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Monday, January 26, 2009

Quinoa Soup Recipe


Quinoa Soup
Originally uploaded by Judi FitzPatrick Studio
1. What is quinoa? It is a delicious grain that cooks quickly, very high in protein, a good source of fiber, gluten free, and easily digested. The seeds are usually available for sale in health food stores. Once it is cooked, you can recognize it by the small circles that become evident.

2. Why and when did I cook it? I was invited for dinner last week, offered to bring dessert. I’ve been attempting to get back to eating properly (for me) as much as possible. Since lasagna was the main dish (dairy, simple carbs, fat), I decided I wanted to make a dessert that had no refined sweetener; a healthier alternative to say - brownies. Since I had almost everything I needed to make a dish called Quinoa Pudding (Dr. Andrew Weil’s 8 Weeks to Optimum Health, chapter 2), that is what I made and brought.

3. The way you are directed to cook the quinoa always results in much more than is needed to make the finished pudding. In warmer weather I often use the leftovers to make a salad, much like tabouleh. Since it has been below freezing for many days now, this just didn’t fit the bill.

4. I decided to put the leftover quinoa into a soup using only items I had on hand. Below is the resultant recipe; I hope you will run with this and make it your own.

5. This dish is suitable for vegans as no animal products are included.

Quinoa Soup – On The Fly

1 jar whole pearl onions, drained, reserve the juice
1 T olive oil
1 T canola oil
Finely diced garlic (to taste)
1.5 to 2 cups of cooked quinoa
Vegetable stock (or water)
½ C cooked carrots
½ C frozen peas
Spices to taste
Salt and pepper to taste

Put the onions, oil, and garlic into a 3 quart saucepan and turn the heat on med. Allow all to sauté until the garlic is softened. At this point I added a little Tuscan Sunset (from Pensey’s Spices) and some red pepper flakes and continued to sauté for another minute or so.

Add the reserved onion juice if you like it. Add the quinoa and enough vegetable stock to cover the contents of the pot and stir. Then add the carrots and peas, salt, and pepper, and other spices if you like. Bring to simmering and keep it going until the peas are cooked.

One could easily use green beans or another vegetable in place of the peas, or add additional vegetables. Depending on how big the appetites are, this would serve 2-4 people.

Have fun and please let me know if you try it yourself.

9 comments:

T.Allen said...

I've never tried quinoa.I have texture issues, but I think I'm going to give it a shot-this looks too tasty to pass up.

High Desert Diva said...

Sounds yummy.

Suldog said...

Is it similar in texture to tapioca, perhaps?

Karen said...

I've never tried quinoa but now that you say it is smiliar to tabouleh (which I love)I'll give it a try! The soup sounds delicious :)

Kenna Elizabeth said...

mmmm... sounds great for cold weather. :)

Judi FitzPatrick said...

Thanks for all of your comments, they are most appreciated.
I won't say that quinoa is like anything else, per se. It comes out kind of light and fluffy and works well in many dishes.
Go on, give it a try!

Unknown said...

Yeah I was skeptical on the desert but it was super yummy so I bet this soup would be too (except the peas of course haha)! I must get Ginger over here, this is a recipe right up her alley :)

disabled account said...

here i am!!! up my alley!!! thanks for the link jenn. haha

i love quinoa, it is my favorite grain ever...hands down..yum, yum, yum!!!

i'm wondering about how it could be made into an actual dessert pudding though. perhaps adding dried fruit instead of vegetables and spicing it with cinnamon and vanilla and then sweetening it with a little molasses or maple syrup...the healthiest, tastiest, most nutritious and low glycemic sweeteners...i accept the challenge judi!! :)

i'll let you know.

Michelle (mkc photography) said...

yum, Judi!! I'm so excited to try this out some day soon - thank you for sharing :-D