Right before Thanksgiving, the baby and I took the train to Kansas to visit my family. I had six beautiful Roma tomatoes in the house right before we left, and I knew that no one would eat them while I was gone. I didn't want them to go to waste, so I cut them in half, threw them into a bag, and tossed them in the freezer.
A couple of days ago, I decided to pull out the bag and roast the tomatoes with some garlic cloves. I still wasn't sure what I was going to do with them, so I put them in a Tupperware and put them in the fridge. Yesterday I came home freezing half to death and decided that I wanted soup. It's a rare occasion that I eat soup from a can. We've already established how I feel about excess sodium and ingredients I can't pronounce. Luckily I had some perfectly roasted tomatoes ready to go.
I know the combination of garlic, tomato, and coconut sounds strange, but it's really not. The coconut milk gives it a silky, creamy texture, and it blends so nicely with the rest of the spices in the soup. This recipe makes two small servings (or one great big one; I ate it all, all by myself!), so feel free to adjust proportions accordingly.
Thursday, January 12, 2012
Wednesday, January 11, 2012
Garbage Pail Vegetable Broth
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10:35 AM
Oh my gosh you guys. I am SO behind. I've got 14 recipes ready to be posted (and those are for big people. I've got three baby recipes ready to go, as well), but I just can't find the time. First I had strep; then the baby had croup; then I had bronchitis, and then it was the holidays. There are days when I considered myself lucky to have time to get dressed and even luckier if I managed to take a shower. At this rate you're going to be getting Fall recipes this Summer!
Here's one that's quick and easy though, and it's REALLY economical. I've always called the Vegetable Butt Broth, but I figured maybe I should revamp the name if I was going to put it out there on the internet. I'm not sure that this is any better, actually, but it's far more appetizing than it sounds.
When I clean my vegetables, I never throw away the parts that most people consider garbage. I keep the celery leaves, the tops of red, yellow, and orange peppers (but never green; I loathe green peppers), carrot peels, potato and sweet potato peels (but sure to clean them very well first), zucchini ends, outter cabbage leaves that are a little wilty, pieces of squash not quite big enough to roast, the ends of tomatoes, the thin outter rings of the onion, and anything else I happen to be using at the time. I also save vegetables that are about to go bad and won't be used before they turn. I keep a big bag in the freezer, and just throw all of this stuff in it as I have it. When the bag is full, I make veggie broth. This is far more economical than buying pre-made broth; it has far less sodium, and it also costs less than going out to buy veggies to make your own.
Here's one that's quick and easy though, and it's REALLY economical. I've always called the Vegetable Butt Broth, but I figured maybe I should revamp the name if I was going to put it out there on the internet. I'm not sure that this is any better, actually, but it's far more appetizing than it sounds.
When I clean my vegetables, I never throw away the parts that most people consider garbage. I keep the celery leaves, the tops of red, yellow, and orange peppers (but never green; I loathe green peppers), carrot peels, potato and sweet potato peels (but sure to clean them very well first), zucchini ends, outter cabbage leaves that are a little wilty, pieces of squash not quite big enough to roast, the ends of tomatoes, the thin outter rings of the onion, and anything else I happen to be using at the time. I also save vegetables that are about to go bad and won't be used before they turn. I keep a big bag in the freezer, and just throw all of this stuff in it as I have it. When the bag is full, I make veggie broth. This is far more economical than buying pre-made broth; it has far less sodium, and it also costs less than going out to buy veggies to make your own.
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