Wednesday, February 10, 2010

After what we are estimating to be 12" of snow, it is soup time....

A nice warm bowl of soup was waiting for my husband after he "braved the elements" as they say, and cleared off our driveway of about a foot of snow.  As I look out the window this afternoon I do see some stray snowflakes falling even now a day later. 

Time for some:

Chicken Noodle & Vegetable Soup

As I have mentioned before and you will see here, I do take advantage of short-cuts, one, if time is short and two, if they are just plain good, so why try and duplicate with all the fuss and work involved.  Shown here are a few examples of my doing just that:


I have always loved a soup starter per se.  A lot of the seasoning has been done for you and those little extras are taken care, plus I am sure there are probably enough preservatives in there to make the kids think it is from the local fast-food chain and they will love it.  Just kidding.  I really do not know about the preservatives but I do think they just might like this one.

I used the left-over turkey and bones but a deli chicken, some plain chicken pieces or any poultry will work here.  Try to make sure a bone or two is in there, even the chicken or turkey neck is great in this case.  It will enhance the flavors, you will discard before serving of course.

Add the turkey, or chicken to the broth mixture, whole, intact, this will be removed later:
















Here is my honey or "sous chef", preparing the vegetables for me.  He is paid well, trust me.  :)




















He does such good work doesn't he?













Add the vegetables to the soup pot:

Remove the turkey bones and all, from the soup, allow to cool; cut to spoon/soup size pieces:
Return turkey pieces to soup pot; simmer:

Mix everything well, allow to simmer for at about one hour, until vegetables are fork-tender:
This is also the time to add any vegetables that are already cooked i.e. left over corn, green beans etc..

Warm the soup bowls in the microwave, serve soup in the nicely warmed bowls:
Once again here we are adding another view:



Chicken Noodle and Vegetable Soup

The Players:

1 left-over turkey, with meat still attached and bones in place or
1 deli rotisserie chicken or left over poultry of your choice
1 32 oz. box of Progresso Chicken Broth
1 Bear Creek soup mix or any favorite soup starter type product (pictured is Chicken Noodle)
1 tsp. salt 
1/2 tsp. pepper
garlic and onion powders
3 stalks celery, wash and cut into bite size pieces
3-4 carrots, wash, ends removed, scraped and cut into bite size pieces
1 small onion, diced
any left over vegetables you feel like adding i.e. corn, green beans, white beans (a little of each will work too)
8 cups of water, more may be necessary as simmering may reduce amount of liquid
Noodles and/or rice, uncooked (will cook in soup)

Optional: add rice, additional noodles or macaroni when you add the left-over vegetables.  If you plan on freezing left-over soup, keep noodles separate as these will absorb all the broth.
Just make noodles the same day as you plan on serving the soup.  If noodles are in soup starter this will be just fine, it is the extra noodles that will absorb so much of the broth.  Is this clear as mud?

Instructions:

Place whole turkey carcass, or deli-rotisserie chicken in soup pot, over medium high heat on stove.  Cover with 8 cups of water, add soup starter mix and box of Progresso chicken stock.  Begin to simmer.

Add onion and vegetables to pot.

Add spices; sprinkle in onion and garlic powders to taste, add salt and pepper. Stir well.

Reserve any pre-cooked vegetables until later.

Bring soup to a gentle boil, reduce heat to medium low or low, allowing soup to simmer and vegetables to cook or at least one hour. 

When vegetables are fork-tender, remove turkey meat and bones to a cutting board, allow to cool until easy to handle.  Remove meat from bones, cut into bite sized pieces.  Return meat to pot, discard bones.

Add any pre-cooked vegetables to pot to heat through.  If using left-over vegetables that are frozen add at the same time, these will cook up quickly.  We save any left-over vegetable by putting them in small snack size storage bags, placing them in the freezer to be used later on soup day.  Also add any extra noodles or rice if you so desire, at this point.

Allow soup to simmer for about 10-15 more minutes. 

Place soup bowls in the microwave for a few seconds, to warm.  Add hot soup. 

Serve.

Any left-over soup can be frozen for another meal. 

Enjoy! 

Keep warm!

This should help a little bit. 

Evelyn






2 comments:

  1. Yum- this looks so good. My family said I could make the tuna casserole but no way would they let me serve it with cinnamon rolls :-)

    Of course they make fun of me for serving cole slaw with spaghetti- seems very appropriate to me.

    Love your blog.
    B.

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  2. Thanks Bea. Now wth on the no cinnamon rolls with the tuna and noodles? They all need to come here, then we will decide. lol
    Thanks for checking on the blog. I am enjoying it.
    xo
    Ev

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