A Curative Concoction for the Common Cold
Here's what you'll need.
~ Chicken Legs (4-6 legs; 4-5 lbs)
~ Celery
~ 1 Spanish onion (or 2 small yellow)
~ Chicken bullion
~ Carrots
~ Uncle Ben's long grain wild rice (fast cook recipe or microwavable pouch)
~ 1-2 bay leaves
~ Salt and pepper
And now, clear-cut, easy-to-follow-even-through-haze-of-cold-medicine directions:
In large pot or Dutch oven place chicken legs with enough water to cover plus 2 inches. Start boiling.
Add 1-2 bay leaves, 10-12 bullion cubes, salt and pepper to taste.
Chop celery - enough equal to 3 stalks. Add to pot.
¨ If not well, don't bother chopping, cut leafy top part off and add the stalks to pot, plus or minus a few leaves.
Chop carrots - one good handful. Add to pot.
¨ If not well, don't bother chopping, use baby carrots.
Chop onion - 1/4 inch slice from center of Spanish, or two golf ball sized yellow onions. Add to pot. A small piece of bread held in the mouth will prevent eyes from stinging while slicing onion.
¨ If not well, don't bother chopping, put slice of Spanish in whole.
Cover and boil all until meat starts falling off the bones (40-50 minutes).
Take meat out and cover on plate to cool (about 30 minutes). Continue boiling mixture on high heat (and watch it so it doesn't scorch!).
De-bone and skin chicken and dice. Put back into boiled down mixture.
Add Uncle Ben’s wild rice. Easiest to use the pre-cooked packages, but also can cook rice separately and add.
¨ If not well, just use the pre-cooked microwavable rice – don’t bother microwaving, just pour it in the pot.
::PAUSE::
Customarily, this family recipe calls for egg noodles. I, however, prefer grains in soup, such as barley and wild rice. Therefore, rice is used in this recipe, but if the idea of chicken rice soup is blasphemous to you, noodles can easily be substituted!
::UNPAUSE::
Repeatedly taste and boil until soup reaches desired strength.
Optional - draw out broth with ladle, let sit in clear container, and use turkey baster to pull out settled broth from bottom of container and place back in pot to boil (leaving separated fat in container to be disposed of).
¨ If not well, just wait until later when soup is chilled, then remove the hardened fat from the top of the pot with a spoon and dispose.
So there you have it. If you're truly sick, you may find that this pot becomes your sole sustenance, morning, noon and night. There's nothing wrong with that - it's one heck of a hearty, healthful soup - stew, really - that will have you back on your feet in no time!
Yours in the love of the restorative powers of food,
AL
Noses dribble, noses droop
ReplyDeleteWhat you need is chicken soup!
Great posting!
I'm so glad you feel better.