May 8, 2024

Warm-up this Winter with Healthful Soup Recipes by Kathy Smart

Great health begins with great nutrition. Try these healthy and hearty soup recipes to jump start your winter wellness plan.
 

Citrus Infused Carrot Soup (8 servings)

Ingredients:

1 pound of carrots, chopped
1 tablespoon of butter
1 orange
1 cup of leeks, chopped
 ¼ teaspoon of nutmeg
1 teaspoon of salt and pepper
6 cups of chicken or vegetable broth
8 tablespoons yogurt
Fresh cilantro

Recipe Accolades:

The subtle taste of orange in this recipe always keeps guests guessing as to identify the special taste.  This soup is perfect after a long walk in the snow!

Dairy Free
Easy to Make
Gluten and Wheat free
Low in fat
Low Glycemic
No Added Refined Sugars
Vegetarian (if made with vegetable stock)

Directions:

Melt butter over medium heat in a large soup pot.  Add carrots and leeks and let cook gently for 10 minutes allowing the vegetables to soften.

Cut the orange in half and juice both halves and add juice to the vegetables.  Reserve the orange peels.

Add the chicken stock, and season with nutmeg, salt and pepper.

Take reserved orange peel and puree in a food processor and add to the soup.  Let soup simmer for 30 minutes over low heat.

Puree with blender. Adjust seasoning to taste.
 
Serve with a dollop of yogurt and a fresh sprig of cilantro.
 

Smokey Red Pepper Soup (4 Servings)

Ingredients:

4 sweet red peppers
2 tablespoons of butter/ coconut oil if dairy intolerant/vegan
1 cup onion finely chopped
1 teaspoon dried rosemary or one tablespoon fresh
5 cups chicken or vegetable stock
3 tablespoons tomato paste
1 teaspoon sea salt
4 teaspoons of coconut milk or whipping cream

Recipe Accolades:

The smokiness of the roasted red pepper blends together with the aromatic undertone of onion and rosemary to create a smooth soup without the added fat from cream.  Serve this soup with a sprig of fresh rosemary on top. Red peppers are low in calories and high in vitamin C, which helps to fight infections, heart disease and cancer.  Other key nutrients found in this colourful vegetable include calcium, iron, magnesium, phosphorus, zinc and B vitamins just to name a few.
 

Directions:

Preheat oven to broil. 

Put red peppers whole on baking sheet under broiler and turn regularly until the skins have blackened.  Remove peppers from oven and place into sealed plastic bag and let stand for 20 minutes.

Peel off skin from peppers and remove seeds and stem.  Half peppers while trying to save any juices that run from pepper.  Set aside.

Melt butter/oil in a saucepan and add onion and rosemary, cooking gently over low heat for 5 minutes. 

Add peppers with juices, and stock and bring to boil.  Reduce heat and simmer for 15 minutes.  Add tomato paste and sea salt.

Remove from heat and puree with an immersion blender until smooth.  Strain soup through a fine strainer and reheat in saucepan.

Serve soup hot or chilled and garnish with pepper, paprika and a delicate swirl of cream or coconut milk on top.
 

Curried Butternut Squash and Apple Soup (10 servings)

Ingredients:
2 cups onion, chopped
2 tbsp. coconut oil
1 tbsp. ground cumin
1 tbsp. garam masala
2 tsp. ground coriander
2 tsp. sea salt
6 cups butternut squash, peeled and chopped
2 cups sweet potato, peeled and cubed
2 cups apples, peeled and chopped
6 cups vegetable broth, low sodium 
1/2 cup coconut milk

Recipe Accolades:

Dairy Free
Gluten Free
Vegan

 

Directions:

In a large soup pot, sauté the onions and coconut oil until the
onions are soft and translucent.

Add all spices, sea salt, vegetables, apples, broth and coconut
milk to the onions.

Bring to a boil, then lower heat and simmer for 30 minutes until the ingredients are soft and tender.

Puree with a blender or immersion blender. Serve soup with a
swirl of coconut milk on top.

Kathy Smart, TV nutritionist, host and chef of ‘ Live the Smart Way ~ the world’s first vegetarian and gluten free TV show and author of  Live the Smart Way. More information may be found on  www.livethesmartway.com.

Ask A Pro by Candi Wingate

This article is brought to you by Nicki Anderson. Nicki Anderson has owned and operated Reality Fitness, Inc. Personal Training since 1992. Nicki lectures all over the world teaching trainers the secret to success in owning and operating their own personal training business. Nicki is the author of 4 books, including 8 Secrets to Creating a Successful Personal Training Business. A few of Nicki’s lecture topics include, Outrageous Customer Service, Biggest Mistakes Personal Trainers Make, Women in Business-Finding the Balance and many, many more all pertaining to business. As a successful business owner, author and columnist, Nicki also consults with personal trainers providing them with tips for success. To contact Nicki, email her, nicki@realityfitness.com or via her website, www.realityfitness.com 

 Question: How do I prevent my teen from getting discouraged when not making the sports team at school? How do I help him build self-confidence?  –Marc in Minneapolis, MN.

Answer:
We, as parents, want our children to grow up healthy, happy and self-confident. It is easy to determine what steps we can take to foster good physical health: proper nutrition, regular medical exams, regular exercise, etc. However, fostering happiness and self confidence can be more elusive. Valuing our children as individuals, communicating our love for them, and letting them feel truly heard are some of the many components to fostering happiness in our children. Fostering self-confidence, however takes effort, awareness and sensitivity in specific areas.

Acknowledge Self Confidence as a Learned Attribute. Self-confidence is, to some degree, a learned trait. That is to say that we generally start as teenagers with some degree of uncertainty. When we attempt an accomplishment, it is our success or failure, as well as the feedback that comes to us as a result that determines whether our level of self-confidence is bolstered or diminished.

Maintain Momentum of Small Successes. For example, if a third grade boy tries out for junior football and is chosen for the team, the boy will learn that he is strong and capable in this context. He will subsequently interact with other youth who also consider themselves strong and capable in the sport of football. These youngsters become friends which makes the boy feel good that others enjoy his company. This will further reinforce the concept that he is a good person and worthy of friends. As his football prowess grows, so will his assessment of his own capability. Thus, by participating in football, his self-esteem has been bolstered in athletic as well as social contexts.

Be Context-Specific when Offering Feedback. Just because the desired accomplishment didn’t come to fruition, doesn’t mean self confidence should lower. For example, if this same boy tries out for soccer and is not chosen for the team, the feedback he receives as a result of this perceived failure will determine the effect of this event on his level of self-confidence. If he receives feedback that he did very well, however he was just a not as fast of a runner than the boys that were chosen for the soccer team, the boy will understand that his not making the team is performance based. Choosing feedback that is performance based, instead of personally-based in most effective in building self confidence.

Watch your Words. Let’s follow the same example of the boy who did not make the soccer team. Maybe he was one of the youngest boys trying out, so therefore he may feel encouraged (he did well for his size and age), which bolsters his self-confidence. Conversely however, what if he returns home after try outs to report that he did not make the team and his parent provides the following critical in nature feedback, “you performed very poorly. What’s the matter with you?” The boy then internalizes this criticism as a personal innate flaw which then translates into diminishing his self-esteem.

Encourage Perseverance and Practice. Use small frequent experiences, regardless of the outcome to reward children’s participation and therefore begin lying down the building blocks of self-confidence. Continue trying-out, continue learning new skills and sports and continue to encourage him to make new friends and expand his social network.

Candi Wingate is an expert in the child care industry with over 20 years experience. She is the founder of Nannies4Hire.com and Care4Hire.com, and author of 100 Tips for Nannies & Families and The Nanny Factor: A Parent’s Guide to Finding the Right Nanny for Your Family

The Downside of Organization by Juli Shulem

The Downside of Organization.

It may sound ridiculous, but there can be a downside of being too organized. Here is a list of potential hazards you should be aware of:

You will find yourself with unexplained stress-free time in the course of a day because you will be able to find what you are seeking in a matter of minutes.

You will be able to dress and get ready for your day faster because you can see all the items in your closet. Nothing will be shoved in the back of a drawer or laying on the floor of your closet or bedroom.

You will save money not buying something for the second or third time because you couldn’t find the first one you owned due to the clutter it was stuck under.
 
When cleaning you will get that chore done in record time because you aren’t forced to move piles and piles of items to get to the surfaces.

You will not miss out on opportunities because you will have everything you are interested in doing scheduled in your calendar – where you can find it.

You will not need to schedule time to purge closets and rooms or “get organized” because once you get to that place and learn to keep it that way – one doesn’t need to schedule time getting there. You have arrived.

You will not have the physical or mental complications associated with stress as you will no longer experience stress or overwhelm due to disorder.

And lastly, you will have free time. Most haven’t experienced that concept without sitting on the beach in the Bahamas, so allow me to remind you what free time includes. This is a block of unscheduled, unoccupied, unencumbered, ‘not busy’ stretch of existence. In other words – you get to simply exist and fill the space of defined time, or undefined if you are so lucky, where you can do what you wish, or simply do nothing at all. Words often associated with this are: Nirvana, bliss and pure joy.

So, if you’re unable to recall the last time a friend asked what you were up to today and you responded relaxing,  it’s time. Make today the start of a new lifestyle- make today the day you get organized once and for all! Decrease stress, decrease drama, decrease overwhelm and increase peace, breathing easier…and FREE TIME!

Contributed by Juli Shulem (jshulem@gmail.com/805-964-2389), Efficiency Coach. www.julishulem.com, Efficiency Expert since 1984, and author of the eBook, Order! A Logical Approach to an Organized Way of Life, www.getordernow.com