit spicy, so Finn wasn't sold on it; today we had a fall vegetable soup that I made yesterday with some chicken broth I found in the freezer and some veggies I had in the refrigerator. I deliberately left out any sort of barley or noodle filler in my soup this week – I wanted just a broth with vegetables soup to kick my healthy eating into gear. I paired my big bowl of soup with some low-fat cottage cheese and a banana, over-all a relatively healthy, filling lunch. I think tomorrow I’ll have a salad with it and maybe on Thursday I’ll add an open-faced ham sandwich with low-fat cheese and spicy mustard. I realize that for some people, eating the same thing for lunch 5 days in a row can get a little bit boring (and I’m one of them) so the sides I put with my soup need to be different each day and a healthy supplement.

Today I felt much better about my choices than I have in a while…and more in control of what I’m doing. I logged everything I've eaten and pre-pointed out my dinner, so I know that I can afford a small snack this evening if I need it and if it’s before 8 pm. I didn't work out hard, but I did walk a bunch this morning taking pictures of Sarah and Michael, so I feel pretty good about getting some movement into my day today.
One day at a time...
- 2 pounds kale*
- 1 (2 lb) ham steak
- 2 tablespoons hot sauce
- 3 tablespoons olive oil
- 3 medium onions, chopped
- 1 garlic clove, minced
- 6 red potatoes, diced
- 3 (14-oz) cans chicken broth
- 2 (16-oz) cans black eyed peas**
- 2 cups water, use reserved kale cooking water from second boil***
- ½ cup vermouth
- 1 tablespoon white vinegar
- 1 teaspoon salt
Remove and discard stems and discolored spots from kale; rinse with cold water. Drain and tear into 1-inch pieces. Cover kale with cold water and bring to a boil in a large Dutch oven. Remove from heat; drain. Cover again with water and bring to a boil. Drain, reserving liquid.
Toss ham with hot sauce. Cook in oil in Dutch oven over medium-high heat until browned. Add onion and garlic and saute until tender. Stir in kale, potatoes, and remaining ingredients; bring to a boil. Reduce heat and simmer, stirring occasionally 45 minutes.
*Original recipe called for collard greens - couldn't find them, so I substituted kale. I've never had kale before, but it was really, really good.
**I used dried black-eyed peas because Uriah couldn't find them in the canned aisle (probably looking with his man eyes.). Soaked the peas overnight and then added 2 cups to the broth to simmer and cook through.
***The original recipe doesn't say to use the cooking water from the collards/kale, but I think it gives a little bit of extra flavor to the soup; if you don't have 2 cups, add water to make the full amount. You could just use 2 cups of water if you forget to reserve your cooking water, though! Sometimes I like to get a little over-zealous...
8 servings
Adapted from Southern Living Christmas Cookbook, 2005
Fall Vegetable Soup
- 1 leek, white and most of the green part sliced
- 3 tablespoons butter
- ½ acorn squash, seeded, peeled and cubed
- 1 carrot, chopped
- 3 parsnips, chopped
- 1 cup fresh broccoli heads and stem pieces, chopped
- 2 cups chicken broth
- 3 cups water
- 1 teaspoon each, oregano and thyme
- 1 bay leaf
- salt and pepper to taste
Melt butter in soup pot over medium heat, add leeks and saute until tender. Add squash, carrot, parsnips and broccoli; stir to combine with leeks and saute 3 minutes. Add broth, water and herbs. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat and simmer until vegetables are tender. Salt and pepper to taste.
4 servings
Soups to try:
I've started making a big pot of soup on either Sunday or Monday to get me through the week for lunch. It’s quick, easy to heat up and Finn eats it, too, so it’s a good extra serving of vegetables for him.
The key to really good soup, I think, is homemade stock. I obviously don’t sit around and make stock all day, because, really, who has that kind of time? Actually, who am I kidding, some days I do have that kind of time because I stay at home. But it is hands down the easiest, best thing in the world, albeit a little bit time-consuming. Everyone makes stock different; I make mine the way my mom taught me – vegetables, slow simmering, and a whole chicken carcass. I usually make chicken stock when we've had a whole, roasted chicken for dinner – and it can even be one of those rotisserie chickens from the grocery store. I clean most of the remaining meat off, which I set aside to use for chicken salad sandwiches or, if I’m making chicken soup, I’ll add that later, after the broth is done. Then I put the bones in a big ole soup pot, add chopped celery, onion, carrots and a couple of cloves of garlic and fill the stock pot with water. Add some herbs – I use oregano, thyme, basil and a bay leaf and bring it all to a boil. Then I turn the heat back, put a cover on it and let it simmer on low until the broth has reduced by about half.
Usually at this point I’ll turn the stock off and let it cool down to room temperature then stick it in the refrigerator over night. The point is to let the fat from the chicken congeal on the top so that the next morning I can skim it off…you want a little bit of that fat as you’re simmering the broth because fat adds flavor, but you don’t need all of it and it can make for kind of a greasy broth if there is too much. And we all know that at this point, the less fat, the better (my bum will thank me come beach season!). Then I put that big pot back on the stove and bring it up to a low simmer for maybe about 20 minutes to a half an hour and then strain all of the chicken bones and vegetables out, leaving a really nice, intense broth. And then I freeze it in 2 cup portions for use later.
The same theory applies if you get a soup bone from the grocery store for beef broth or a ham bone for ham broth. I've never made fish stock, so I’m not entirely sure how that process would work (I’m sure Uriah can give me a tutorial on that some day when I'm less busy doing stay-at-home mom things.). You can also use whatever veggies you happen to have in the house. I've added red onion, leek, and green or red peppers to my broth before because they were in the fridge and needed to be used. Don’t worry about saving the vegetables from your broth to use later in your soup; you've already leached all of their good flavor out and into the broth – which is also why you want to remove most of the chicken from the bones and add it in later. Even if you’re making vegetable soup or chicken noodle soup, you want to discard the simmered veggies and use fresh in your soup.
Sometimes, however, I don’t have the patience for all of that simmering and straining and cooling and skimming, so I just make my broth, strain out the veggies and bones and then use the broth to make my soup the same day. It’s just as good and if I have leftover broth, I freeze it.
Today was technically my first day of Soup for Lunch, although last week for my lunches I ate the Ham & Pot Liquor Soup I made when my parents visited. The ham soup is a little bit spicy, so Finn wasn't sold on it; today we had a fall vegetable soup that I made yesterday with some chicken broth I found in the freezer and some veggies I had in the refrigerator. I deliberately left out any sort of barley or noodle filler in my soup this week – I wanted just a broth with vegetables soup to kick my healthy eating into gear. I paired my big bowl of soup with some low-fat cottage cheese and a banana, over-all a relatively healthy, filling lunch. I think tomorrow I’ll have a salad with it and maybe on Thursday I’ll add an open-faced ham sandwich with low-fat cheese and spicy mustard. I realize that for some people, eating the same thing for lunch 5 days in a row can get a little bit boring (and I’m one of them) so the sides I put with my soup need to be different each day and a healthy supplement.
So that’s soup week one… I've added the Ham & Pot Liquor soup recipe below – it’s really good if you don’t mind a little heat; you can always cut back on the hot sauce for a less spicy soup. The vegetable soup recipe is really easy and made my whole house smell amazing yesterday. I’m planning to work my way through the list of soups between now and Thanksgiving and then add some more for the weeks after Thanksgiving.
Today I felt much better about my choices than I have in a while…and more in control of what I’m doing. I logged everything I've eaten and pre-pointed out my dinner, so I know that I can afford a small snack this evening if I need it and if it’s before 8 pm. I didn't work out hard, but I did walk a bunch this morning taking pictures of Sarah and Michael, so I feel pretty good about getting some movement into my day today.
One day at a time...
Remove and discard stems and discolored spots from kale; rinse with cold water. Drain and tear into 1-inch pieces. Cover kale with cold water and bring to a boil in a large Dutch oven. Remove from heat; drain. Cover again with water and bring to a boil. Drain, reserving liquid.
Toss ham with hot sauce. Cook in oil in Dutch oven over medium-high heat until browned. Add onion and garlic and saute until tender. Stir in kale, potatoes, and remaining ingredients; bring to a boil. Reduce heat and simmer, stirring occasionally 45 minutes.
*Original recipe called for collard greens - couldn't find them, so I substituted kale. I've never had kale before, but it was really, really good.
**I used dried black-eyed peas because Uriah couldn't find them in the canned aisle (probably looking with his man eyes.). Soaked the peas overnight and then added 2 cups to the broth to simmer and cook through.
***The original recipe doesn't say to use the cooking water from the collards/kale, but I think it gives a little bit of extra flavor to the soup; if you don't have 2 cups, add water to make the full amount. You could just use 2 cups of water if you forget to reserve your cooking water, though! Sometimes I like to get a little over-zealous...
8 servings
Adapted from Southern Living Christmas Cookbook, 2005
Fall Vegetable Soup
Melt butter in soup pot over medium heat, add leeks and saute until tender. Add squash, carrot, parsnips and broccoli; stir to combine with leeks and saute 3 minutes. Add broth, water and herbs. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat and simmer until vegetables are tender. Salt and pepper to taste.
4 servings
- Lighter Italian Wedding Soup
- Asian Chicken & Watercress Soup
- Veggie Split Pea Soup
- Sweet Potato and Chipolte Soup
- Mushroom & Barley Soup
- Onion Soup with Cheese Toasts
- Chicken Posole
- Butternut Bisque
- Broccoli Rabe & White Bean Soup
I've started making a big pot of soup on either Sunday or Monday to get me through the week for lunch. It’s quick, easy to heat up and Finn eats it, too, so it’s a good extra serving of vegetables for him.
The key to really good soup, I think, is homemade stock. I obviously don’t sit around and make stock all day, because, really, who has that kind of time? Actually, who am I kidding, some days I do have that kind of time because I stay at home. But it is hands down the easiest, best thing in the world, albeit a little bit time-consuming. Everyone makes stock different; I make mine the way my mom taught me – vegetables, slow simmering, and a whole chicken carcass. I usually make chicken stock when we've had a whole, roasted chicken for dinner – and it can even be one of those rotisserie chickens from the grocery store. I clean most of the remaining meat off, which I set aside to use for chicken salad sandwiches or, if I’m making chicken soup, I’ll add that later, after the broth is done. Then I put the bones in a big ole soup pot, add chopped celery, onion, carrots and a couple of cloves of garlic and fill the stock pot with water. Add some herbs – I use oregano, thyme, basil and a bay leaf and bring it all to a boil. Then I turn the heat back, put a cover on it and let it simmer on low until the broth has reduced by about half.
Usually at this point I’ll turn the stock off and let it cool down to room temperature then stick it in the refrigerator over night. The point is to let the fat from the chicken congeal on the top so that the next morning I can skim it off…you want a little bit of that fat as you’re simmering the broth because fat adds flavor, but you don’t need all of it and it can make for kind of a greasy broth if there is too much. And we all know that at this point, the less fat, the better (my bum will thank me come beach season!). Then I put that big pot back on the stove and bring it up to a low simmer for maybe about 20 minutes to a half an hour and then strain all of the chicken bones and vegetables out, leaving a really nice, intense broth. And then I freeze it in 2 cup portions for use later.
The same theory applies if you get a soup bone from the grocery store for beef broth or a ham bone for ham broth. I've never made fish stock, so I’m not entirely sure how that process would work (I’m sure Uriah can give me a tutorial on that some day when I'm less busy doing stay-at-home mom things.). You can also use whatever veggies you happen to have in the house. I've added red onion, leek, and green or red peppers to my broth before because they were in the fridge and needed to be used. Don’t worry about saving the vegetables from your broth to use later in your soup; you've already leached all of their good flavor out and into the broth – which is also why you want to remove most of the chicken from the bones and add it in later. Even if you’re making vegetable soup or chicken noodle soup, you want to discard the simmered veggies and use fresh in your soup.
Sometimes, however, I don’t have the patience for all of that simmering and straining and cooling and skimming, so I just make my broth, strain out the veggies and bones and then use the broth to make my soup the same day. It’s just as good and if I have leftover broth, I freeze it.
Today was technically my first day of Soup for Lunch, although last week for my lunches I ate the Ham & Pot Liquor Soup I made when my parents visited. The ham soup is a little bit spicy, so Finn wasn't sold on it; today we had a fall vegetable soup that I made yesterday with some chicken broth I found in the freezer and some veggies I had in the refrigerator. I deliberately left out any sort of barley or noodle filler in my soup this week – I wanted just a broth with vegetables soup to kick my healthy eating into gear. I paired my big bowl of soup with some low-fat cottage cheese and a banana, over-all a relatively healthy, filling lunch. I think tomorrow I’ll have a salad with it and maybe on Thursday I’ll add an open-faced ham sandwich with low-fat cheese and spicy mustard. I realize that for some people, eating the same thing for lunch 5 days in a row can get a little bit boring (and I’m one of them) so the sides I put with my soup need to be different each day and a healthy supplement.

Today I felt much better about my choices than I have in a while…and more in control of what I’m doing. I logged everything I've eaten and pre-pointed out my dinner, so I know that I can afford a small snack this evening if I need it and if it’s before 8 pm. I didn't work out hard, but I did walk a bunch this morning taking pictures of Sarah and Michael, so I feel pretty good about getting some movement into my day today.
One day at a time...
- 2 pounds kale*
- 1 (2 lb) ham steak
- 2 tablespoons hot sauce
- 3 tablespoons olive oil
- 3 medium onions, chopped
- 1 garlic clove, minced
- 6 red potatoes, diced
- 3 (14-oz) cans chicken broth
- 2 (16-oz) cans black eyed peas**
- 2 cups water, use reserved kale cooking water from second boil***
- ½ cup vermouth
- 1 tablespoon white vinegar
- 1 teaspoon salt
Remove and discard stems and discolored spots from kale; rinse with cold water. Drain and tear into 1-inch pieces. Cover kale with cold water and bring to a boil in a large Dutch oven. Remove from heat; drain. Cover again with water and bring to a boil. Drain, reserving liquid.
Toss ham with hot sauce. Cook in oil in Dutch oven over medium-high heat until browned. Add onion and garlic and saute until tender. Stir in kale, potatoes, and remaining ingredients; bring to a boil. Reduce heat and simmer, stirring occasionally 45 minutes.
*Original recipe called for collard greens - couldn't find them, so I substituted kale. I've never had kale before, but it was really, really good.
**I used dried black-eyed peas because Uriah couldn't find them in the canned aisle (probably looking with his man eyes.). Soaked the peas overnight and then added 2 cups to the broth to simmer and cook through.
***The original recipe doesn't say to use the cooking water from the collards/kale, but I think it gives a little bit of extra flavor to the soup; if you don't have 2 cups, add water to make the full amount. You could just use 2 cups of water if you forget to reserve your cooking water, though! Sometimes I like to get a little over-zealous...
8 servings
Adapted from Southern Living Christmas Cookbook, 2005
Fall Vegetable Soup
- 1 leek, white and most of the green part sliced
- 3 tablespoons butter
- ½ acorn squash, seeded, peeled and cubed
- 1 carrot, chopped
- 3 parsnips, chopped
- 1 cup fresh broccoli heads and stem pieces, chopped
- 2 cups chicken broth
- 3 cups water
- 1 teaspoon each, oregano and thyme
- 1 bay leaf
- salt and pepper to taste
Melt butter in soup pot over medium heat, add leeks and saute until tender. Add squash, carrot, parsnips and broccoli; stir to combine with leeks and saute 3 minutes. Add broth, water and herbs. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat and simmer until vegetables are tender. Salt and pepper to taste.
4 servings
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