Skip to main content

It's Soup Time

Oh last weekend we had a taste of autumn and we will again this weekend. 
Plus tomorrow is the autumnal equinox and my favorite time of the year for me. I love the colors, the smells, the crispness in the air and the way the sunlight looks in the pastures. It is also my favorite time for making all those comfort foods, with soups being top on the list.
That is what I made this pass week, first soup was Vegetable Beef and Barley and then Split Pea.
Then you add biscuits or corn bread and I call it a perfect meal.


Now Karen over at Sew Many Ways is having A Souper Douper  Linking Party on Saturday 22, so if you have a soup recipe too that you would like share, I hope you'll jump on over there. It's will a great way to find new soup recipes. 

Here are mine 



This one came from Fix-It and Forget-It Lightly

Vegetable Beef and Barley Soup

1 lb lean stewing meat, cut into bite-sized pieces
1/2 cup onions, chopped
1/2 cup cut green beans, fresh or frozen
1/2 cup corn, fresh or frozen
4 cups fat-free, low sodium beef broth
2 14 1/2-oz cans low-sodium V8 juice
2/3 cup pearl barley, uncooked
1 cup water

1. Combine all ingredients in a slow cooker.
2. Cover. Cook on high 5-7 hours, until vegetables are cooked to your liking




Split Pea Soup

1 cup dry split peas
4 cups chicken broth
1 - 1 1/2 lb ham bone or smokey pork hocks
1/4 tsp. dried marjoram
1 bay leaf
1/2 cup chopped carrot
1/2 cup chopped celery
1/2 cup chopped onion

Rinse peas. In a large saucepan combine peas, broth, meat, marjoram, bay leaf and dash pepper. Bring to boiling, reduce heat. Cover, simmer for 1 hour. Stir occasionally. Remove meat. When cool enough to handle, cut meat off the bone and coarsely  chop. Discard bone. Return meat to saucepan. Stir in carrots, celery, and onion. Return to boiling; reduce heat. Cover, simmer for 20 - 30 mins. or till vegetables are crisp-tender. Discard bay leaf. Makes 4 main-dish servings.


Enjoy a nice warm bowl of soup today.

Kat
=^..^=















Comments

  1. I hate pea soup but the beef and barley looks great. I saved it and I will try it this fall

    ReplyDelete
  2. Funny, with the cooler temperatures I start thinking of soups, too...Potato, White Chicken Chili, Chicken Tortilla, yum!
    Mama Bear

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Welcome friends to share a thought, I enjoy reading them and will try my best to reply back by email most of the time. But if you do not hear back it's because you are a no-reply blogger.

Popular posts from this blog

How to Make a Portable Design Wall

I had wanted to get a portable design wall to take to retreats but did not want to pay the price. Looked at various pins on pinterest and took ideas from more than one to come up with my verison. It worked out great and only cost a fraction of the price. The PVC pipes, joints and 2 yards of felt cost under $22.00 My design wall is 4' x 4' which stands approximately 5 1/5' tall. For this size need 2 - 10ft length of 3/4" PVC pipe for the frame and 4ft of 1" PVC pipe for the feet Cut the 3/4" PVC into 4 - 4' section                                                                                       2 - 1' section              Cut the 1"  PVC into 4 - 1' section          The joints you'll need will be 2 - 3/4" elbows 2 - 3/4" T's 2 - 3/4" to 1" T (this will be the base of the Feet) 4 - 1" elbow Also need pipe cutters (this cost me almost as much

Yarn Along 2/20/13 Spoon Pin Doily

It's snowing here and I know some of you are tired of snow but here we will take the moisture any way we can get it. Plus it just gives me a reason to stay in and work on some of my projects. In this picture I'm not sure if you can make it out but in the background there are some wild turkeys that hang around the house sometime, just  chilling This project I'm working on is Spool Pin Doilies.   I had never heard of them before until Bonnie Hunter had mentioned it on her blog . She a had a viewer send her one for her sewing machine along with a pattern. I did not like the pattern but loved the idea so I decided to make up my own version. I wanted a more simple, smaller and fuller doily. So I tried different thread sizes to get one that I like. (From left to right) I tried sock yarn, which I'll redo because I think I like that look. Heavy weight crochet thread, nope too big Bamboo yarn, I like it. Looks good on my Kenmore. Pearl cott

What's Up

Well that is a big question, what's up Seeing how I haven't posted since before the retreat I went to. So I will show what I did at the retreat and what I have been doing these past few days, which is this Log Cabin Christmas Tree  wall hanging I have the blocks completed and now it just a matter of getting them sewn together. I'll get to that tomorrow. While at the retreat I made this baby quilt top with the disappearing 4-patch block. I had a charm pack and used some "snow" fabric Kaufman snow is one of my favorite whites to use. It's white but not a stark, bright white, goes well with a majority of the fabric I've collected. I started late making my blocks for RCS14 First I wasn't sure what pattern I wanted to make and then with all that was going on the first part of the year, I didn't start until July. One quilt is using a quarter log cabin in solid colors. I made these at the retreat, have the other half t