Summer Soup… and a giveaway

Soup?  In summer?  Yes, my kids love soup and even in hot weather their interest doesn’t wane.  But what makes this recipe so wonderful is that it can be eaten hot or cold.   

It is one of the simplest yet delicious soups that I know I can get all three of my kids to eat.  Even the pickiest one.  I changed the recipe slightly to be a bit lighter for the summer. I added milk and cream instead of just straight heavy cream.

Potato Leek Soup  

  • 7-8 medium or 4 large potatoes (russet or similar)
  • 3 leeks (lightest green and whites only)
  • 3 ½ cups vegetable or chicken broth
  • ¼ cup milk
  • ¼ cup whole milk
  • ¼  tsp white pepper
  • salt to taste (careful with the salt since the broth probably has enough)

Cut the leeks lengthwise then chop.  Rinse in a bowl to wash out any sand/dirt.  Once fully cleaned place in large sauce pan.IMG_1170IMG_1173 Peel and chop potatoes, add to leeks.  Add broth.  Simmer until potatoes are soft (about 25-30 minutes). IMG_1176 Take off heat and add milk and cream.  IMG_1184Use immersion blender to purée (standing blender will work too).  Season with white pepper and, if needed, salt.  Serve.  As I mentioned you can chill and serve cold too (Vichyssoise).IMG_1191

I am doing a giveaway of Dairy Pure insulated shopping bags for my US readers. Just make a comment that you’d like one in the comments section; I will select two people at random to receive the bags. They’re great for hot or cold food.

I did use the Garelick Farms’ Dairy Pure milk, which I buy when I’m not near a farm or able to get to Trader Joe’s for their organic milk. They have a “Worry-Free Flip Cap”.  “It’s easier to use and protects everything you love about Dairy Pure milk along with a 5-Point Purity Checklist. The Worry-Free Flip Cap also helps keep your milk cap where it belongs; on the bottle. Plus, Dairy Pure’s Purity Seal makes sure your milk stays fresh from farm to fridge.

Dairy Pure Milk

Garelick Farms’ Dairy Pure Milk 

  1. Our Farmers pledge NO artificial growth hormones
  2. We Test all milk for antibiotics
  3. Continuously quality tested to ensure purity
  4. Only from cows fed a nutritious diet
  5. Cold-shipped fresh from your trusted dairy within hours”

I also like that it’s not ultra pasteurized.  The flip-top cap does make it easier to open, pour and not lose the cap. 

Disclosure: I was ever so slightly compensated for this post.  And they asked me months ago, but I couldn’t get around to it with my schedule. 

Science Backs Up My Mom (well, when it comes to dairy it does)

Last night I had a conversation about fats in milk … the other person and I were in agreement that full-fat milk, cream cheese, yogurt, etc. tastes so much better than the low-fat or fat-free versions.  I added that we were taught in my family that it’s okay to eat/drink full-fat dairy as long as it was in moderation.  They said they were as well– they were Greek. My family is from New Zealand and Germany. We were wondering if that was one reason, we stuck with the cultural norm.  When I was growing up (and for long after) everyone around us (here in the US) was saying you needed to eat/drink low-fat dairy.  My kids only have low-fat milks at school, where there is no choice. 

Today, while spreading organic butter onto one son’s bagel and full-fat cream cheese on another, I heard on the radio about the latest studies (in a string of recent studies with similar outcomes) that those who consume full-fat dairy are less obese and also do not have higher incidence of heart disease than those who eat/drink low-fat or no-fat dairy.  

“Whatever the mechanism, this association between higher dairy fat and lower body weight appears to hold up in children, too.

As we reported last year, a study of children published in the Archives Of Diseases in Childhood, a sister publication of the British Medical Journal, concluded that low-fat milk was associated with more weight gain over time.” 

It’s what I’ve been saying for years, with only anecdotal evidence, but now science is backing up the beliefs my parents and grandparents passed on to me.

One point made in our conversation last night was that if you look at the ingredient list on those low-fat dairy packages, you notice that there is often added sugar and complex artificial additives to try to make it taste like full-fat dairy.  I remember my mother once, by mistake, bought fat-free cream cheese.  I put it on my bagel and was horribly shocked when I took a bite!  It tasted like plastic! Ick!  I thought it was off/bad – but it was just fat-free.  Think about it, fat-free cream cheese is an oxymoron.  Cream=fat.  Fat-free cream?  Hmm.

A fairly new snack/dessert my eldest two kids are absolutely loving is Greek yogurt with local honey. It’s hard to find full-fat, but I’ll be making my own this week. I buy the Fage 2% plain yogurt. 

Greek yogurt drizzled with local honey.

2% Greek yogurt drizzled with local honey.

The probiotics in yogurt is great for the immune system as is honey!  And if you eat local honey there’s a side benefit– reduced seasonal allergies. (Science still has to prove this one.)

So, if your family does consume dairy– go ahead and buy your kids and yourself the full-fat dairy.  Don’t be afraid. Don’t feel guilty.  Be confident you’re making the right choice. 

Now, to get the schools up-to-date with the science!