Wednesday, June 15, 2011

White Bean Chicken Corn Tomatillo Chili


I love both Chicken Corn Tortilla Soup AND Chili! I also love tomatillos, that green vegetable used for making Salsa Verde.

Great Chili is made from scratch, slow cooking from ingredients the cowboys had access to in the pioneer days.

Prep a day ahead by soaking the white beans (I get them from Whole Foods).
Soaking the beans overnight increases their nutritive value, and decreases the gas causing agents in beans. Sometimes I soak them for 2 days, pouring off the soak water, and replenishing it with fresh water.

I have also taken to using the infamous Costco Roasted Chicken. Debone the chicken, then boil the bones to make stock. Start this a day ahead and boil all day until the bones fall apart. This increases the calcium value of the broth. I asked a Chinese doctor how Chinese get calcium in their diets. Chinese are noted to have osteoporosis later in life than Westerners. The Chinese doctor told me that the secret is soup, made with soup bones boiled for a day or more. this is also the secret to making great Pho broth.

Another wonderful ingredient in this recipe is BACON. Now really, do you think those cowboys had extra virgin olive oil in their packs? No, they had Bacon, a cured meat that they could take with them on their travels. Not to worry about the cholesterol if you stick to the recipe and add garlic and a couple of onions. Onions and garlic are known to neutralize the creation of cholesterol when cooked with fatty meats such as steak or bacon.

After this, the rest of this recipe is easy.

Ingredients:
1 whole chicken roasted (available at Costco)
1 cup of dried white beans (soaked overnight) (cheaper and more nutritious than canned)

12 fresh tomatillos (available at Win Co Foods or Whole Foods)
1 teaspoon cumin
1 teaspoon oregano
1 teaspoon spanish paprika
1/4 teaspoon ancho chili powder
1/4 teaspoon black pepper
1/2 teaspoon salt
2 cans of Rosarita refried beans
4 strips of bacon cut into 1" pieces
2 small onions, diced
4 cloves garlic, minced
1 jalapeno, chopped
1 bunch of cilantro (cut up - leaves only, remove stalks)

Step One: Cut the wings, thighs and drumsticks off the roasted chicken. Using a knife, cut along the ridge of the bone dividing the chicken breasts, as close as you can to the bone for maximum removal of the chicken breasts. Separate the chicken breast from the bone as you cut, using a fork. When you have removed the entire chicken breast, cut it crosswise in 1" cubes. Cut or pull the chicken meat off the wings, thighs and drumsticks.

Place the chicken bones in a large pot filled with water.

EASY TRICK: If you have one of those pasta pots with a colander insert (the one with holes in it to let the water out) use this to put the chicken bones in! When they are done, just lift the colander out of the chicken broth, bones and all!

Bring to a boil. Turn it down to medium low and cook for hours until the bones fall apart. Add water when needed.

MAKE AHEAD OPTION: You can make this calcium rich chicken broth and pour it into containers for storage in the refrigerator or freezer.

Step Two: Take the soaked white beans that have been soaking overnight, and rinse them.
Add them to a baking dish and cover with an inch of water. Put the lid on and bake at 350 degrees for 2 hours.

Step Three: Cut up the bacon into 1" pieces. Cook them over medium heat in a skillet. Chop up the onions and garlic, adding them to the bacon. Cook until the onions are transparent.

Step Four: Quarter the tomatillos. Add the tomatillos to the onion mixture. Add enough chicken broth to cover. Bring to a boil, then let it simmer until the white beans are ready. Add all the spices above. Add the cut up jalapeno.

Step Five: When the chicken bones have fallen apart, remove them from the chicken broth.

Step Five: When the white beans are soft enough to eat, use a slotted spoon, and transfer just the beans (not the water) to the big pot of chicken broth, after the chicken bones have been removed. Turn the heat up to Medium heat.

Step Six: Add the Rosarita refried beans to the soup, stirring and mashing them on the side of the pot until they dissolve into the soup.

Step Seven: Add the tomatillo onion bacon garlic mixture to the soup.

Step Eight: Cut the corn off the two ears of corn and add to the soup. (Yes, you can substitute with frozen corn)

Step Nine: Add the chicken meat, and cut up coriander leaves. Serve over rice.

Good with Doritos black bean tortilla chips and Costco Mango Peach Salsa.

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Bad Cholesterol Lowering Foods

Pondering what foods actually lower Bad Cholesterol Levels? There is LDL and HDL.
Seems that increasing one decreases the other.

I decided to look around on the web and found these links to be of interest:

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Mountain High Yogurt Tzatziki Creamy Garlic Cucumber Dip

Okay, okay, it's almost as good as Trader Joes, but not quite. Please comment on any additions to make it better.

Okay, so I got a taste test yesterday, and the taster says it tastes better than TJ's. See yesterday's post.
TJ's Creamy Garlic Cucumber Dip

But how can that be?
It's because I used this Mountain High Original Vanilla Yoghurt.

TJ's Creamy Garlic Cucumber Dip with Mountain High Yoghurt



The vanilla adds a sweetness to it that melts in your mouth.

If you can't get Mountain High Original Style Yoghurt where you live, try a full bodied natural yoghurt and add a touch of honey, and a drop of vanilla.

See what you think.


1/2 cup Mountain High Original Style yogurt - Vanilla
1/2 cup TJ's Lite Sour Cream
Zest of 1 TJ lemon
Juice from 1 lemon (about 3 Tbs)
1 Cucumber thinly sliced with a veggie-matic type veggie slicer set to very thin.
1 Tsp TJ's garlic (comes in a jar all pureed. A must in my kitchen)
3 Tbs fresh dill
1 tsp dried mint

salt and white pepper to taste.

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Tzatziki Creamy Garlic Cucumber Dip - Trade Joe's Style


OMG!!! I just had some Trader Joe's Tzatziki at their food sampling bar which we all know and love. We brought some home, and it didn't last very long.
I searched the Internet for a similar recipe as the ingredients on the tub and this is as close as I could find.
I used the Trader Joes ingredients, and just the measurements from the other recipe.

1/2 cup yogurt
1/2 cup TJ's Lite Sour Cream
Zest of 1 TJ lemon
Juice from 1 lemon (about 3 Tbs)
1 Cucumber thinly sliced with a veggie-matic type veggie slicer set to very thin.
1 Tsp TJ's garlic (comes in a jar all pureed. A must in my kitchen)
3 Tbs fresh dill
1 tsp dried mint

salt and white pepper to taste.

Mix it all together and serve with Trader Joes's Sesame Seed Pita bread.

Yum ; )

Okay, okay, it's almost as good as Trader Joes, but not quite. Please comment on any additions to make it better.

Okay, so I got a taste test yesterday, and the taster says it tastes better than TJ's.

But how can that be?
It's because I used this Mountain High Original Vanilla Yoghurt.

TJ's Creamy Garlic Cucumber Dip with Mountain High Yoghurt



The vanilla adds a sweetness to it that melts in your mouth.

If you can't get Mountain High Original Style Yoghurt where you live, try a full bodied natural yoghurt and add a touch of honey, and a drop of vanilla.

See what you think.

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

The Sandwich Generation



Have you had a good sandwich lately?
This is a photo essay I did today called The Sandwich Generation.
Ben told me about this concept where the baby boomers are sandwiched between their aging parents and their kids needing student expenses and tuition for colleges.

Thursday, May 27, 2010

Betty Hill's Homemade Jam


Lauren, Aidan and I were invited to dinner at Betty Hill's house in Corvallis. Richard and Kim were visiting, and we all got together for a wonderful dinner of Raclette. The Raclette was so amazing that we didn't stop to take a photo of it.

During our visit, Betty Hill invited me to see her prized garden. It had raised vegetable beds, fruit trees, and flowers. Every year Betty makes home made jam. Her supply from last summer was almost depleted. She gave us Blueberry Jam, Apricot Jam, and Strawberry Jam that she made to take home with us. This morning, I opened the jar of apricot jam and spread it on my English muffins. Betty's jam is exquisite! It is rich in fruit and not very sweet, just as I like it. Betty Hill says many 100% fruit jams on the market are mostly apple with some fruit. Hers is 100% apricots, or 100% blueberries, or 100% strawberries with not other fruit mixed in. This accounts for its richness of flavor and lower sugar content.
Thank you Betty Hill for having us over for Raclette this week and giving us some of you marvelous homemade jam.