American dietitian, Johanna Burani invites GI News readers to try recipes from her Italian kitchen (photographed by Sergio Burani).
Johanna Burani
Cream of carrot and celery soup
This simple, earthy soup tastes like it came right out of Mother Nature’s very own soup kettle! It’s wholesome, smooth and absolutely delicious. Make a double batch and freeze some. It will taste just as good the second time – if not even better.
Serves 4 (approx. 1½ cup each)
4 carrots (approx. 230 g/8 oz)
1 small head celery (approx. 700 g/1½ lb)
2 scant teaspoons caraway seeds
4 slices hearty rye bread
4 teaspoons extra virgin olive oil
4 teaspoons grated parmigiano reggiano
- Wash the vegetables with a vegetable brush. Cut off the ends and cut in half horizontally. Place vegetables in a large pot with 5 cups of lightly salted water. Cover and cook over moderate heat for 30 minutes or until vegetables are tender.
- Remove a quarter of the vegetables at a time and place in a blender. Process on high for a smooth puree, adding some of the cooking liquid if needed. Pour the puree into a medium sized pot. Continue processing all the vegetables until they are all pureed and in the pot. Add the remaining broth and keep warm on a low heat. Stir in the caraway seeds and mix well.
- Place a slice of bread on the bottom of each soup bowl. Ladle equal amounts of the hot soup into each bowl, over the bread. Drizzle a teaspoon of oil on each bowl of soup, sprinkle with the grated cheese and serve hot.
Energy: 777 kJ/ 185 cals; Protein 5 g; Fat 7 g (includes 1 g saturated fat and 1 mg cholesterol); Carbs 28 g; Fibre 7 g
Each month, GI News readers can shop smart, cook smart, eat well and save money with Diane Temple's Money Saving Meals.
Melt-in-the-mouth beef goulash
The big cost savings (it worked out at AUD $2.25 a serve or $2.10 without the pasta) came with using more vegetables and less meat than many standard goulash recipes, and making the stock with a stock powder (I like Vegeta for its flavour). This recipe uses the Australian 20 mL tablespoon, so US and UK readers will need to add an extra teaspoon of paprika and vinegar). About 20 mins to prepare and 1 hour 50 mins to cook.
Makes 8 serves
1 tablespoon olive oil
900 g (2 lbs) chuck steak, visible fat trimmed and chopped into large chunks
3 onions, peeled, halved and sliced
1 tablespoon red wine vinegar
2 teaspoons brown sugar
1 red capsicum, seeded and diced
1 green capsicum, seeded and diced
1 tablespoon paprika
¼ cup tomato paste
3 cups beef or chicken stock
250 g (9 oz) flat mushrooms, wiped and sliced
2 tablespoons chopped parsley
- Heat the oil in a large saucepan and brown the meat on all sides in 2–3 batches for 2–3 minutes for each batch over medium heat. Don’t overcrowd the pan or you’ll end up stewing the meat not browning it. Lift the meat out and set aside.
- Sauté the onion for 10 minutes over low heat until it is very soft and starting to caramelise, adding a little stock if it sticks to the pan. Add the red wine vinegar and sugar and stir for 1 minute to deglaze the pan (dislodging any delicious bits stuck on the bottom).
- Return the meat to the pan with the red and green capsicum, paprika, tomato paste and stock. Stir well to combine, bring to the boil, then reduce the heat, cover, and simmer on a low heat for 1 hour. Stir in the mushrooms and continue simmering for 30 minutes, until the meat is almost falling-apart tender.
- Scatter over the parsley and serve with rice (a low GI one of course), or with pasta, mashed sweet potato, or sourdough or a grainy bread to mop up the juices.
Energy: 1410 kJ/ 336 cals; Protein 29 g; Fat 9 g (includes 3 g saturated fat and 67 mg cholesterol); Carbs 34 g; Fibre 3 g
5 comments:
Would it be possible that this magnificent webpage could be read in Spanish language?
I would like to share this information with my friends and relatives but they hardly understand English.
Please.
Best regards from Mexico.
Hi Luigi, Thanks for the compliment and suggestion. These things come back to budget. We will put it on the wish list as it's a great idea. And if you know of anyone you think would be the right person to translate the website, tell them to get in touch with us. Needs to be someone with a nutrition or dietetics background.
Lovely Beef Goulash recipe, but best not use Vegeta as it contains MSG. Vegeta is used in most restaurant and hotel kitchens and customers may not be aware they are consuming MSG. Some people may be allergic to MSG and my partner had a frightening experience by consuming MSG in a restaurant. Great website. Thank you.
Glad you love Diane's goulash and of course, use your preferred stock powder without MSG - just make sure that it doesn't contain too much salt. Look at the ingredients list on the label and make sure it starts with food not additives or flavour enhancers.
Re MSG. There's a useful summary on Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monosodium_glutamate
Did you know that the rich deep savoury flavour for very few calories mushrooms deliver to dishes such as stroganoff, risotto, omelet, stir-fries, salads and of course stuffed mushrooms is all due to their high content of glutamate, the naturally occurring version of the favour enhancer monosodium glutamate or MSG. (See GI News October 2008).
thanks for the recipes. As a newly diagnosed diabetic this is greatly helpful. Also to the person requesting translation, there is a site online which can give translations in a few languages.
www.babelfish.yahoo.com will bea able to do the job.
regards from Australia
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