Free Republic
Browse · Search
Bloggers & Personal
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Jenny's Flu Soup
Natural Family Blog ^ | October 18, 2005 | Jenny Hatch

Posted on 10/18/2005 8:11:38 AM PDT by Jenny Hatch

Jenny's Flu Soup Here is my recipe for a great Anti-Viral Soup. It is chock full of garlic, nutrients, and all the ingredients needed to quickly nourish and cleanse the body if it becomes ravaged by a flu virus.

Start with Two full bulbs of garlic...

(Excerpt) Read more at naturalfamilyblog.com ...


TOPICS: Food; Government; Health/Medicine
KEYWORDS: flu; garlic; health; naturalremedies; soup
I like to make up recipes, and since I figure eating chicken soup during a bird flu epidemic will be sorta silly, I decided to make up a great anti-viral recipe that does not contain any animal ingredients.

Here is the recipe....

Jenny’s Flu Soup:

2 onions 2 bulbs of garlic (about 20 cloves) 2 tablespoons sea salt ½ cup olive oil ¼ cup oatstraw tea (you may need to go to a health food store to get this) 2 tablespoons flax seed ¼ c Red Raspberry leaf tea ½ cup quinoa 1 cup brown lentils ½ cup sprouted brown lentils 2 potatoes 10 large carrots 1 tsp cumin 10 whole coriander seeds Essential oils of Thyme and Oregano Dried herbs of Thyme, Oregano, and Parsley

Directions for soup:

Cook onions, garlic, and olive oil in a pot. Add in chopped potatoes, carrots, and one Tablespoon of the sea salt. Let this cook for a few minutes, then add in the Quinoa, and sprouted lentils. (Sprouted lentils have the highest concentration of vitamin C of any food). To sprout lentils just cover a half cup of them with water over night. Drain in the morning and keep them wet until a ¼ inch tendril of sprout is detected. (This takes about 35 hours)

Fill a separate pot with two quarts of water to make soup stock. Add in the peels from the garlic, flaxseed, the oatstraw, raspberry leaf tea, and the peels from the carrots and potatoes. Bring the stock up to a hard boil for twenty minutes.

Cover the cup of brown lentils with water in a bowl. After soaking them for a few minutes, add the lentils and the water to the soup.

After the stock is finished boiling, strain the liquid into the soup pot. Recover the stock vegetables with another 2 quarts of water, and bring to a boil. Once again, strain the stock vegetables and add that liquid to the pot of soup. This ensures that the maximum amount of nutrients from the herbs will be included in the stock. This stock is chock full of essential fatty acids, vitamins, and minerals.

Add in the ten whole Coriander seeds. Cover the pot and let simmer for three hours.

To finish the soup, add in the drops of Essential oils of Thyme and Oregano (one or two drops of each) – Therapeutic grade oils are best, and then toss in the dried herbs.

Check out my blog for pictures of how to make it...

Jenny

1 posted on 10/18/2005 8:11:43 AM PDT by Jenny Hatch
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: Jenny Hatch
2 bulbs of garlic (about 20 cloves)

Dunno if I'd use it to treat the flu, but it'd dang sure keep vampires away...

2 posted on 10/18/2005 8:14:19 AM PDT by r9etb
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: r9etb

I'm not into that whole Vaccine thing, so if we get sick, the soup will be the way we treat it.

Jenny


3 posted on 10/19/2005 5:43:42 AM PDT by Jenny Hatch (Go Iraq Go!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: Jenny Hatch
I just posted a new article on alternative remedies for the Flu on my blog. Go HERE to read it Jenny Hatch
4 posted on 10/31/2005 8:54:20 PM PST by Jenny Hatch (Healthy Families Make A Healthy World!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]

To: Jenny Hatch

Come on over for dinner! We're having Jenny's flu soup!
And for dessert, Gina's special gas abating brownies!
RSVP!


5 posted on 10/31/2005 9:25:39 PM PST by derllak
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies]

To: Jenny Hatch
Here is my recipe for a great Anti-Viral Soup. It is chock full of garlic, nutrients, and all the ingredients needed to quickly nourish and cleanse the body if it becomes ravaged by a flu virus. Start with Two full bulbs of garlic... Two huge bulbs of garlic.jpg I purchased a large bag of these bulbs from Sam's Club the other day - cost? $4.00 Cloves from two full bulbs.jpg Break the cloves of garlic off the bulb and chop it up. I then pick out about ten cloves worth of peeled garlic to add to the soup. The rest of the garlic and peels I add to my stock pot. Garlic is one of the most powerful anti-viral foods on the planet. Even chopping this garlic and getting it all over your hands, and sniffing the odors will help to kill virus in your kitchen and your home. The idea of eating "chicken soup" for a "chicken virus" does seem a little weird, so this recipe is vegan (does not contain any animal ingredients) and is easy enough for even the novice cook to make. Adding garlic peels to Stock pot.jpg You add the peels to the stock pot to extract as much power from the garlic as possible. Boiling for twenty minutes helps to pull those properties out of the garlic. It also helps to kill any air born viruses in your home as the steam from the soup spreads over your home. Add the garlic to the onions in the soup pot.jpg Adding in the garlic - Cook on a medium heat while the lentils soak and the stock boils. Adding Oatstraw to Stock pot.jpg Add the Oatstraw Tea to the stock pot. Make sure not to add this to your soup pot, it will make the soup taste terrible. However, using it to make stock is one of the most powerful herbal additions to any food. Oatstraw.jpg Oatstraw is an excellent food to eat for any viral disease. Potatos and Sprouted lentils.jpg Potatoes and Sprouted Lentils Adding potato peels to stock pot.jpg Potato peels are a great addition to any stock. Just peel your potatoes right into the stock pot. Then chop the potatoes and add them into the soup pot. Chopped potatos.jpg When I purchase foods at the store, I always buy a variety of colors, sizes, and types of foods, to add different nutrients to my meals. For this recipe I used one baking potato and one red potato. But you can use any combination of potatoes. This same principle is good for onions, any vegetable, or grain. Get small amounts of different types of food to get a variety of flavors and nutrients into your foods. Adding Flax seed to stock pot.jpg I could talk all day about the goodness of Flax Seed. Friends are always surprised to hear that I use flax in almost everything I make. Flax is a natural anti-depressant for me, and it adds great flavor to any dish. I use two tablespoons in this recipe. Add the flax into the stock pot. Adding raspberry leaves to stock pot.jpg Add in Red Raspberry leaf tea to the stock pot. Raspberry leaves contain Vitamin C and Magnesium, both necessary nutrients to fight disease. Adding Sea Salt to stock pot.jpg Sea salt added liberally to the stock pot will help to extract the nutrients from the foods. I put in about a full tablespoon of good quality sea salt. Carrots for soup.jpg Carrots in the sink Allison peeling carrots.jpg While I made the stock I asked my daughter Allison to peel the carrots. Adding Carrot peels to stock pot.jpg You can add the peels to the stock pot to extract more vitamin A into the stock. This is a very important nutrient to help the body fight disease. Adding Sprouted Lentils into the pot.jpg Sprouted lentils contain a high concentration of Vitamin C. Soup pot with Lentils.jpg The soup pot with the lentils Organic Brown Lentils.jpg Organic Brown lentils Organic Quinoa - I keep a bay leaf in the bin to ward off weevils.jpg Organic Quinoa - This high protein grain is easy to digest and is a great alternative to rice. I keep a bay leaf in the food bin to ward off weevils and moths. one half cup Organic Quinoa.jpg One half cup of Quinoa One cup of Lentils.jpg One cup of lentils Adding Quinoa into garlic and onions.jpg Adding in Quinoa to the garlic and onions Stock pot simmering.jpg Stock pot simmering Getting ready to strain the stock into the soup pot.jpg Getting ready to strain the stock into the soup pot Straining the stock pot into the soup.jpg Straining the stock into the soup pot. When I have put the first stock into the soup, I fill up the stock pot once more with the same foods, cover them with water, and again, boil a second pot of stock for twenty minutes. This ensures that the highest amount of the nutrients are extracted from the herbs and vegetables. It sort of "rinses" the final nutrients from the herbs, seeds, and vegetables. Adding cumin to soup pot.jpg Adding Cumin to the soup. Cumin helps to make the lentils more digestible. Also tastes great. Cumin makes lentils more digestible.jpg I like LOTS of cumin... Adding whole coriander to soup pot.jpg Adding in whole coriander to the soup pot. Soup before cooking.jpg This soup is now ready to be covered and simmered for three hours at a low temperature. Adding in Young Living Essential oils and dried herbs.jpg The final step is adding in powerful anti-viral oils and herbs just before serving the soup. This step is one of the most important in terms of the overall "viracide" action of this soup. We want to kill off as many viruses and bacteria as possible. I add in one or two drops each of Thyme and Oregano oil. I purchase these oils from a company that produces therapeutical grade essential oils. Dried herbs also give good flavor and final color to the soup. Adding in two drops of Thyme Essential oil.jpg Adding in two drops of Thyme essential oil Adding in one drop of Oregano Essential Oil.jpg Adding in a drop of Oregano oil Finished Garlic, Lentil, Quinoa Soup.jpg Finished Garlic, Lentil, and Quinoa Soup Soup ready to eat!.jpg Soup's on! Serve this soup with whole grain toast, fresh fruit, or home baked rolls or bread. Here is the recipe in a quick synopsis for those of you who missed amounts and steps while browsing through the pictures... Jenny’s Flu Soup: 2 onions 2 bulbs of garlic (about 20 cloves) 2 tablespoons sea salt ½ cup olive oil ¼ cup oatstraw tea (you may need to go to a health food store to get this) 2 tablespoons flax seed ¼ c Red Raspberry leaf tea ½ cup quinoa 1 cup brown lentils ½ cup sprouted brown lentils 2 potatoes 10 large carrots 1 tsp cumin 10 whole coriander seeds Essential oils of Thyme and Oregano Dried herbs of Thyme, Oregano, and Parsley Directions for soup: Cook onions, garlic, and olive oil in a pot. Add in chopped potatoes, carrots, and one Tablespoon of the sea salt. Let this cook for a few minutes, then add in the Quinoa, and sprouted lentils. (Sprouted lentils have the highest concentration of vitamin C of any food). To sprout lentils just cover a half cup of them with water over night. Drain in the morning and keep them wet until a ¼ inch tendril of sprout is detected. (This takes about 35 hours) Fill a separate pot with two quarts of water to make soup stock. Add in the peels from the garlic, flaxseed, the oatstraw, raspberry leaf tea, and the peels from the carrots and potatoes. Bring the stock up to a hard boil for twenty minutes. Cover the cup of brown lentils with water in a bowl. After soaking them for a few minutes, add the lentils and the water to the soup. After the stock is finished boiling, strain the liquid into the soup pot. Recover the stock vegetables with another 2 quarts of water, and bring to a boil. Once again, strain the stock vegetables and add that liquid to the pot of soup. This ensures that the maximum amount of nutrients from the herbs will be included in the stock. This stock is chock full of essential fatty acids, vitamins, and minerals. Add in the ten whole Coriander seeds. Cover the pot and let simmer for three hours. To finish the soup, add in the drops of Essential oils of Thyme and Oregano (one or two drops of each) – Therapeutic grade oils are best, and then toss in the dried herbs. I made this soup for my family and asked them to describe it for you who are reading... Husband Paul - "on a scale of one to ten, this soup was a six in terms of my all time favorite soup" Shelly (16) - "it was OK, wouldn't want to eat it every day" Allison (13) - "too spicy, but I would eat it if I was sick" Jeff (11) - I liked the carrots, but that was about it..." Andy (9) - "yum!" (Andy will eat ANYTHING!) Ben (2) - Ben would not even try the soup I thought it was delicious, really spicy, with a powerful effect on my throat and sinuses, I could feel it moving through my system cooking out all the junk. I plan to make this soup a couple times this season both to help prevent the flu, and if we get it, to help heal those who may be ill. Jenny Hatch
6 posted on 04/11/2006 8:02:17 AM PDT by Jenny Hatch (Mommy Blogger)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies]

To: Jenny Hatch

New Link: http://naturalfamilyblog.com/2009Blog/?p=309


7 posted on 12/07/2009 2:21:03 PM PST by Jenny Hatch (Mormon Mommy Blogger)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 6 | View Replies]

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
Bloggers & Personal
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson