I’ve taken up this for my daily Work from Home lunch.
third of a cup of soaked yellow lentils
same amount of brown rice
handful of Italian barley
two tablespoons of cooked black beans
some diced left over potatoes or celery
half a stick of carrot chopped
fist full of frozen spinach
a chunk of that cheese that dried out and hardened in the fridge
tablespoon of vegetable oil or beef tallow
teaspoon of Garam Masala, Garlic Powder, half a teaspoon of Cayenne pepper, half a teaspoon of tomato paste
five cups of water or so.
Bring to a boil then lower to a simmer, come back in 45 minutes.
Salt to taste, serve with some bread.
Jessica Fisher
Thanks for sharing!
Lynn
Freeze tomatoes that don’t get eaten in time – whole. Or even the tiny tomatoes or pieces or slices left over. For soup (or spagetti sauce), I defrost them on the stove in a few minutes and then puree them (I use magic bullet). They make a nice smooth sauce to add to the broth– and soup always tastes better with this puree in it. Today I also chopped head lettuce that we’ve been unable to digest, and that cooked nicely into the soup.
Jessica Fisher
Great tip! Thanks, Lynn.
Pat
Love soup. First time living alone, always had family. So am making soup and will freeze for later eating as well. Trying to scale to single living and not eating the same thing over and over. But soup…… well that’s different. A friend said she makes it on the thick side and serves it over noodles or spaghetti or rice and serves it as a main dish, not a soup. So will try that too, I guess just add a thickening rather like I do with stir fry. Thanks for reminding me.
Paula
What could I substitute for the potatoes?
Jessica Fisher
You can leave them out. It’s a very forgiving recipe. Just toss in what veg you have on hand.
Anna
I love soup, and I have made variations on this many times. (In other words, no recipe, just whatever is on hand.) When it was just 2 of us, I would put little bits of leftovers into the freezer until there was enough for soup. Now that I have 3 GROWING kids who can really pack it away, it’s more like little bits of things that didn’t get used for other meals. I also have a similar thing I do with chili- meat, beans, salsa, and a little tomato paste. Lots of varieties are possible, doesn’t require much thought or measuring, and it can even go in the crockpot or be a freezer meal. 🙂
Jessica
Weather for recipe and we make this all the time actually not all the time only when we have bits of this and that left over after them in a beagle storage bag in the freezer little bit of this little bit of thats little bit of chicken little bit of this and anything that is left over that is not Jedi leftover material for another meal. My son is autistic and picky. My picky child can eat any picky child for breakfast. But we save everything from every meal that has a tiny little bit of this and that we never waste to the best of our ability. Oh my goodness I think we’ve even thrown dried out chicken nuggets in that reconstitute into yummy delicious pillowy clouds of amazingness in the soup. Everything goes in the ziplock bag in the freezer if there are tiny portions. That way it is fresh and beautiful and frozen by the time we need it. We are a montly income family and when you run out of the money but have mouths to feed it is just brilliant. And so Jedi! Just so Jedi mind trick! It’s awesome! And frankly I grew up in a very well to do family. Middle class but well to do. I did not know how to make soup until I graduated from college because my mom always made me very very particular recipe which was frugal but still out of my grasp in college. And along came an amazing man that I married and we made an amazing child that is the pinnacle of our lives. But with that comes great responsibility and I’m so blessed that this child adores soup. I mean he adores soup adores it! soup, salad soup and salad did I mention soup and salad? I also make homemade bread in my bread machine that is so cheap and amazing. Perfect belly fillers and an amazing recipe that even a child with autism like my son can make and pass on and feel like a leader provider protector making it. Just priceless. I love the way you wrote your blog post. Thank you so much it empowers me even further.
Angie
We are not a cooked carrot kind of family because we don’t like them mushy. I found our years ago that if I grate the carrots into the soup we still get the flavor and vitamins without the mushiness. Plus, my family can no longer pick out the carrots. Win win for me!
Vanessa B
This is right in my wheelhouse! I am becoming a leftovers revival expert. I love the challenge of turning meal remenants into a totally different food experience.
Claire
I was just thinking of what soup to put in the slow cooker tomorrow. This is it:-)
I’ll just use what I have & make my own “stone soup”. Now to whip up some bread to go with it. I’m thinking your honey whole grain rolls 😀
Rosy Donnenwirth
I made this for dinner last night. i used frozen peas instead of corn. i didn’t have the purée or canned tomatoes. And I used a can of black eyed peas. My family loved it. Even my onion hater!
Jessica Fisher
Yay! I love to hear success stories. See? Lots of variations will work.
Sandi
I tend to do more of the heavily vegetable soups, sometimes with poultry sometimes without. I don’t generally have those little bits of leftovers to dump into soup, since there are only two of us to start with, and I will do a “bizarre but cleared out fridge” meal whenever little bits start to build up. I do, however, clear out the veggie drawer! Rough chops, dump in crockpot, simmer all day, eat and enjoy. In my experience, a really good stock/broth makes a big difference.
Creamy tomato soup can be quite good, too. Last time, I used V8 instead of plain tomato juice (it was on sale) and I liked it but the kid was less than impressed, so back to using plain juice next time. I have a crab and sweet corn chowder I’m really looking forward to making soon.
Tragic Sandwich
I’m in a soup mood these days–in fact, I wrote my own Stone Soup post recently!
Last winter I started making homemade soups and found that they do taste so much better that canned. I freeze small bits of leftovers (not enough for another serving) and then perioidically get them out and toss them in some homemade stock. (like Jessica, I make it and freeze it from other meals like roast chicken bones or from crockpot meals.) I find that the following are good to flavor “leftovers” soup: italian seasoning blend, garlic and minced onion, cajun seasoning blend, and taco seasoning ( great for a southwest style soup with beans, corn, and tomoto products).
Kaitensatsuma
I’ve taken up this for my daily Work from Home lunch.
third of a cup of soaked yellow lentils
same amount of brown rice
handful of Italian barley
two tablespoons of cooked black beans
some diced left over potatoes or celery
half a stick of carrot chopped
fist full of frozen spinach
a chunk of that cheese that dried out and hardened in the fridge
tablespoon of vegetable oil or beef tallow
teaspoon of Garam Masala, Garlic Powder, half a teaspoon of Cayenne pepper, half a teaspoon of tomato paste
five cups of water or so.
Bring to a boil then lower to a simmer, come back in 45 minutes.
Salt to taste, serve with some bread.
Jessica Fisher
Thanks for sharing!
Lynn
Freeze tomatoes that don’t get eaten in time – whole. Or even the tiny tomatoes or pieces or slices left over. For soup (or spagetti sauce), I defrost them on the stove in a few minutes and then puree them (I use magic bullet). They make a nice smooth sauce to add to the broth– and soup always tastes better with this puree in it. Today I also chopped head lettuce that we’ve been unable to digest, and that cooked nicely into the soup.
Jessica Fisher
Great tip! Thanks, Lynn.
Pat
Love soup. First time living alone, always had family. So am making soup and will freeze for later eating as well. Trying to scale to single living and not eating the same thing over and over. But soup…… well that’s different. A friend said she makes it on the thick side and serves it over noodles or spaghetti or rice and serves it as a main dish, not a soup. So will try that too, I guess just add a thickening rather like I do with stir fry. Thanks for reminding me.
Paula
What could I substitute for the potatoes?
Jessica Fisher
You can leave them out. It’s a very forgiving recipe. Just toss in what veg you have on hand.
Anna
I love soup, and I have made variations on this many times. (In other words, no recipe, just whatever is on hand.) When it was just 2 of us, I would put little bits of leftovers into the freezer until there was enough for soup. Now that I have 3 GROWING kids who can really pack it away, it’s more like little bits of things that didn’t get used for other meals. I also have a similar thing I do with chili- meat, beans, salsa, and a little tomato paste. Lots of varieties are possible, doesn’t require much thought or measuring, and it can even go in the crockpot or be a freezer meal. 🙂
Jessica
Weather for recipe and we make this all the time actually not all the time only when we have bits of this and that left over after them in a beagle storage bag in the freezer little bit of this little bit of thats little bit of chicken little bit of this and anything that is left over that is not Jedi leftover material for another meal. My son is autistic and picky. My picky child can eat any picky child for breakfast. But we save everything from every meal that has a tiny little bit of this and that we never waste to the best of our ability. Oh my goodness I think we’ve even thrown dried out chicken nuggets in that reconstitute into yummy delicious pillowy clouds of amazingness in the soup. Everything goes in the ziplock bag in the freezer if there are tiny portions. That way it is fresh and beautiful and frozen by the time we need it. We are a montly income family and when you run out of the money but have mouths to feed it is just brilliant. And so Jedi! Just so Jedi mind trick! It’s awesome! And frankly I grew up in a very well to do family. Middle class but well to do. I did not know how to make soup until I graduated from college because my mom always made me very very particular recipe which was frugal but still out of my grasp in college. And along came an amazing man that I married and we made an amazing child that is the pinnacle of our lives. But with that comes great responsibility and I’m so blessed that this child adores soup. I mean he adores soup adores it! soup, salad soup and salad did I mention soup and salad? I also make homemade bread in my bread machine that is so cheap and amazing. Perfect belly fillers and an amazing recipe that even a child with autism like my son can make and pass on and feel like a leader provider protector making it. Just priceless. I love the way you wrote your blog post. Thank you so much it empowers me even further.
Angie
We are not a cooked carrot kind of family because we don’t like them mushy. I found our years ago that if I grate the carrots into the soup we still get the flavor and vitamins without the mushiness. Plus, my family can no longer pick out the carrots. Win win for me!
Vanessa B
This is right in my wheelhouse! I am becoming a leftovers revival expert. I love the challenge of turning meal remenants into a totally different food experience.
Claire
I was just thinking of what soup to put in the slow cooker tomorrow. This is it:-)
I’ll just use what I have & make my own “stone soup”. Now to whip up some bread to go with it. I’m thinking your honey whole grain rolls 😀
Rosy Donnenwirth
I made this for dinner last night. i used frozen peas instead of corn. i didn’t have the purée or canned tomatoes. And I used a can of black eyed peas. My family loved it. Even my onion hater!
Jessica Fisher
Yay! I love to hear success stories. See? Lots of variations will work.
Sandi
I tend to do more of the heavily vegetable soups, sometimes with poultry sometimes without. I don’t generally have those little bits of leftovers to dump into soup, since there are only two of us to start with, and I will do a “bizarre but cleared out fridge” meal whenever little bits start to build up. I do, however, clear out the veggie drawer! Rough chops, dump in crockpot, simmer all day, eat and enjoy. In my experience, a really good stock/broth makes a big difference.
Creamy tomato soup can be quite good, too. Last time, I used V8 instead of plain tomato juice (it was on sale) and I liked it but the kid was less than impressed, so back to using plain juice next time. I have a crab and sweet corn chowder I’m really looking forward to making soon.
Tragic Sandwich
I’m in a soup mood these days–in fact, I wrote my own Stone Soup post recently!
http://www.tragicsandwich.com/mom-friendly-meals-stone-soup/
Kathryn M
Last winter I started making homemade soups and found that they do taste so much better that canned. I freeze small bits of leftovers (not enough for another serving) and then perioidically get them out and toss them in some homemade stock. (like Jessica, I make it and freeze it from other meals like roast chicken bones or from crockpot meals.) I find that the following are good to flavor “leftovers” soup: italian seasoning blend, garlic and minced onion, cajun seasoning blend, and taco seasoning ( great for a southwest style soup with beans, corn, and tomoto products).