6,678 WINTER SOUP/3 recipes
Harvest Time Pumpkin Soup recipe
Broccoli Cheddar Beer Soup recipe
A good way to use up your leftover bread with this garlicky roasted tomato and onion soup! Tons of roasting flavours brings the soup to another level.
Grapefruit, orange and watercress create this refreshing and light salad. Great to serve before or after any heavier fat laden meal to clean the palate. Also good to incorporate some fall and winter fruit.
Perfect for a fall or winter morning, a great way to use up any leftover pumpkin from pumpkin pie.
Toasting adds strong nutty flavor into quinoa, roasted walnuts add another layer of nutty flavor and texture. It is a very flavorful and light side dish that goes well with any main course.
Conner Prairie Pumpkin Soup recipe
Homemade Tomato Soup I recipe
It was very tasty and I also used this as a base for squash soup with maple-apple flavored chicken sausage as part of a new recipe
These quick and easy fritters are made with sweet potatoes, peas, fresh mint, cilantro, and whole wheat flour. They are not only good for you, but also taste delicious. Serve these warm fritters with sour cream, hot sauce or any your favorite dipping sauce.
Nothing is better than a warm pumpkin soup at your Thanksgiving menu.
Bacon, beer and cheese turned into decadent soup.
Delicious Lemon-Raspberry Muffins that are sensitive to the toughest of dietary limitations.
Tasty, easy to prepare, brandy recipe for boneless pork chops. Best with 1" thick chops, a leafy spinach salad with walnuts, rasberry vinaigrette dressing with a dash of balsimic vinegar, and a glass of dark earthy Merlot. One of my favorite discoveries.
A very citrus and moist key lime cake, you don't have to be in the keys, you can still have a slice or two of this delicious cake.
"Kohlrouladen" used to be a staple on the menu for regular people in Germany during winter time. The relatively long preparation and cooking time pays out, because it can be easily reheated over a couple of days and gets even better and tastier then. Fried potatoes complete the picture, but you can cook the potatoes also in the pot with the sauce, if there is space left. This recipe can be varied in many ways, be it the stuffing (ground meat here), or the sauce. The recipe is as traditional as it can be; the ingredients are adjusted to availability in North America (like Savoy cabbage in lieu of "Weisskohl", bacon to replace "Speckwuerfel"). For sure the ground meat can vary depending on preferences or diets - I bet quite often in the "good old times " regular people did not exactly know what's in the ground meat they got from the butcher - at least it was some meat, for most of the families only once a week.