Showing posts with label elderberry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label elderberry. Show all posts

Sunday, January 11, 2015

Medicinal Herb & Chicken Soup

Okay, so you've heard that chicken soup is for the soul, for a cold, for the flu and for just about everything... BUT not all chicken soups are created equal.  This one has it all covered in my opinion.  We eat this throughout the year but even more so in winter when people around us are sick and we are more susceptible to becoming ill ourselves due to less fresh foods from our gardens or from less vitamin D.  I can proudly say that nobody in my family has been to the doctor for an illness in the past eight years! I believe it is so important to learn to care for ourselves, first by preventative health and second, by knowing what to do in case you do come down with something.  Between the five people in my family we have been sick probably five times (collectively) in the last ten years.  Even when we were sick, we quickly recovered.  The trick is to NOT run to the doctor for an antibiotic prescription.  You can easily take care of coughs, colds, flus, viruses, stomach and digestive issues, and many other ailments on your own.  There is a place and time for doctors, but that is not every time that you sniffle.   Here is one of the many tools I have in my home's "medicine chest" to keep us healthy year round.  This recipe can be tweaked depending on your taste preference or what you have on hand.  Here is what I used today:


  • One whole chicken, I took the skin off but added in the giblets for extra iron, and for sure leave the bones.  Slowly simmer the chicken for about 45 minutes before you add anything else so the bones really get the chance to release their calcium and gelatin into the broth.
  • Chinese Five Spice which consists of fennel, anise, star anise, cloves, and cinnamon.  Warming herbs that help the body's systems function more efficiently and help circulation.
  •  Parsley Boost the immune system by providing important vitamins, including Vitamins A, C,  B 12, and K. Helps flush excess fluid (improves kidney function) and tones nervous system.
  • Turmeric Powerful anti-inflammatory and antioxidant, this is a "super-spice" (good for so many things I couldn't possibly list them all here!)
  • Fenugreek Balances cholesterol and blood sugar levels.  Nourishes body during illness.
  • Fresh Garlic - It is referred to as "Russian penicillin" because it is antibacterial, antiviral, antifungal, is used to treat cold, cough, flu, reduce cholesterol and fight cancer to name a few of the many, many things it is great for.
  • Dried Rose Hips (Bottom left)- Contain 50% more vitamin C than oranges!
  • Astragalus Root (Bark looking stuff below the garlic) Will kick your immune system into action, fights cancer and is good for your heart.  Do not add if you are already sick as it can actually "lock" the sickness into your cells.  It can also "lock out" a sickness and is therefore a great herb for preventing illness.  Also, do no take if you have an auto-immune disease.
  • Gogi Berries (Dried red berries) These potent little berries have been used as medicine and food in the east for over 3,000 years!  They have significant antioxidant properties and have one of the highest vitamin C contents of any food in the world!  They are used to treat a wide variety of ailments, I suggest you become acquainted if you aren't already.  I add them to oatmeal, soups, health bars, smoothies, or eat them plain.  PACKED with vitamins & minerals.
  • Elderberries- Used to treat cough, cold, flu, viral and bacterial infections.  High in antioxidants... and like a bazillion other uses.  (My favorite herb!)
  • Fresh Ginger- Ginger actually has more than 40 pharmacological actions (stuff it can help with, medicinally) it is an anti-inflammatory, antibacterial, antiviral, antioxidant, and reduces nausea and other stomach ailments.
  • Carrots, Onions, Celery, Kale Hearty veggies that contain many vitamins, minerals, and fiber


 
Before I go on, I can already hear what you are likely thinking... "I don't have all of that stuff on hand!  So I might as well not even try to make this."  (Hopefully that's not what you're thinking, but that is what I may have said).  Don't throw in the towel just yet friends!  You would be amazed at what your common spices can do for you.  Cheyenne, cinnamon, nutmeg, basil, thyme, cloves, pepper and even a healthier salt like Himalayan Mineral Salt can all improve your body's performance and help heal many illnesses.  I'm going to plop this link in here for you just to whet your appetite.  I LOVE this site and magazine, but there are a plethora of other articles on this subject for you to easily research as well. http://www.backwoodshome.com/articles2/cowell122.html
Option #2 is even better, go ahead and buy these things like Gogi berries, astragalus root and some elderberries (if you can't find them growing around you).  They are used weekly if not daily in my home in multiple applications.  Start to get friendly with these herbs and spices and experiment with teas, tinctures, cooking and baking with them.  You won't be disappointed!  I buy all of my bulk herbs from Mountain Rose Herbs www.mountainroseherbs.com and Monterey Bay Spice Co. www.herbco.com BUT everything that I can grow myself I do, because I like to become very well acquainted with the things that I use and there is no better way than planting it, watching it grow, caring for it, harvesting it, processing it, and using it.  I mean that's all an education in itself, wouldn't you say?  So buy them, plant them, get them from the store, whatever.  But try them for sure.
 
 
Medicinal Chicken & Herb Soup Recipe
 
*(PLEASE if you see something that you don't have, substitute for whatever you do have!)*  If you try something and like it, please share what you did in the comments for us to try too  :)
 
1 Whole Chicken, skin off
6 Carrots, large diced
4 Celery stalks, including the leaves, diced
2 Large onions, medium diced
2 Cups kale, finely chopped
1-2 Inches fresh ginger, slices or grated
1 Head of fresh garlic, roughly chopped
4 Tablespoons dried parsley (double if fresh)
1 1/2 Teaspoons turmeric
1 1/2 Teaspoons fenugreek seed, ground (I use coffee grinder)
1 Teaspoon Five Chinese Spices
4 Astragalus root slices
1/4 Cup Gogi Berries, whole
1/3 Cup elderberries (dried, fresh, or frozen)
1/4 cup rose hips, dried or fresh, chopped
1 cup barley (or other grain)
salt and pepper to taste
coconut oil (optional)
enough water to cover everything in the pot, I didn't measure :/
 
Put the whole chicken in a large pot and cover with water, let it gently simmer for 45 minutes or until almost done.  Add the rest of the ingredients, minus the coconut oil and cover with water again.  Let everything cook together for 20 minutes, the chicken should be fully cooked at that point.  Remove the chicken and let it cool a bit while everything else finishes cooking.  Debone the chicken very carefully and shred it up into bite-sized pieces.  Add it back into the soup.  You can add a few tablespoons of coconut oil at this point, just to get it into your diet, and the coconut flavor that floats to the top is yummy.  In fact you could probably add a bit of canned coconut milk to this recipe and it would be delicious!  I truly hope you enjoy this delicious and very nutrition soup and that it finds you in good health. 
 
 
 
 



Wednesday, January 7, 2015

In the past year...

Welcome back to the Good News Herbs (and Wornicov Family) Blog!
Yes, it has been a while, but it was well worth the absence because I now have a new SON to show for it!  It was a high risk pregnancy and pretty much from the get-go I was out of commission, so there wouldn't have been much to blog about except my misery, big hit eh!? 
Welcome to the world Tav Elijah!  Born October 15
 So, I never really understood why people had blogs, why people read blogs, I mean who gives a rip about what is going on in my life!  However, I have often found myself googling a recipe or something and finding the answer on a blog, that leads to reading a couple of articles that that person has posted and that leads to me actually doing what they posted about.  My family and I are into at least a dozen projects at any given time.  Those projects range from cooking and baking to gardening, beekeeping, homeschooling, cheese making, herbs and their uses in our daily lives, raising livestock,  and a bazillion other random things.  SO, maybe, just maybe I can inspire someone as so many others have done for us.  Thank you for reading this blog, and please comment or question because I would love to hear from you and because I know that we have so much to learn from one another.
 
Here are some recent happenings around the homestead...

HERBS, of course! That is something that never ceases here.  I have been fine-tuning some of my old blends and coming up with several new ones.  I am opening an Etsy store here in the next month or so, so I am getting that all in order.  Packaging and labels have been a pain in the neck, but it's coming along slowly.  Some of my blends that you can look forward to are: Calming Tea, Restorative Blend, Fairy Tale Blend, The Momma Trio- Big Momma, Little Momma and Milky Momma (yep, that's what I said!), Cold and Flu Brew, a Citrus Ginger Yerba Mate Blend and the winter favorite... Roasty Toasty Tea, similar to a chai and great for circulation.
 
 
Some other things I've been developing and tweaking:
lotions and creams, baby diaper balm, tooth powder, medicinal 
syrups, face and body scrubs, throat lozenges, herbal massage oils
and some other things that we like to use in our home and am trying to replace with natural, herbalicious substitutes.






I LOVE cooking from scratch, especially when I can find all or most of the ingredients from right here at home!  I also like to make food so chalk full of healthful ingredients that it is actually medicinal!  This soup has homemade bone broth, free-range chicken, hearty home-grown vegetables, lots of herbs and spices including turmeric, sage, parsley, gogi berries, astragalus root and rose hips.  If you had a cold or were feeling something come on THIS is what you would want to be eating!
 
 
 It's important to me to make sure that my kiddos love to eat healthy foods.  This was our New Year's breakfast.  Freshly ground whole wheat pancakes with bananas, cinnamon and kefir added to the batter.  I also made a plum syrup to go with it instead of adding syrup or honey.  Not diet food at all, just delicious and nutritious!


I've been experimenting with ALL things bread.  I have 50 pound bags of wheat berries, rye, spelt, 7 Grain cereal, rice and lentils.  I've been sprouting grains for bread, making kefir breads, sourdough breads, ancient breads, flat breads, and having a blast doing it.  All this kneading is making me buff! I think I need me a kneading machine, phew!  More on all of this later.
 







Daniel and I butchered a couple of our lambs this week.  What a process!   But we think it is important to raise as much of our own food as we can.  We are also in the process of tanning the fleeces for rugs, there will probably be a post on that process too. 


 
 
This momma looooves elderberries!  Every year our family goes out and harvest buckets and buckets of elder flowers for medicinal teas and berries for elderberry syrup.  This year because I was pregnant I didn't get to get out there myself but my husband brought me lots of branches full of berries and I sat on the deck and combed them off.  Now this winter we are keeping healthy with our elder teas and syrup!



MY GOODNESS, the garden was in full swing for months and we had to  harvest, freeze, can and dry the produce as quickly as we could.  It was a constant chore!  Maybe this year will be better since I won't have a big belly attached to me.  We are still enjoying our potatoes, onions, garlic, green beans, canned tomatoes, dried herbs, pickles and even fresh kale from the garden this winter!



 







Crocheting is another hobby of mine.  I had fun making hats and things for the baby and one new hat for each person in the family too.  They are coming in handy now.  It is FIVE degrees outside as I type this

 



 This is Benjamin, we raised him from two months old.  The girls always knew he would be dinner and were fine with that.  The other day when we had the s hanging for a couple of days Nadia (the little one) walks up as her dad was removing the fleece and says "Yum yum,  he is going to be so tasty!" Some may think that is gross but I am proud to say that my kids know darn well where their food comes from! 
 
 
 
Introducing our son to our home and our lifestyle.  Get used to the work and the fun son, this is the good life!

There will always be lots to post about around here.  I'll do my best to keep it up but this lifestyle is quite a busy one!  If there is something in particular you'd like to hear about let me know.  My post will probably be short but useful (hopefully) so that I can commit to posting more often.  I hope you have enjoyed the introduction to what this blog will be about.  Have a blessed week!


Winter Happenings


 


Welcome back to the Good News Herbs (and Wornicov Family) Blog!
Yes, it has been a while, but it was well worth the absence because I now have a new SON to show for it!  It was a high risk pregnancy and pretty much from the get-go I was out of commission, so there wouldn't have been much to blog about except my misery, big hit eh!? 
Welcome to the world Tav Elijah!  Born October 15
 
So, I never really understood why people had blogs, why people read blogs, I mean who gives a rip about what is going on in my life!  However, I have often found myself googling a recipe or something and finding the answer on a blog, that leads to reading a couple of articles that that person has posted and that leads to me actually doing what they posted about.  My family and I are into at least a dozen projects at any given time.  Those projects range from cooking and baking to gardening, beekeeping, homeschooling, cheese making, herbs and their uses in our daily lives, raising livestock,  and a bazillion other random things.  SO, maybe, just maybe I can inspire someone as so many others have done for us.  Thank you for reading this blog, and please comment or question because I would love to hear from you and because I know that we have so much to learn from one another.
 
Here are some recent happenings around the homestead...

HERBS, of course! That is something that never ceases here.  I have been fine-tuning some of my old blends and coming up with several new ones.  I am opening an Etsy store here in the next month or so, so I am getting that all in order.  Packaging and labels have been a pain in the neck, but it's coming along slowly.  Some of my blends that you can look forward to are: Calming Tea, Restorative Blend, Fairy Tale Blend, The Momma Trio- Big Momma, Little Momma and Milky Momma (yep, that's what I said!), Cold and Flu Brew, a Citrus Ginger Yerba Mate Blend and the winter favorite... Roasty Toasty Tea, similar to a chai and great for circulation.
 
 
Some other things I've been developing and tweaking:
lotions and creams, baby diaper balm, tooth powder, medicinal 
syrups, face and body scrubs, throat lozenges, herbal massage oils
and some other things that we like to use in our home and am trying to replace with natural, herbalicious substitues.






I LOVE cooking from scratch, especially when I can find all or most of the ingredients from right here at home!  I also like to make food so chalk full of healthful ingredients that it is actually medicinal!  This soup has homemade bone broth, free-range chicken, hearty home-grown vegetables, lots of herbs and spices including turmeric, sage, parsley, gogi berries, astragalus root and rose hips.  If you had a cold or were feeling something come on THIS is what you would want to be eating!
 
 
 It's important to me to make sure that my kiddos love to eat healthy foods.  This was our New Year's breakfast.  Freshly ground whole wheat pancakes with bananas, cinnamon and kefir added to the batter.  I also made a plum syrup to go with it instead of adding syrup or honey.  Not diet food at all, just delicious and nutritious!


I've been experimenting with ALL things bread.  I have 50 pound bags of wheat berries, rye, spelt, 7 Grain cereal, rice and lentils.  I've been sprouting grains for bread, making kefir breads, sourdough breads, ancient breads, flat breads, and having a blast doing it.  All this kneading is making me buff! I think I need me a kneading machine, phew!  More on all of this later.









Daniel and I butchered a couple of our lambs this week.  What a process!   But we think it is important to raise as much of our own food as we can.  We are also in the process of tanning the fleeces for rugs, there will probably be a post on that process too. 




 
 
 
This momma looooves elderberries!  Every year our family goes out and harvest buckets and buckets of elder flowers for medicinal teas and berries for elderberry syrup.  This year because I was pregnant I didn't get to get out there myself but my husband brought me lots of branches full of berries and I sat on the deck and combed them off.  Now this winter we are keeping healthy with our elder teas and syrup!



MY GOODNESS, the garden was in full swing for months and we had to  harvest, freeze, can and dry the produce as quickly as we could.  It was a constant chore!  Maybe this year will be better since I won't have a big belly attached to me.  We are still enjoying our potatoes, onions, garlic, green beans, canned tomatoes, dried herbs, pickles and even fresh kale from the garden this winter!


 







Crocheting is another hobby of mine.  I had fun making hats and things for the baby and one new hat for each person in the family too.  They are coming in handy now.  It is FIVE degrees outside as I type this

 



 
 This is Benjamin, we raised him from two months old.  The girls always knew he would be dinner and were fine with that.  The other day when we had the s hanging for a couple of days Nadia (the little one) walks up as her dad was removing the fleece and says "Yum yum,  he is going to be so tasty!" Some may think that is gross but I am proud to say that my kids know darn well where their food comes from! 
 
 
 
There will always be lots to post about around here.  I'll do my best to keep it up but this lifestyle is quite a busy one!  If there is something in particular you'd like to hear about let me know.  My post will probably be short but useful (hopefully) so that I can commit to posting more often.  I hope you have enjoyed the introduction to what this blog will be about.  Have a blessed week!