Melly’s Eipc Homemade Chicken Noodle Soup

Posted by Jessica Jewett No Comments »

>I have been having fantasies about this soup since I saw the blog post last night, as if someone slow-cooked my fantasy man for six hours and served him in a bowl. Chicken noodle soup is my go to feel good meal in the winter and I usually eat Healthy Choice because it’s less salty than Campbell’s. You see the theme in my life? Cans. So the prospect of forcing someone in my household to make this soup has me counting couch change for bribery and extortion. Enjoy.

This recipe comes from http://mellyskitchen.blogspot.com

Soups are my favorite part about cool weather. Every week, I make at least one pot of soup or two, depending on my mood. Chicken noodle is one of my favorites, but unfortunately, can also be the most time consuming, if you really want to do it right. Because of that, this recipe will also be long. My apologies, but I promise you, it’s worth it.

You can open up a can of chicken broth, throw in some chicken meat, some noodles and call it good. I emphasize you can. I can’t. That’s not my style.

For this particular recipe, I use a whole chicken, fresh vegetables and (usually) I make the noodles myself. This time I used Reames Frozen egg noodles, which, for the sake of simplicity, is what I’ll include in this recipe.

1 whole chicken, rinsed with “parts” removed (liver, kidney, giblets, etc.)
1 8oz jar Chicken “Better than Bouillion” (I got mine at Target)
1 lb full sized carrots, peeled
6 stalks of celery, washed with leaves still on
1 large onion, chopped

3 qt water
2 tsp salt
1 tsp black pepper
1 tsp garlic powder
1 tsp ground sage
½ tsp ground thyme
½ tsp poultry seasoning
¼ tsp ground marjoram
3 bay leaves

1 24oz pkg Reames frozen egg noodles

The first thing you have to make is a solid chicken stock. This cannot be rushed. It cannot be improvised. It’s going to take a good six hours to get a flavorful stock. If you don’t have time to do this, go find another recipe to make. Don’t say I didn’t told you so when the flavor isn’t what you want it to be. This recipe will make enough chicken stock for TWO pots of soup, but we’ll get to that in a minute.

STOCK:
Clean and rinse off the chicken, make sure there are no stray feathers. Also check that the organs and neck have been removed. Some people leave them in and remove them later. It’s up to you. I don’t simply because they kinda gross me out. (I’m a wuss.) Season the inside of the chicken cavity with a healthy sprinkle of salt and pepper and put it in the pot. (Make sure you’re using a large pot so the broth and vegetables have room to move around while it cooks.)

Take the rinseed celery stalks and cut off the leafy tops, including about an inch or so of regular stalk. This is the part that is going in the stock. Save the bottom half of the celery stalks for later. You should have 6-8 full sized carrots in a pound. Peel them all, but set aside half of them for later. For the stock, I don’t bother chopping the vegetables very delicately. They’re going to fall apart over that six hour time frame anyway, so I don’t worry about it. In fact, when I put the veggies in the pot after I’ve cleaned them, I break them into chunks instead of chopping them.

Over the top of the chicken, celery, onion and carrots, I add the 3qts of water, then the spices and the entire jar of Better than Bouillion. This isn’t my usual broth enhancer when I need a touch of chicken flavor, but I’ve found it has the best flavor of anything else on the shelf and is PERFECT in the soup. It’s also not as salty as other bouillion or soup bases on the market.

Put the pot on the stove and bring it to a boil over high heat. Once it comes to a boil, turn the heat down to where bubbles are just coming to the surface around the edge and in the center of the pot (around the chicken). Anything hotter and you’re losing a lot of flavor to steam. Anything lower and you’re not hot enough to get the flavor out (Thank you Alton Brown for that cooking tip). Simmer for 5-6 hours, stirring occasionally.

While the chicken is cooking, I chop up the remaining carrots and celery into coin-sized pieces and put aside for later.

Once the stock has finished simmering and everything has cooked down to limp little carcasses of their former selves, caaaaaarefully remove the chicken from the broth. I use large tongs, but you can use a slotted spoon, as well. Chances are, the chicken will fall apart, but if you’re careful, you should be able to get the biggest part of it out without too much trouble. I usually set the chicken inside a colander, then the colander inside a bowl so any broth that drains out can be put back into the pot later. Scoop any remaining chicken out of the pot and add it to this colander. Let the chicken cool a bit.

In the meantime, carefully scoop all the rest of the vegetables (and any fallen chicken parts) out of the broth so nothing is left but the plain stock. (I usually strain it into another pan to make it easier.) Throw away what you scoop out. It’s done its job. Let it rest in peace. 🙂 ***

Now, is where I become a chicken snob. I don’t like dark meat. It’s got a different texture and flavor than white meat and, to me, it doesn’t work well in soups and other recipes that require continued cooking. So I remove the chicken breast meat from the carcass and shred it into bite sized pieces. (The rest of the chicken carcass gets put in my pressure cooker with 2 c of water and some salt & pepper and later becomes chicken broth to use in other recipes down the road. Holler if you want to know how to do this.)

Next, you’re going to combine the chicken meat, the broth and the vegetables you chopped up earlier and combine them together. Bring to a full boil, lower the heat and let it cook at a low rolling boil until the vegetables are tender. Once everything has cooked, I ladle out about half of the soup into a freezer-safe container. Let the soup cool on the counter, then cover it tightly and freeze it. This can be used later and combined with a pkg of egg noodles to create a healthy soup when you don’t have the time to cook. It’s also perfect just by itself when you’re feeling under the weather.

Some people cook the noodles in the broth. I prefer to do it separately in a pot of slightly salted water while the vegetables are cooking. The package directions call for a 20 minute boil. I typically do about 15 mins, then drain the noodles. By now, the vegetables should be tender. I add the noodles to the chicken stock and cook an additional 10-15 mins. Add a homemade loaf of bread or rolls and you’ve got the perfect meal for a cool night.

Again, it’s a long process and to people with tight schedules, this probably won’t work for your random Tuesday evening. But it’s great when you’ve got the time or desire to cook. A friend of mine (a baker) said “I hug people with food.” I could probably say the same thing. When you spend over six hours making a meal for someone, they know you love them. 🙂

*** At this point, if you prefer a healthier soup, you can set the broth in the freezer for a couple hours so the fat rises to the top and you can skim it off. I did this, but in the fridge overnight. I think the fat provides a fantastic flavor to the soup, but for those who are watching their weight, it’s still got great flavor without the unnecessary fat.

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Why I choose silence on 9/11

Posted by Jessica Jewett 2 Comments »

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I had an entirely different blog written and scheduled to post today. Now I just don’t know what should be said. What can you say? We are approaching the tenth anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks and I find myself flooded with horrible memories, thrown right back to September 11, 2001, as if it happened yesterday.

That morning, I remember waking up to the sun streaming into my bedroom and thinking it was a beautiful day. I don’t remember what I was planning to do but everything went out the window when my mother burst into my room and said a plane had hit the World Trade Center. She didn’t appear too shaken by it though, so I thought maybe it was a little private plane that clipped the corner of a building or something. We reached the living room just in time to see the second plane hit the other building on live television. I remember going numb and my brain shifted to a place of thinking it wasn’t real just to cope with what I had just seen.

I remember this hushed conversation with my mother a few minutes later.

“Why would another plane crash right there?” I asked.

Ashen, she replied, “I think we’ve been attacked.”

“By who? Who would do this to us?”

“I don’t know. I’m not going to work today.”

Somewhere in the back of my mind, as I watched the columns of smoke rise into that perfect blue sky, I knew the buildings were going to collapse. I also knew that I had been having nightmares of plane crashes all summer and a strange tingling of guilt set in, as if I had known it was going to happen and I could have prevented it. The horror of watching people die on live television took the forefront though and we both lingered in the house amongst eerie silence, lost in our own thoughts. I don’t think there was anything that could have been said. Honestly, I don’t know how the news anchors kept talking.

Later that afternoon, we decided to go get something to eat and clear our minds. At the time, I lived in Calhoun, which is a small town in northwest Georgia not prone to much traffic. We noticed right away that every gas station in town had lines stretching around every block. People were buying gas as if we might never have gas again. My mother decided it was better to fill up our tank too rather than risk gas prices skyrocketing as soon as the government declared war. We sat in line for 45 minutes at a gas station on highway 53, which was the main strip through town. When we left, I noticed a man standing outside of another gas station guarding the building with a shotgun. Fear really set in for me then. It occurred to me that we were only about an hour and a half from Atlanta, a major city with major businesses and skyscrapers. What if Atlanta was next on the attack list?

In the days that followed, once the adrenalin died away, I can only describe it as sliding underwater where everything moves in slow motion and the fear of drowning paralyzes your body. I had what I describe as a hysterical breakdown on the fourth day after the attacks and my doctor at the time ordered me to turn off the television for at least a week or more. My mental health was in danger. It took a year for me to really recover from the things I saw on 9/11 and during that year, I felt like all of my creativity and life was drained from my body. I couldn’t write. I couldn’t do anything artistic. My life was survival on a day to day basis. Sometimes I felt stabs of guilt because I was having such a tough time recovering from the attacks, yet I wasn’t there. It wasn’t my right to struggle so much. A lot of other people struggled to recover from the attacks who weren’t there as well, I found out, and my doctor termed my problems as survivor’s guilt along with post-traumatic stress from seeing thousands die on live television. I used to have nightmares about watching people jump from windows just as I had seen that day.

Every anniversary, I think maybe it’ll be easier this time – maybe it won’t feel like such a blow. But then the anniversary comes around again and it feels like the rug got pulled out from under all of us. Each year, I spend the day in silence away from technology as best as I can. I prefer to spend that day in reflection on how far we have come and how far we have yet to go. I meditate and think about what I can do to make this world a better place by having my life when those people no longer have their lives. It’s precious to be able to breathe, to work in a garden, to hug your loved ones, to work every day, and to contribute love where others try to spread hate. I use 9/11 to remind myself that life is not guaranteed and should be used to help humanity evolve into something better.

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VA Loans

Posted by Jessica Jewett No Comments »

>I know there are a lot of you out there who are in the military or veterans of the military. If you’re having trouble getting a house or something else that requires substantial income, you could try getting VA Loans. Any active or retired military can call their number for a free quote and VA loan requirements are spelled out quite clearly on their website. Consider it as an option in providing for the future of your military family.

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