Treasures From The Sea & Chana Dal Soup

Why are fish so good for you?  Because they eat sea vegetables!  Skip the middle-man and save money by eating the sea vegetable yourself!

Did you know that sea vegetables contain up to ten to twenty times the minerals of other foods?  These veggies from the sea are absolutely loaded with minerals like calcium, magnesium and zinc.  They are also the richest whole food source of iodine, a mineral that helps to keep the thyroid functioning properly.  Sea vegetables are SO good for you, but for many they are an acquired taste.  I confess, I do not LOVE the taste of sea vegetables on their own, so I typically hide them in recipes, like cooking my beans with the sea vegetable Kombu. By cooking bean based soups and stews with kombu, you can add valuable minerals to the beans, which soften them and make them more digestible (read: less gas!).  When the soup is ready, you can take out the kombu, cut it up and put it back in the soup or remove it completely.

Want to learn more about sea vegetables?  Join me on February 16th from 6-8 pm for a Sea Vegetable Cooking Class.  You will learn about the different varieties of sea vegetables and how to add them to your diet effortlessly.  We will prepare several tasty sea vegetable dishes from recipes that you can take home to replicate. Prepare to feel GREAT after this mineral intensive class! For more information and to register, please click here.

Enjoy the following delicious soup recipe that uses Kombu.  Until Next Time, Eat Well, Be Well and LOVE Every Bite!

~Jennifer

Chana Dal Soup

Serves 6

Preparation Time: 15 minutes

Cooking Time: 20 minutes

Equipment Needed: Soup pot

Chana Dal are baby chickpeas, very cute indeed!  If you can’t find them, you could substitute yellow split peas.

FREEZE RIGHT THERE! This soup will freeze well without the baby spinach, so add spinach leaves to each bowl instead of the whole pot.

1 Tablespoon unrefined coconut oil

1 large leek, washed well and sliced

2 stalks celery, sliced

2 carrots, sliced

3 cloves garlic, minced

1 cup dry chana dal (baby chickpeas) or yellow split peas

1 strip kombu (See What is It? Below)

2 1/2 cups vegetable stock

2 1/2 cups water

1 15-oz can coconut milk

1-2 Tablespoons thai chili paste**

1 Tablespoon fresh squeezed lemon juice

salt and pepper to taste

3 cups baby spinach leaves, washed

Melt oil in a large saucepan.  Add leek, celery, carrots and garlic and sauté for 3-4 minutes. Add dal, kombu stock and water and bring to a boil.  Reduce heat and simmer for 30 minutes or until dal is tender.

Reserve 1/4 cup of the coconut milk and put it in a small saucepan.  Now add the rest of the can of coconut milk to the soup along with the lemon juice.

HAVE KIDS OR PEOPLE WHO CAN’T TOLERATE SPICY FOODS? At this point, take out enough soup for them.  It will need some salt and pepper but will be pretty tasty even without all of the other stuff.  Then, just follow the rest of the directions.

Heat the 1/4 cup coconut milk over medium heat and add the chili paste(**In small batches of 1-2 teaspoons at a time), whisking until paste is completely dissolved.  Stir this mixture into soup pot thoroughly, heating through. Taste for spiciness and for salt and pepper.  If you think it needs more spice, take out some of the hot soup liquid, put it in the small saucepan and dissolve more chili paste into it. Then add that to the pot.   In other words, don’t add a blop of chili paste into the soup without making sure it is dissolved 1st.  This is NOT something you want to take a big bite of, for sure! And yes, I am speaking from experience!

When ready to serve, remove Kombu and Serve in bowls with a 1/2 cup baby spinach leaves (ask kids to find the buried treasure!) on the bottom.  The hot soup will wilt the greens.  Enjoy!!

What is it?  KOMBU?  Kombu is a sea vegetable (otherwise known as kelp) that is a rich source of minerals, including calcium, magnesium and iodine.  By cooking soups and stews with kombu, you can add valuable minerals to the pot of soup.  Plus, kombu actually helps to make beans more digestible.  When the soup is ready, you can either take out the kombu, cut it up and put it back in the soup or remove it completely.

This recipe is from my Weekly Meal Plan.  You get 4 healthy recipes, an organized shopping list and coupons to New Leaf Community Markets.  You can try it free for a month by going to www.nourishingnutrition.com.

Cereal guy

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