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![]() My kids love to help by blending corn soup. |
Meals Kids Might Eat:
Blender Soups
by Jyotsna “Jo” Sreenivasan, from the October 2006 newsletter
My kids are fascinated with the blender. My four-year-old gets very upset if I blend anything without his help. Every once in a while I make a soup that needs to be pureed, and the kids thoroughly enjoy turning on the blender and watching the swirling contents become smooth and uniform.
I find that a blender makes a much smoother soup than a food processor. But it’s been a while since I owned a food processor, so maybe the newer ones are better at pureeing soups.
The process of pureeing a soup is a little tricky. Once you cook the soup, it’s best to let it cool a while before blending. You don’t want to be ladling boiling-hot soup into the blender jar, in case you spill it, or in case it spurts out the top. I often cook the soup in the afternoon and let it cool while I go pick up my younger son from preschool.
Before you blend, set an extra large clean pot on the stove. Place the pot with the soup close to the blender, and ladle the soup in until the blender jar is half full or so. Cover, blend, and then pour the pureed soup into the clean pot. Repeat the blending until all the soup is smooth. You can then re-heat the blended soup if necessary.
Theoretically, one way to get kids to try new things is to have them help out with the cooking. This sometimes works with blender soups. Maybe your kids will enjoy the process of blending so much that they’ll eat some of these soups!
I’m also including a recipe for “smart cookies,” which are really home-made granola bars. You can serve them with one of these soups – or not.
Squash and Apple Soup
(Adapted from 1,001 Vegetarian Recipes by Carol Gelles)
This soup is like velvet! It is so smooth, sweet and delicious.
2 teaspoons vegetable oil
1 ½ cups chopped, peeled apples
¾ cup chopped onion
¼ teaspoon ground ginger
2 cups vegetable broth (I use the Celefibr brand vegetable bouillon cubes dissolved
in water)
1 cup water
2 cups cubed butternut or buttercup squash
1/8 teaspoon salt, or to taste (may be necessary if your broth is salted)
Creamy Corn Soup
(from Honest Pretzels by Mollie Katzen)
Note: don’t replace the butter in this recipe with oil! The smell
and taste of the butter are heavenly.
1 tablespoon butter
6 scallions, minced (white and lower part of green stalk)
1 stalk celery, chopped
2 cups corn (frozen, canned, or fresh-off-the-cob)
½ teaspoon dried basil
1 cup vegetable broth, or the liquid from the can of corn
1 cup milk
½ teaspoon salt (you may not need this if your broth is salted)
Smart Cookies (AKA Granola Bars)
(from Honest Pretzels by Mollie Katzen)
1 ½ cups unbleached white flour (or ¾ cup white flour and ¾ cup whole wheat flour)
2 cups rolled oats
¼ cup oat bran or wheat germ
½ teaspoon cinnamon
½ teaspoon salt
2/3 cup brown sugar
1 cup apple juice
½ cup unsweetened applesauce
¼ cup canola oil
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Possible additions: ¾ cup chocolate chips; ½ cup dried cranberries, cherries or raisins; ½ cup shredded unsweetened coconut; ½ cup chopped nuts
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