Chicken

Chicken Noodle Soup for the Sick of Being Sick Soul

All year, I work to try to avoid this very thing – getting sick. And I’m not talking cough, sniffle, sneeze sick, I’m talking shivers, trouble swallowing, ear aching, nose won’t stop running even though you blew it dry, sick.  Let me tell you, it sucks.

I felt it coming on late Monday, after I spent my whole day (starting at 6:45am) on site at a client conference.  Then, bam! Tuesday morning I woke up with half a sore throat, an aching ear and an inability to swallow anything with a consistency more solid than mashed potatoes.

Blame it on the change in weather – which by the way, is amazing at the moment but I can’t enjoy it because I’m home, sick as a dog, working while laying on the couch with the TV off. What frustrates me is that I can’t do anything about it. After seeing my doctor. Pure luck that I scheduled an appointment for yesterday. She broke the news to me. “It looks like you have a virus.” Dum dum dum. My world came crashing down. A virus? How in the world did that happen? I wash my hands, eat well, make sure I stay away from sick people, and yet … I have been diagnosed by the professional. The only good news is that she put me on a Z-Pak, a five-day antibiotic treatment whose powers are so great that hopefully it will have me feeling better before the long weekend rolls around.

Between email and projects, I’ve managed to create a giant pile of Kleenex and also make myself some really easy chicken noodle soup.

Why chicken noodle soup? You might ask. Well, a handful of scientific studies show that chicken soup really could have medicinal value. A study published in 2000 in the medical journal Chest by Dr. Stephen Rennard of the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha found that chicken noodle soup helps reduce upper respiratory cold symptoms by inhibiting the migration neutrophils, infection-fighting cells.

Dr. Rennard conducted lab tests to determine why chicken soup might help colds, starting with his wife’s homemade recipe. The recipe was handed down by her Lithuanian grandmother. Using blood samples from volunteers, he showed that the soup inhibited the movement of neutrophils, the most common type of white blood cell that defends against infection.  To find out more about Dr. Rennard’s findings, visit http://www.unmc.edu/chickensoup/index.htm

So here’s my chicken noodle soup recipe. Mostly made of food I had in my fridge (not much really).

 

 

Chicken Noodle Soup Recipe

Ingredients

2 Chicken Breasts
2 large Carrots
1 Medium Onion, chopped
2 Red Potatoes, chopped
1 box Low Sodium Chicken Broth
1  ½ cups Thin Spaghetti, broken in half
Olive Oil
Salt to taste
Oregano to taste
 
 

Directions

Boil chicken breasts for 20 minutes, drain water.
Cut chicken into small squares, or shreds
Sauté onion with 1 tablespoon (I used 2 swirls) olive oil until translucent
Add carrots and potatoes, sauté for 2 minutes.
Add chicken broth
Add noodles
Add chicken
Stir carefully as not to break the noodles.
Let boil once it boils, add salt and oregano to taste
Allow the soup to continue boiling on low-medium for another 20 minutes.
 

Serve with a box of Kleenex and a warm blanket.

Goat Cheese Recipes

The other day, as I was rummaging through the fridge for a snack, I came across a package of goat cheese that was only ¼ eaten. Since we don’t keep many salty snacks in the house – because I’d be tempted to eat them, all in one sitting – I decided to snack on some goat cheese and a mix of saltines/Triscuit crackers. I had only eaten a bit more before I realized that this huge package of goat cheese that’s been sitting in my fridge for more than a month will be expiring on September 26.

 

What to do with a little less than half a package of goat cheese expiring in two weeks? Make a goat cheese inspired dinner, of course!

 

On the Menu

Spinach, Goat Cheese and Walnut Salad – one of my own creations with olive oil, rosemary, lemon vinaigrette

Rosemary Goat Cheese Chickenmy own recipe

Mini Goat Cheese Pizzas– my own recipe

 

Spinach, Goat Cheese and Walnut Salad

Spinach, Goat Cheese and Walnut Salad

Ingredients

2 handfuls of Baby Spinach
2 tablespoons crumbled Goat Cheese
2 tablespoons Walnuts (whole or chopped)
1 large Roma Tomato, chopped

Dressing

Mix together olive oil, rosemary (leaves and dry), Lemon juice, salt.
Mix salad ingredients together, add dressing
 
Rosemary, Goat Cheese Chicken

 

Rosemary, Goat Cheese Chicken

Ingredients

2 chicken breasts
2 tablespoons Lemon Pepper
2 tablespoons Pine nuts (sautéed in olive oil)
2 tablespoons Rosemary (fresh and dried)
¼ packet Goat Cheese
½ cup Chicken stock/broth
2 tablespoons olive oil

Directions

Rub chicken breasts with lemon pepper
Sear in a skillet with 1 tablespoon olive oil until browned
Place in a baking dish
Sauté Pine Nuts in olive oil until lightly browned
Cut Goat cheese into ½ inch thick pieces
Place pieces of goat cheese over each chicken breast
Sprinkle with fresh rosemary and pine nuts
Add chicken stock
Cover baking dish with aluminum foil
Bake at 350 for 30 minutes
 
Mini Goat Cheese Pizzas

 

Mini Goat Cheese Pizzas

Ingredients

1/8 packet Goat cheese, chopped
Tomato sauce
½ onion, chopped
1 tablespoon olive oil
Mushrooms (canned)
1 tablespoon pine nuts
1  can (16.3 oz) Pillsbury® Grands!® refrigerated biscuits
1 cup shredded Mozzarella

Directions

Sauté onions in olive oil until caramelized,
Sauté pine nuts in the same oil, drain extra oil
Lay biscuits out on baking sheet, and flatten with your fingers
Spoon tomato sauce on each biscuit
Add onions, mushrooms, shredded mozzarella
Top with goat cheese and pine nuts
 Bake at 350 degrees for 14-17 minutes
 

For two people, we have a lot of left overs. That means, I’ll be having pizza and salad for lunch tomorrow. Yum!

What culinary creations have you come up with that involve a surplus or close-to-expriation of a food item? Share your stories in the comments.