Friday, March 20, 2015



Tomato Soup with Black Beans and Spinach
Time to prepare: 30 minutes from start to finish
Prep Work: Very little
Serves 4
(Thank you, South Tulsa Living magazine for publishing this recipe in your March 2015 issue.)

Ingredients Needed:
1 15-ounce can black beans, no salt added, drained and rinsed
3 cups vegetable broth
1 14.5-ounce can chopped tomatoes, no salt added
1 8-ounce can tomato sauce, no salt added
1 cup salsa
1 tsp. cumin
2-3 tsp. chopped garlic
3-4 cups of fresh baby spinach leaves
½ cup nutritional yeast (you can use a bit of Parmesan cheese if you prefer)
Bragg Liquid Aminos (or reduced sodium soy sauce)

Directions:
Place drained beans, garlic and vegetable broth in a medium saucepan. Bring to a boil, cover and cook over low heat for 15 minutes. Add the canned chopped tomatoes, tomato sauce, salsa and cumin and cook, stirring occasionally, until the soup is heated through, another 5-10 minutes.

Serving up:
Place one cup of spinach leaves in the bottom of each soup bowl. Sprinkle with 1 tablespoon of nutritional yeast (or 1 tsp. of Parmesan cheese) and drizzle with 1 Tablespoon of Bragg’s (or soy sauce). Ladle hot soup into bowl over spinach leaves and let sit for one minute, just until spinach is gently wilted. Eat up! YUMMERS!

Notes: This soup is very easy to put together. My husband commented that even 'he can make it' and does.  Jeff cooks up a double batch of this soup in the crock pot when he goes out to our Colorado cabin and eats it throughout the week.

I got the original recipe idea from The McDougall Quick & Easy Cookbook. The book’s recipe called for black-eyed peas and frozen spinach. I started with the original recipe and then tweaked it to suit my personal tastes. I prefer black beans and fresh spinach. You can use whichever you like best.  I've used navy beans and kidney beans, too. They all add a slightly different flavor to this heart healthy soup. If you use the frozen spinach, you’ll want to add it in when you’re simmering the soup until the spinach is heated through.

Corn is another nice addition to this soup. Just add a cup of frozen corn to the simmering soup until the corn is tender. You can add additional vegetables, if you like. Onions, celery and even some leftover baked potatoes work nicely with the other flavors.

This soup is even better after it’s been allowed to sit in the refrigerator for a day or two. I love to make enough to eat once right away and then have plenty for leftovers.




Monday, March 2, 2015

Bean Burgers with 'special sauce'


Ripped from the pages of cleanfooddirtygirl.com, I can't resist posting yet again from this awesome chef's cook book.  After making these burgers exactly as directed and adding the 'paprika garlic burger sauce' made to the letter, Jeff took a bite and said 'this is the best bean burger I've ever had.'  I thought they were pretty tasty too.  

Thanks, Molly, for your delicious and healthy recipes.  I continue to be wowed and amazed.  We bow to your yumminess.

If you are interested in Molly's recipe and quit wit and repartee?  Click HERE (and scroll all the way to the bottom of Molly's page to find the recipe for her burgers and sauce)! Remember, cleanfooddirtygirl.com is not for the faint of heart i.e. strong language may put some people off.  If this is you, please resist the urge to click on the link.  For all others, I strongly recommend Molly's recipe for those who love eating a whole-foods/plant-based diet.




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