Halushki and Dill Pickle Soup

2013_02_12aI decided to cook Polish this year for Fat Tuesday to accompany my pazckis. My mom made halushki when I was growing up and I loved it. It was such an odd combination of ingredients. Noodles, bacon, cottage cheese, potatoes, and topped with sugar. Something about it really works. Aya loves when I make this one. Even her mom loves it!

As far as authentic Polish, I really have no idea if this is or not. This recipe could be Polish, or it could be Hungarian. My aunt makes a halushki dish too, but it is completely different than this.

This was Ellie’s first time eating halushki and I found it funny that in being a true halvsie kid, she used her chopsticks.

This was my first time making dill pickle soup. I used a recipe recommended from my friend. I really liked how it turned out. It was just the right amount of pickle flavor. I didn’t add the extra chicken bullion cubes and used soy milk instead of regular milk. But everything else I did according to the directions.

RECIPES:

Halushki

My mom wasn’t very detailed with this recipe. There was a lot of “a little bit of this,” “approximately,” and “maybe” when she told me the recipe.

Ingredients:
Potatoes(3) peeled and cubed
Onion (1) diced
6 strips of bacon
About 8oz. wide egg noodles
Almost 16oz. of cottage cheese
Salt and pepper to taste
Dried parsley
Sugar

Cook the bacon and set aside. Brown the onion. Cook the potatoes in boiling water. Cook noodles in a separate pot. Once everything is cooked, combine in same pan as the onion. Crumble the bacon on top and mix. Add the cottage cheese while noodles are hot and combine. Serve on plate and sprinkle with sugar. It sounds so gross, but it’s really good.

2013_02_12bDill Pickle Soup

Ingredients:
8 cups chicken stock
2 cubes chicken bullion
1 large carrot – grated
2 cups peeled, cubed potatoes
1 cup chopped celery
5 small dill pickles – grated
1/2 cup milk
2 Tbs flour
1 egg
5 Tbs sour cream
salt and pepper to taste
Fresh dill – finely chopped

In a large saucepan, combine chicken stock, bouillon, carrot, potatoes, and celery. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat and cook covered over low heat until potatoes start to get soft.

Add pickles and continue cooking about 15 min. In a small bowl, beat milk and flour until smooth then stir in a small amount of the hot soup. Add this mixture to the soup pot and bring all to a boil until slightly thickened. Remove from heat.

In a small bowl, beat egg and sour cream until smooth and stir in a small amount of the hot soup. Add this mixture to soup. Keep soup warm but do not boil, as this will make it curdle. Garnish with dill.

Roasted Cauliflower Soup

2013_01_23Most of my experience with cauliflower is with dip on a raw veggie tray. Anything tastes good goobered up in a ranch veggie dip. I don’t hate cauliflower, but it’s not something I would seek out or get excited about. Aya loves cauliflower though. So much it’s in her top three favorite vegetables. Wanting to please Aya, I decided to give this soup a try.

When it comes to cooking vegetables, roasting is always the best way to go, in my opinion. Cauliflower was no exception. I was surprised how great it tasted roasted. And once it was blended and cooked in soup form, it was outstanding! The dried bread and bacon garnish added just enough extra flavor. We both really liked this.

I served it with turkey sandwiches and a spinach salad.

RECIPES:

Roasted Cauliflower Soup

 

Beet & Carrot Soup w/ Turkey Meatball Reuben Subs

2013_01_10aI know the picture of the meatball sub doesn’t look very appetizing, but they were really good. I would make less, but bigger, meatballs next time. The soup was very beety. I liked it, but I know some people have an aversion to beets. If you don’t like beets, you won’t like this. Ellie loved it though and had three bowls! I have to say it was a little stranger eating something that looked like a raspberry, but tasting warm beets instead. 2013_01_10b

RECIPES:

Beet and Carrot Soup

Turkey Meatball Reuben

Italian Sausage Soup

2012_12_18This was easy and quick. I used regular canned tomatoes so I added my own spices. It called for turkey Italian sausage, but I just had regular on had. I also used frozen chopped spinach instead of fresh. I made a double batch so we could have leftovers too. This was fantastic! We both gave it 5 out of 5 stars and I’ve already made it more than once. I think it stands  on it’s own as a main dish, but it’s make a great side serving too.

RECIPES:

Italian Sausage Soup

Maple Sage Pork, Stuffed Apples, Creamed Spinach, and Sweet Potato Carrot Soup

This was my mom’s birthday dinner. And before you think, “Oh, that’s so nice you cooked for you mom,” I should tell you her birthday was three months ago in August. But we still tried to make it special. Everything I made was from Cooking Light and all very good, except the spinach was a little lame in my opinion. It was good, but not great. This is probably my favorite pork tenderloin recipe I’ve tried so far too. So good, and soooo easy.

RECIPES:

Maple Sage Pork

Savory Baked Apples

Carrot and Sweet Potato Soup

Creamed Spinach with Mushrooms