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chicken soup does!

Posted By: jss on 2008-10-10
In Reply to: need advice on what i can freeze - sm

and if you make it thicker and put a pie crust lid on it you can make home-made (much healthier in my book) pot pies easily. i would just advise rice instead of pasta...the pasta can lose its texture during thawing sometimes. a beef roast with potatoes and all freezes well too. I usually make a double batch of both of these and put one in the freezer. Same with lasagne. :)


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chicken soup
Good ol' "Jewish penicillin" - chicken soup.  Use leftover chicken or steamed chicken thighs or breasts if no leftovers are available.   Use Swansons natural chicken broth (no sodium) but can use bullion, but it contains a lot of sodium.  Use about a quart or more of natural chicken broth.  I like to use baby carrots whole, but can certainly use sliced carrots.  Season with lots of minced garlic and a little dill weed (maybe a teaspoon).  I slice in a couple of things of celery or sliced celery hearts with leaves.  I sometimes add noodles, or rice, sometimes I use a package of frozen mixed vegetables which are really terrific, depending on what I have available and what type of soup my  family wants.  Add some white pepper, not black pepper.  Simmer until carrots and celery are soft.  If using pasta or rice, add that last, otherwise it soaks up too much broth and gets soggy.  My family would eat this even if they were sick and nothing else appealed to them, that is why I call it "Jewish penicillin."  This is a Jewish mama's recipe.  Enjoy - it is so simple and so delicious not to mention nutritious and healthy.  Note:  Never let your chicken leftovers go to waste - make a pot of chicken soup!
homemade chicken soup here
Teenage son just walked in and said, Oh, good. We get to eat tonight. LOL. Guess he is tired of take-out.
Mexican Chicken soup
Ingredients
2 tablespoons canola oil
1 medium onion, chopped
1 medium rib celery, chopped
2 garlic cloves, minced
1 tablespoon chili powder
1 teaspoon ground cumin
6 cups chicken broth, low-sodium canned
1/4 cup canned green chiles
1 (15 1/2-ounce) can posole, drained or frozen corn kernels
4 canned whole peeled tomatoes, roughly chopped
1 teaspoon dried oregano
1 cup cooked skinless shredded chicken breast (about 4 ounces)
1/4 cup chopped fresh cilantro leaves
Juice of 1 lime
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
Directions
Heat the oil in a medium saucepan over medium heat. Add the onion, celery, garlic, chili powder, and cumin, and cook until the onion softens, about 5 minutes. Add the chicken broth, bring to a boil, reduce the heat slightly, and simmer, uncovered, for 10 minutes. Add the green chiles, posole, tomatoes, and oregano and cook for another 5 minutes.

Pull the saucepan from the heat and stir in the chicken, cilantro leaves, and lime juice. Season, to taste, with salt and pepper. Serve hot.

I normally buy 2 of the already roasted chickens at the store (Wal-mart) and eat most of one chicken for dinner and then use the leftovers as well as the next chicken for the soup, I know that is more chicken than what is called for, but it just really makes for a wonderful soup. I don't always have cilantro on hand so I usually leave that out. Also, for the whole tomatoes, I usually use a large can of crushed tomatoes. Sometimes the soup is a little to thin so I might throw in a handful of instant rice. My family can't get enough of it.
Hamburger soup and sausage soup

Pretend you're making vegetable soup. Throw in whatever you want for veggies (corn, green beans, carrots, onions, potatoes), a can of tomatoes or tomato juice. Add 1 pound of browned, drained hamburger and beef broth in place of water.


For the sausage soup, brown a pound of sliced SMOKED sausage, add some water and scrap the bottom of the pan. Add your veggies and chicken or vegetable broth (the harder it's smoked, the better).  


I usually use frozen mixed veggies and just add a few potatoes if I feel like it or if I'm in a hurry and simmer for 30 minutes.


I make large batches and freeze all but enough for a meal. You can season with your favorite seasons. I usually use garlic and pepper and a bit of cumin to make them smokier.


My dad told me that I got the chicken pox from playing in the chicken coop. I believed him for years
nm
Thank you! Actually, the fried chicken is chicken strips sm
breaded and fried that I make from scratch. Yes, I buy the 5 pound bag from Sam's club, fry it up and then toss is with my mom's famous teriyaki sauce cut into small, bite sized pieces. With 5 pounds cut up I can make well over 120 pieces. No big deal! Thanks for your suggestions!
The Soup

For any of you who don't watch this show you should.  It's one of the funniest shows.  I just pulled myself up off the floor from laughing so hard....


Guy goes to the ER (think his girlfriend and he had a fight and she injured his foot).  Needless to say this guy is not one of the brightest on the blocks, but here's the conversation (he's filling out the questionnaire) in the triage area.


Mariital Status: Guy says "martial status?" - nurse says "marital status".  Guy says "definitely single"


Guy says "Mode of transportation?".  Nurse says "how did you get here".  Guy says (I think to the person who brought him in).  "Was it a chevy or a ford".


AHAAAAA HA HA HA 


For my squash soup (sm)
I'm sorry this is going to sound not professional, but I cook by taste.

I take 3-4 pounds of acorn squash, pumpkin, etc., whatever squash I have around. (I have been known to use a sweet potato as well.) Roast them up for an hour or until you can gut them. Put the seeds in the oven to roast for whoever eats roasted seeds. :)

Puree those up until smooth. Then you want about 3-4 cups chicken broth or bouillon to thin it out to your preferred thickness.

In the meantime, I've been cooking up about 7 slices of bacon more or less or maybe a few slices of canadian bacon, whatever you have on hand. When those are all crisped up and some grease drained(and I cut my bacon up precooking), throw in a finely chopped onion with a little bit of salt and sweat them until translucent.

When that's done, throw the bacon and onion into the soup. Salt and pepper (freshly ground, please!) to taste. Your final herb is sage. If you have fresh, go with around 4 teaspoons. If you have dried like my un-green thumb has, use around 1-1/4 teaspoon dried. Throw that in, stir it in, and make a big decision whether you want the soup completely smooth or if you're lazy like me and don't mind the chunks of onion and bacon.

Heat to serving temperature and eat. It's a simple soup and really pretty healthy. It also freezes exceptionally well. I could eat it for every meal.

Hope that was okay--sometimes I'm clear as mud.
soup/zupatta

That soup sounds delicious!  Not professional!??!!  Are you kidding? ...Your MA and grandma did everything with a pinch of this or a dash of that....I copied your recipe and plan to make it (probably not as well as you do though). 


Waste not, want not....I'm glad to see somebody putting up food/canning/freezing....been doing it for years.....


Lived in a very rural area (gravel roads)  where it was a 17 mile one-way trip to the grocery store......If anyone needed bread, butter, meat, veggies or anything else, they could come stop by and get it out of my deep freezer and visa versa.  We all helped each other out. It used to be called community....             


      


tuna and soup
I use to make it like that but added mac and cheese to it.  My children loved it.
Grilled cheese and soup - nm
x
...If it seems like too much soup for the sauce, then just leave
s
I can't watch CSI Miami because of The Soup
plus the men are sexier on Vegas!!!
Has anyone ever tried the cabbage soup diet and if so
did you stay on it longer than a week, what sort of weight did you lose, tell me how you varied the soup, did you use herbs, etc. to change the taste, etc. Oh before being flamed for the staying on more than a week, know it says to stay on only a week but others probably did not go along with this. Thanks everyone!
Cabbage soup diet
I first read about this diet about 35 years ago, as it was published in a popular womans' magazine.  So, it has been around a long time.  I tried it for a week, lost 5 pounds, gained back the weight as soon as I started eating regular food again.  I decided that it is a good side dish as part of a well-balanced reducing diet.  But, it can never work as the only food that I eat on a daily basis.  For one thing, I have to have sufficient protein or my diet doesn't last long.  And what I really want is a plan for life that will help me maintain a good weight once I reach it, without feeling deprived.  I find that canned tuna fish is a good "diet" food because of being low in fat and pretty high in protein and convenient.  Any fish is good as far as that goes.
The soup will simmer until dinner so
hopefully they will soften up by then. Thanks! I also freeze bananas as well. I was so glad when I heard about that tip.
I love the soup with Joel
and Lou!!
Bakes potato soup
I like to make baked potato soup. Bake 3 large potatoes or 4-5 small ones. Cut them in half, cool slightly, then scoop out the middle. While they are baking I takes some time to heat up some chicken stock with a bay leaf, garlic, black pepper, a little time. Sometimes I use boulion (sp?) if I don't have stock. Add potatoes to this. Heat to boil. Puree if you want or leave chunky. Add milk and cornstarch if you like it thicker or sometimes I use potato buds to thicken it. The amount of milk/chicken stock, etc. depends on how much fat you want. I used to use almost full milk or heavy cream but not any more. I just use enough to make it creamy now. Put in bowls and top with cheddar cheese and bacon. Sour cream doesn't work well. Really easy and quick (can "bake" the potatoes in the microwave if you want). I find that kids love it if you call it cheese and bacon soup. lol Usually for the bacon, I don't cook a new package but instead when I cook bacon for breakfast, etc. I save 2 or 3 pieces in the freezer each time. Then when I want some for soup, green beans, or salads it is available.
looks like an old fashion soup line to me
http://www.yahoo.com/s/1025202
Try the cream of mushroom soup......sm
in the mac and cheese and stir in a can of tuna. Very yummy! I haven't tried the chicken or celery cream soups but they sound good, too.
Got an cheese and cream of whatever soup
when you first said rice I was thinking white, but this may work anyway.

A few of us posted not too long ago that we have similar recipes with slight variations for a mac and cheese/tuna recipe -- simple, you just make the boxed macaroni and cheese as usual and add the cream of (I use chicken, could be celery, mushroom, whatever) and flake the tuna with a fork and add . . . could work with rice also, you just wouldn't have that lovely powdered cheese mix and would have to make your own cheese sauce.

I have also made tuna patties before with canned tuna (like salmon patties). I like the salmon patties better, but the tuna patties were certainly edible (anything fried is pretty much edible, right?), and have the rice as a side dish.
Add a can of cream of mushroom soup.......... sm
to that tuna mac and you'll think you've died and gone to heaven!
I have a big canner of veggie soup cooking
and it smells yummy.  Tonight is a parade in town and dinner at my parent's.  Not sure about tomorrow.   Church and then who knows.  I have 2 movies to watch from Netflix and a newsletter to get ready to mail.
Post Your Favorite Soup Recipe Please

Now that the weather is turning chilly in some areas (mine included) soup sounds wonderful!


Would you all please post your favorite soup recipes -- thanks!!


Or just freeze to use in soup or sloppy joes down the road. nm
b
The guys in my family have a chili/soup cookoff
so the women don't have to do much except enjoy. I like the below poster mainly enjoy the commercials. This year is a little more special becuase one of the Giants graduated just a few years ago from the high school my children now attend. I can still remember constantly hearing his name at all the high school football games.
Posted about cabbage soup diet earlier
I made the soup yesterday and along with what it calls for added additional bellpeppers, garlic, lots, coriander (spelling?), parsley and both chunked up tomatoes and whole tomatoes. It is absolutely delicious and filling. Ok, not even 11 a.m. yet and I cooked some turnip greens this morning and ate some already (today is the vegetable and soup day). This diet is being used as a bridge for me as next week when I am not supposed to be on the diet, I have been setting up meals such as fish, lean meats and loads of vegetables, not fried for this week coming up. I had tried this diet some years back and like 1 of the posters, found it completely unpalatable but then again did not try the various spices like I have this time. Hope I am on my way to the XXXX amount of weight I need to lose!!
Love sage in a squash soup, but no meat here. Blend in some
s
Can't you pack hot stuff in a thermos? Chili, soup, stew,
s
Got a soup kitchen or church mission that serves lunch daily?
s
Beef stew for the meat eaters and broccoli/cheese soup for the veg heads. nm
n
tator tots, burger, green beans, cream of mush soup
Brown a pound of ground beef with your favorite seasons.
In baking dish put a layer of tater tots, then take a can of french style green beans (all liquid removed) and layer over top of tots, then burger and top with cream of mushroom soup diluted with milk so its thin enough and creamy. Bake until tator tots cooked.
String bean casserole made with that goopy canned cream of mushroom soup!
nm
What about chicken; so much you can do with it.
And if you buy the large packages, it's fairly inexpensive. Also, eggs are inexpensive, quiche or omelets. Grilled cheese with tomato. Baked macaroni and cheese casserole. There is really so much.

Do try Zatarain's meals in a box, very cheap and we love them. You just add the meat or seafood. Here is a website.

http://www.zatarain.com/products/products.php/1/1/Rice_Dinner_Mixes

And their rices are by far the best as side dishes, much better than Rice a Roni or Uncle Ben's I think. Cooks up fluffy, not sticky and a large amount.

http://www.zatarain.com/products/products.php/1/4/Side_Dishes

Here's one of my chicken recipes:

Easy parmesan chicken

Dip chicken breast in melted butter/garlic mix (1 stick butter and 1/2 tsp minced garlic)

Coat with breadcrumb mix (I used flavored/seasoned with about 1/4 cup of grated parmesan cheese and pinch of garlic powder added).

Place in pan. Pour the remaining butter on top, or not. I do! :)

Bake in oven at 325 for around 30 minutes.

Yum.
Chicken leg
We played this at a friend's for Thanksgiving. It was fun. There may be a limit on how many people, I am not sure. You take regular dominos. Each draw 7. Before you give out the tiles put the highest domino that is the double number or the lowest number like 1 dot 1 dot. Then, everyone takes turns around the table and puts 1 tile only to match one of the ends. In this case it would be 1 dot of course. If someone has a double number again they put that tile diagonal next to the tile they are matching sticking out like a leg. Then the group has to keep going to match that other side to make the other leg. If you can't match it you keep drawing from bone yard (again one each time then onto the next person). All other times than doubles you keep matching the dots and if after you draw you don't have it next person goes. You do this until a person has only 1 tile left, they say 1. And when the first person has all tiles gone, the game is over and the people add up their dots and that is their high score. I got the highest score ever, which meant I was the biggest loser ever LOL. There are many strategies like cards, but mostly try to get rid of the high number dots first. The difference between this and dominos is the chicken leg part which is tough, and of course the fact you only draw 1 tile instead of keeping going and each person only puts 1 tile then the next person goes. You'd be surprised how the time flies when you play this. BTW: We were all from 46 to 56 in age range there. Hope that if anyone plays this the time flies by as much as it did for me. Happy Holidays!
Raw chicken??
I wouldn't give raw chicken to a dog for the same reasons I wouldn't give it to a person. Dogs can get salmonella poisoning, too.

& ditto what the poster below says about chicken bones. Except neck bones.

I buy chicken thighs once in awhile & boil it until it falls off the bones & add some broth to my dogs' food every day. They eat the *cooked* meat & skin as well, but I throw away the bones.

Andy is a picky eater. It took awhile to find a food he liked. WorriedMom (OP) may just have to keep experimenting.
Chicken
Crustless Chicken Pot Pie Skillet.

 

Boneless chicken breasts cut in to 1-inch pieces.

Chicken boullion (cubes or powder)

1 can sliced mushrooms, drained.

Onion (to taste) diced small.

1 can Cream of Mushroom soup

1 can diced peas and carrots.

 

Egg noodles, cooked and drained.

 

Saute chicken, mushrooms, and onion with chicken boullion and low fat spread chicken is cooked through and onions are tender.  Deglaze pan with a little milk (basically use milk to loosen any browned bits stuck to pan).  Add Cream of mushroom soup, peas and carrots, and egg noodles. Season to taste with salt, pepper, garlic, etc.  Simmer until heated through and serve.

Cooking chicken
I wound be reluctant to cook chicken on an indoor grill.  Pounding the chicken will help, but you really need to be careful about cross contamination.  Until you get a   feel for it, I would cook it on the grill to mark it, but finish it in the oven.  I also would marinate your chicken.  I love Soy Vey teriyaki marinade.  There are some excellent crock pot recipies that incorporate chicken breast.  I got a panni sandwich maker and those are excellent and easy.  Start off slowly, look at recipies and do what tastes good.  Eating out is definately not a habit you want to get your kids into.  Just really be careful with raw chicken.  When I pound chicken I use a plastic grocery bag.  I put the chicken in there and then pound it.  It saves on cleanup of splattered chicken and is more sanitary.  All Recipies is a great site, as well as BHG.com.  Good luck and have fun. 
Chicken and biscuits?
When I bake a whole chicken at the beginning of the week, later in the week I cut up the leftovers into a casserole dish with a can of cream of potato soup, cream of celery soup and peas and carrots.  Top with Pillsbury biscuits.  If you want the complete recipe, feel free to e-mail me.
I'm roasting a chicken
probably broccoli from the garden, not sure what else yet.
Chicken Salad

I agree with keeping it simple . . . just wanted to add that I love to use leftover grilled chicken, and don't forget the garlic.  Love the garlic!


mix chicken with various marinades...
Use any salad dressing or marinade. Example: steamed/boiled chicken cooled then stir Caribbean mango marinade. Eat as is or mix in some fresh dill, shredded lettuce, fruit, whatever. Have on crackers, toasted pita chips, in a roll, etc. Use any salad dressing or marinade. I never use mayo - too blah, need that zing!
chicken sphagetti (sp). nm
d
me too and chicken mcnuggets in

Chicken in foil - sm

Boneless, skinless chicken breasts pounded a bit thin, place in tin foil, season with Italian spices/herbs, garlic, cover with sliced onion, zucchini, green pepper, a jar of sliced mushrooms, a bit more seasoning, dot with margarine, fold foil tightly, place in a pan, over 400 degrees for 30 minutes. Juices are good on rice.


Can also place all in a 9 x 13 pan, covered tightly with tin foil and baked.


Can vary toppings to your taste - can add shredded mozzarella.


 


Chicken teriyaki
Is there a reason you can't do it in a skillet? You might be thinking you can't "grill" it over an open grill, which I can understand, but I'm not grasping why you can't use a skillet. A flat or kind-of-flat skillet will work just fine. Brush it lightly with oil to keep the goo from sticking too badly and to provide a bit of something for the meat to brown on. You need the kind of high heat/hot metal of a skillet or grill in order to caramelize the sugar in the sauce. Otherwise, you'll just have baked chicken in goo. (Voice of experience, here!)

A skillet will cook the meat quickly without drying it out. The oven is going to dry it out too much, I think, and you won't get the nice brown glaze outside. The goal is just done, moist chicken inside and a nicely browned crust outside.

Either way, marinate the chicken ahead of time. You can use some dilute sauce for this. Also soak the skewers a few hours in water so that they don't burn as readily.

I guess you can do this in the oven, but if you do, how about cooking the chicken and THEN skewering it? Nobody will know! It will be a lot easier to turn the meat and get good contact with the pan. If you choose to do it in the oven, you might line a heavy pan with aluminum foil, shiny side up, and coat it with a very thin layer of oil. Arrange the marinated chicken so that one side of every piece is flat on the foil. Every so often, turn the meat so another side is down and brush with sauce. When it's done, skewer it with the soaked skewers, add some more sauce, and finish in the oven until the sauce gets like you want it.

If you have a spray bottle, put some water in it. If the skewers do catch on fire, just spritz them out.
buffalo chicken dip -- always a hit!

I got it from allrecipes.com


INGREDIENTS (Nutrition)



  • 2 (10 ounce) cans chunk chicken, drained
  • 2 (8 ounce) packages cream cheese, softened
  • 1 cup Ranch dressing
  • 3/4 cup pepper sauce, such as FranksŪ Red HotŪ
  • 1 1/2 cups shredded Cheddar cheese
  • 1 bunch celery, cleaned and cut into 4 inch pieces
  • 1 (8 ounce) box chicken-flavored crackers or any crackers you like







DIRECTIONS



  1. Heat chicken and hot sauce in a skillet over medium heat, until heated through. Stir in cream cheese and ranch dressing. Cook, stirring until well blended and warm. Mix in half of the shredded cheese, and transfer the mixture to a slow cooker. Sprinkle the remaining cheese over the top, cover, and cook on Low setting until hot and bubbly. Serve with celery sticks and crackers.

how do you cook your chicken?
are you baking it or on the stove?
my sister used to make us rice and teriyaki chicken and i loved it. im not so much a cook, but would like to do this as it seems so simple
fiesta chicken
4 boneless chicken breasts cut into bite size pieces.

8 oz sliced mushrooms

1 cup shredded swiss cheese

1 can cream of chicken soup and mix with 1/2 can white wine or chicken broth

1 cup pepperidge farm stuffing

1/2 stick butter melted


place chicken in bottom of 9 x 13 pan, layer with mushrooms, then swiss cheese..

pour soup mix over

SPrinkle stuffing overtop and then pour melted butter on top.

Baker 350 for 45 minutes

Easy and good!!
chicken w/stuffing
Use Italian dressing to rub on boneless chicken for flavor, prepare corn bread stuffing or instant from mix, either put under each breast or serve separately, peel and wash small potatoes, coat w/the same Italian dressing or non-saturated fat oil, bake at 375 for about 45 min. depending on thickness of chicken, until chicken is well cooked, sometimes you can just put this in a large baking dish and you don't have to do anything but check the chicken to be sure it's "done" and I find it pretty simple and serve a vegetable on the side if available.
Chicken paprikash
I am Hungarian and that is our favorite meal.  I figured if he did not like it, he was not worth marrying!!!  Luckily he loved it as does our 4 kids now; 2 out of 4 ask for it for their birthday dinner.  I do remember the first time I cooked breakfast for him as a married couple and it was an electric stove and I had grown up with a gas stove.   I burned EVERYTHING!  But, he still ate it and did not complain.  20 years later I'd bet he'd complain if I did it now! LOL