Fennel and kale avgolemono soup

This quick and light version of the classic Greek lemon and egg soup has fennel and kale for some nutrition while maintaining the creamy and bright notes of the original. #meandthemoose #avgolemono #soup #souprecipe #avgolemonorecipe #easyrecipe #lu…

For this classic Greek lemon and egg soup, you slowly heat an emulsion of eggs, lemon juice, and broth for a quick, comforting bowl that packs a sweet and sour punch.

Take me to the recipe!

This quick and light version of the classic Greek lemon and egg soup has fennel and kale for some nutrition while maintaining the creamy and bright notes of the original. #meandthemoose #avgolemono #soup #souprecipe #avgolemonorecipe #easyrecipe #lu…

So guys, I’m trying to lose weight. I hate admitting that because it feels like a betrayal of my hard work to unlearn diet culture over this past year. BUT! Thanks to all of that work, I think I can lose a few pounds while maintaining a healthy relationship with food and my body. Because I love food and it’s not realistic for me to give any of it up. And, while I’m still working at loving my body, I appreciate all that it’s done for me and don’t feel like it has to match an unrealistic thin, white ideal.

But the fact is, I weigh more than I’d like to. Baby weight plus quarantine weight plus holiday weight has added up. I started reigning in my eating a few months ago, which helped my mental health. Somehow feasting on unlimited amounts of Nutella to deal with postpartum and covid anxiety wasn’t working. GO FIGURE. But I focused primarily on what I was eating, rather than on how much I was eating.

Now I need to face the statistics that having had Gestation Diabetes during my second pregnancy makes it more likely that I’ll develop Type II Diabetes if I don’t maintain a healthy weight. And, one of my chief physical complaints is back pain and when I’m holding onto extra weight, there’s more stress on my spine. I want to be able to play with and pick up my kids and I can’t do that if my back is out!

This quick and light version of the classic Greek lemon and egg soup has fennel and kale for some nutrition while maintaining the creamy and bright notes of the original. #meandthemoose #avgolemono #soup #souprecipe #avgolemonorecipe #easyrecipe #lu…

Enter, soup! I love soup in the winter anyway for its coziness, but it’s the perfect vehicle for veggies and healthy fats. It’s also filling and EASY.

This quick and light version of the classic Greek lemon and egg soup has fennel and kale for some nutrition while maintaining the creamy and bright notes of the original. #meandthemoose #avgolemono #soup #souprecipe #avgolemonorecipe #easyrecipe #lu…
This quick and light version of the classic Greek lemon and egg soup has fennel and kale for some nutrition while maintaining the creamy and bright notes of the original. #meandthemoose #avgolemono #soup #souprecipe #avgolemonorecipe #easyrecipe #lu…

This version of Avgolemono in particular is one of my favorites. It’s creamy without any dairy and a well-rounded meal with the orzo and veggies. It’s also infinitely adaptable based on your diet and preferences. Doing Whole 30? Leave out the orzo and add shredded chicken. Gluten free? Swap the orzo for rice. Vegetarian? Use veggie stock instead of chicken stock. Want more protein? Add beans or quinoa. Want it zingier? Add more lemon! Want it creamier? Add another egg! The variations are endless.

The only rule with Avgolemono is this: Don’t let the eggs come to a boil! You’ll end up with scrambled egg bits in your broth and nobody wants that.

This quick and light version of the classic Greek lemon and egg soup has fennel and kale for some nutrition while maintaining the creamy and bright notes of the original. #meandthemoose #avgolemono #soup #souprecipe #avgolemonorecipe #easyrecipe #lu…

Fennel and kale avgolemono soup 

Time: about 30 minutes, mostly active
Yield: about 6 cups

6 cups chicken stock
1 tsp salt + more to taste (I’ve added another 1/2 tsp at the end in some batches)
1/8th tsp of black pepper 
1 bay leaf
1 large garlic clove (or 2 medium/small), peeled and lightly smashed
1/2 cup uncooked orzo
3 eggs
¼ cup lemon juice (the juice of 1 large lemon) + more to taste
2 cups lacinto kale (1 small bunch) 
1 small fennel bulb, sliced paper thin

Combine the stock, salt, black pepper, bay leaf and garlic in a pot and bring to a boil. Scoop out 1 cup of the hot stock and set aside to cool. 

Scoop out the garlic clove and add it to a blender. Set aside. 

Add the orzo and cook according to package directions, minus one minute. 

While the orzo is cooking, chop the kale and slice the fennel as thinly as possible. Set aside. 

Add the eggs and the lemon juice to the blender with the cooled garlic. Set aside.

Once the orzo is done, turn the heat down all the way and let the broth just barely simmer. Add the kale and the fennel and stir.

Check the cooling cup of broth. It should be warm, but not hot. If you can comfortably leave your finger in the broth, it’s ready. If the broth is still too hot to touch, add an ice cube and check again in one minute after the ice has melted.

Whizz the garlic, eggs, and lemon juice in the blender until just combined and slightly frothy. Add the warm broth in a stream or in 4 batches if your blender doesn’t open while running. 

Add the egg, lemon, garlic, and stock emulsion to the simmering broth and cook, stirring, for about 5 more minutes. Don’t let the soup boil!

Taste for seasoning and add more salt, pepper, and lemon as needed.

French onion lentil and spinach soup

This French onion lentil and spinach soup warms your soul while being filled with iron and fiber. #meandthemoose #soup #souprecipes #mealsoup #lentils #spinach #Frenchonionsoup

This soup is healthy, warming, comforting, and filled with iron and fiber. It also tastes better the second day, so double the batch and enjoy the leftovers all week!

Take me to the recipe!

This French onion lentil and spinach soup warms your soul while being filled with iron and fiber. #meandthemoose #soup #souprecipes #mealsoup #lentils #spinach #Frenchonionsoup

I started making this soup when I was pregnant with Z and the thought of eating meat really turned my stomach. I was looking for nourishing soups that also tasted great and kept me full because while I LOOOOOOVE a soup, they don’t always fill me up unless they’re cream-based or more of a stew.

This French onion lentil and spinach soup warms your soul while being filled with iron and fiber. #meandthemoose #soup #souprecipes #mealsoup #lentils #spinach #Frenchonionsoup

Enter this soup. It starts off with a base of caramelized onions like you’re making French onion soup. I use a super-quick method for caramelizing onions that might take a minute to get the hang of, but turns raw onions into melty, caramelized goodness in about 20-25 minutes instead of 45-60 minutes. I outline the process here.

Basically, you’re using high heat and a covered pan while also de-glazing every 2-3 minutes to achieve that deep, rich color and flavor by utilizing all of the stuck on bits at the bottom of the pan. It can be tricky to find that sweet spot between browning and burning, but luckily, the onions are pretty forgiving and if they get a little too dark, you can just deglaze with a bit of extra water and turn the heat down a smidge.

This French onion lentil and spinach soup warms your soul while being filled with iron and fiber. #meandthemoose #soup #souprecipes #mealsoup #lentils #spinach #Frenchonionsoup
This French onion lentil and spinach soup warms your soul while being filled with iron and fiber. #meandthemoose #soup #souprecipes #mealsoup #lentils #spinach #Frenchonionsoup
This French onion lentil and spinach soup warms your soul while being filled with iron and fiber. #meandthemoose #soup #souprecipes #mealsoup #lentils #spinach #Frenchonionsoup

Once you have those jammy onions in the bag, you can basically add the rest of the ingredients (with a little watching for a few minutes) and let the stove do the rest of the work.

This soup makes me so so happy. I’ve made it for new moms during those rough postpartum days. I’ve also made it for snow days and arctic days, regular days and special days. I always wish I was eating it in front of a fire wearing a huge sweater and reading a book, but alas, that never happens.

This French onion lentil and spinach soup warms your soul while being filled with iron and fiber. #meandthemoose #soup #souprecipes #mealsoup #lentils #spinach #Frenchonionsoup

French onion lentil and spinach soup

5 cups sliced onions (about 3 large onions, sliced 1/8th of an inch thick)
3 Tbsp butter or olive oil (or a combo)
2 cups water
½ tsp dried thyme or 2 sprigs fresh thyme
1 tsp kosher salt 
1 Tbsp red wine vinegar
4 cups beef broth 
¾ cup dried green or brown lentils
1 cup frozen spinach or 1 bag fresh baby spinach 

Time: About 1 hour (30 minutes active)
Yield: about 5 cups of soup

 Slice the onions into 1/8th to 1/4th inch slices. 

Heat the oil and butter over a medium flame in a large skillet with high sides. 

Turn the heat up to medium high and add the onions. Cover and cook, for 2-3 minutes until the onions begin to brown and stick to the bottom of the pan. Pour in about 2 -4 Tbsp of water and scrape the brown bits from the bottom of the pan. Cover and cook for 2-3 more minutes and repeat the process. Continue cooking until the onions are a deep brown color, about 20-25 minutes. 

Add the thyme and salt and cook for 1 minute. 

Add the red wine vinegar and cook until evaporated, about 1-2 minutes.

Add the broth and the lentils. Bring to a boil over the highest flame. Once boiling, reduce the flame to low and simmer, covered, for about 30 minutes until the lentils are cooked, but have a little bit of crunch left to them. (Continue to cook for another 10 minutes if you prefer mushier lentils.)

Turn off the flame and stir in the spinach, either frozen or fresh, and stir to wilt. 

Test for seasoning. 

Quick(ish) Meat Sauce

This quick meat sauce achieves that slow-cooked depth of flavor with a little beef stock, tomato paste, and high heat. #meandthemoose #dinner #meatsaucerecipe #meatsauce #pasta #quickdinner

Meat sauces are usually long and slow affairs, but this version speeds things up with high heat and beef stock to mimic the flavor of a cooked-all-day sauce in a fraction of the time.

Take me to the sauce!

This quick meat sauce achieves that slow-cooked depth of flavor with a little beef stock, tomato paste, and high heat. #meandthemoose #dinner #meatsaucerecipe #meatsauce #pasta #quickdinner

I love a great, long-simmered, deeply flavored, unctuous Bolognese more than almost anything. That falling apart meat with a hint of acidic tomatoes all clinging to some wide flat noodles with a sprinkle of salty, nutty parmesan? Swoon.

But realistically, we never have time to make one. Even during these quarantined weekends we need flexibility for when the children inevitably short circuit and need a change of scenery.

It’s hard to achieve that depth of flavor without the long, slow simmer, but I’ve tried! And I think succeeded! However, there’s a reason why I call this a “meat sauce” and not “Bolognese.” It’s not the original. But it is a delicious approximation in about an hour.

This quick meat sauce achieves that slow-cooked depth of flavor with a little beef stock, tomato paste, and high heat. #meandthemoose #dinner #meatsaucerecipe #meatsauce #pasta #quickdinner
This quick meat sauce achieves that slow-cooked depth of flavor with a little beef stock, tomato paste, and high heat. #meandthemoose #dinner #meatsaucerecipe #meatsauce #pasta #quickdinner
This quick meat sauce achieves that slow-cooked depth of flavor with a little beef stock, tomato paste, and high heat. #meandthemoose #dinner #meatsaucerecipe #meatsauce #pasta #quickdinner
This quick meat sauce achieves that slow-cooked depth of flavor with a little beef stock, tomato paste, and high heat. #meandthemoose #dinner #meatsaucerecipe #meatsauce #pasta #quickdinner
This quick meat sauce achieves that slow-cooked depth of flavor with a little beef stock, tomato paste, and high heat. #meandthemoose #dinner #meatsaucerecipe #meatsauce #pasta #quickdinner

A couple of notes:

  • Use the leanest beef you can find. If you can’t get 90/10 or 85/15, use half of the amount of pork listed or leave it out entirely

  • This recipe is meant to be made mostly at high temperatures, but you’ll need to keep an eye on the sauce at every step to ensure that the liquids are evaporating fast enough, but that nothing is burning. We want the heat to caramelize and brown everything, but we don’t want anything to burn and turn bitter. You may have to do a significant amount of fiddling with the temperature throughout the cooking to speed things up or slow them down at intervals.

  • I list a range of amount of the tomato paste. I like it less tomato-y, but my husband likes it with a little more. The largest amount (6 oz) is one small can of tomato paste.

This quick meat sauce achieves that slow-cooked depth of flavor with a little beef stock, tomato paste, and high heat. #meandthemoose #dinner #meatsaucerecipe #meatsauce #pasta #quickdinner

Quick (ish) meat sauce 

2 Tbsp olive oil 
½ large onion, finely chopped (about 1 cup) 
1 large stalk celery, finely minced  (about ½ cup) 
1 small carrot, finely minced (about ½ cup) 
5 large garlic cloves, smashed 
1 lb ground beef (90/10 if you can find it) 
¼ lb ground pork or sausage, casings removed
1 tsp kosher salt 
4-6 oz tomato paste (5-6½ tbsp)
¼ cup red wine 
2 cups beef broth 
Pepper to taste

Time: about 1 hour for the sauce and the pasta, mostly active
Yield: 3-4 cups of sauce, or enough for 1 lb of pasta 

Heat a skillet over a medium flame. Add the oil and heat until the oil is shimmering and slips easily around the pan. Add the onion, celery, and carrots, and cook for about 10 minutes, stirring frequently, until the veggies soften and begin to brown.

Add the garlic. Cook until fragrant, 1-2 minutes, being careful not to burn. 

Add the meat and turn the heat back up to medium if you turned it down earlier. Stir and chop up the meat with your spatula breaking it into small pieces while cooking until no pink remains, about 5 minutes. 

Stop stirring and let the meat cook, undisturbed, until browned on the bottom, about 5 minutes. You should hear it sizzling and bubbling. If not, turn up the flame.

Add the tomato paste and wine and stir well to combine and deglaze the pan. Cook, stirring constantly, until the wine has evaporated, about 2 minutes. 

Add 1½ cup of beef broth and cook, stirring often, until it has evaporated, about 8-10 minutes. If the liquid isn’t evaporating fast enough, turn up the flame.

Add the final ½ cup of broth, turn the heat all the way down, and cover. Let simmer on the lowest heat while you cook your pasta. 

Bring your water to a boil and cook the pasta according to its package directions. Stir the sauce every few minutes while the pasta cooks.

Combine and serve.

Koginut squash soup

Koginut squash, a cross between butternut and kabocha, makes a creamy, herby, warm, and comforting soup. #meandthemoose #squashsoup #koginut #koginutsquash #squashrecipes #squashsouprecipes

This soup is so creamy, herby, warm, and comforting—everything a bowl of soup should be. I use Koginut, which is a cross between the butternut and kabocha varieties of squash, but use anything you have on hand!

Yes, soup for you!

Koginut squash, a cross between butternut and kabocha, makes a creamy, herby, warm, and comforting soup. #meandthemoose #squashsoup #koginut #koginutsquash #squashrecipes #squashsouprecipes

The koginut is my new favorite squash. It has the thick, creamy flesh of a kabocha squash but the mellow, sweet flavor of a butternut. If you can’t find one, have no fear. Basically any winter squash variety would be perfect here and all roast in roughly the same way. I’ve also used 2 extra large sweet potatoes in a pinch and the soup turned out equally delicious.

A note about roasting: One important element of this roasting method is to NOT trim the tops and bottom of the squash. Leaving them whole means that the steam gets trapped in the cavity of the squash so that it roasts and steams at the same time.

Also! In the recipe, you’ll note that I put the milk high up on the ingredients list even though we don’t add it until the end. That’s because, bringing it to room temperature and even microwaving it a bit makes it less likely that the milk solids will separate, which can happen if the cold milk is shocked by the hot soup. You can warm it in a pan on the stove while the soup simmers, but who wants to make another dish or worry about something scalding?

Koginut squash, a cross between butternut and kabocha, makes a creamy, herby, warm, and comforting soup. #meandthemoose #squashsoup #koginut #koginutsquash #squashrecipes #squashsouprecipes
Koginut squash, a cross between butternut and kabocha, makes a creamy, herby, warm, and comforting soup. #meandthemoose #squashsoup #koginut #koginutsquash #squashrecipes #squashsouprecipes
Koginut squash, a cross between butternut and kabocha, makes a creamy, herby, warm, and comforting soup. #meandthemoose #squashsoup #koginut #koginutsquash #squashrecipes #squashsouprecipes

Koginut squash soup 

 

Time: About 90 minutes, less than half of it active
Yield: 10 cups of soup 

3 cups roasted squash, about 1 medium winter squash or 2 very large sweet potatoes 
½ cup heavy cream or half and half 
1 Tbsp olive oil
½ large onion or 2 large shallots, roughly chopped 
5 large garlic cloves, roughly chopped 
1 Tbsp butter 
3 stems fresh thyme or ¼ tsp dried 
Heaping ¼ tsp cumin
Heaping ¼ tsp paprika 
1 tsp sea salt 
4-6 cups low sodium chicken stock 
2 Tbsp brown sugar (optional)

Heat oven to 425. Halve the squash and scoop out the seeds and stringy flesh inside. Place the squash cut side down on a parchment-lined baking sheet and roast for 30-45 minutes, until the squash is fork tender. 

Using a kitchen towel or oven mitt to protect your hands, scoop out the cooked flesh from the inside of the squash and set aside.

Measure out the cream or half-and-half. Let sit at room temperature while you prepare the rest of the soup.

In a large stock pot, heat the olive oil over a medium-low flame and then cook the onion until beginning to brown, about 5-6 minutes. Add the garlic and cook for 1 minute until fragrant. 

Add the butter and let melt and bubble slightly. 

Add the spices, stir well, and cook for 1 minute until fragrant. 

Add the squash and stir well to combine. Add the stock, stir well again, increase the flame to high, and let the liquid come to a boil.

Turn down the flame to low and let simmer for 15 minutes.

Puree the soup. 

Add the puree back to the original pot. Test the milk to see if any chill remains. If it feels cool to cold, microwave it for 30 seconds at a time until it feels room temperature or warmer. Add to the soup and stir.  

Test for seasoning and adjust as necessary. If desired, add 2 Tbsp of sugar (brown or white) and stir to combine.

Chicken burgers with pub cheese

The easiest, fastest chicken burgers you can make that are packed with flavor and a real crowd pleaser. #meandthemoose #burgers #chickenburgers #dinner #easydinnerrecipes #fastdinnerrecipes

These easy, fast chicken burgers are packed with flavor and ready in under 30 minutes. They’re what I cook on nights when it’s suddenly dinnertime, everyone’s hangry, and I need a quick, crowd-pleasing meal.

Take me to the burgers!

The easiest, fastest chicken burgers you can make that are packed with flavor and a real crowd pleaser. #meandthemoose #burgers #chickenburgers #dinner #easydinnerrecipes #fastdinnerrecipes

Guess what?! Change is hard! I sent my little off to Kindergarten on Monday (we’re on a hybrid schedule so he’s in school one week and at home the next) and then wandered around my house for 5 hours like I’d never been here before. (And he went back to Pre-K for almost two months this summer, so I don’t know why it felt so weird!)

That happens to me any time I go through a big transition. The edges suddenly feel a little fuzzy and I temporarily forget how to negotiate my day. It’s no wonder my kid struggles with change too.

How do you deal with change? Is there something that anchors you when the seas get rough? For me, it’s cooking. When I feel off kilter, I need to cook something. It focuses my mind, forces me to think about the present, and following a recipe is really helpful when I just want someone to tell me what to do.

So, here is a fab recipe for chicken burgers. If you’re feeling strange as this new school year starts, I’ll be the grown up telling you, “Make these for dinner. Here’s how.” Problem solved.

The easiest, fastest chicken burgers you can make that are packed with flavor and a real crowd pleaser. #meandthemoose #burgers #chickenburgers #dinner #easydinnerrecipes #fastdinnerrecipes
The easiest, fastest chicken burgers you can make that are packed with flavor and a real crowd pleaser. #meandthemoose #burgers #chickenburgers #dinner #easydinnerrecipes #fastdinnerrecipes

A couple of notes:

  • The heat of the skillet is important. A good sear on both sides and then covering the pan and letting the meat steam as it cooks seals in the juices as well as cooking the meat pretty fast.

  • I try not to handle the raw meat mixture too much; the more you mix the meat, cheese, and spices, the tougher and more rubbery it can get.

  • DO NOT, I REPEAT: DO NOT use another bowl to mix these ingredients. Use the container that the ground chicken came in. Save a dish.


Chicken burgers

Time: 25 minutes, mostly active
Yield: 4 burgers 

1 lb ground dark meat chicken (I like to use leg meat) 
1 tsp garlic powder 
1 tsp onion powder 
1 tsp fine sea salt 
½ tsp cumin 
½ tsp coriander 
pepper to taste
¼ cup pub cheese 
2 Tbsp olive oil

Sprinkle the seasonings and plop the cheese onto the ground chicken in the package. Using your hands, mix thoroughly, but try not to over mix. I like to make sure that there aren’t any pockets of dry spices, but if there are still blobs of cheese, that’s fine.

Heat a skillet over a medium high flame. Add the olive oil and heat until the oil slips easily around the pan. Add patties with ¼ of the mixture in each one, trying to shape them into rough circles. 

Get a good sear on one side. If the pan is hot enough, this should take about 3 minutes. Flip and sear on the other side, 3 more minutes.

Turn the flame to low and cover the skillet. Cook until the burgers are firm and have reached an internal temperature of 165, about 10-12 minutes.