Immunity Miso Soup Recipe and Immune Boosting Benefits | Gaia (2024)

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2 min read

By Andrea Potter |

November 22, 2013 |

  1. Transformation
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  3. Alternative Health
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  5. Recipes

Immunity Miso Soup Recipe and Immune Boosting Benefits | Gaia (2)

I call this Immunity Soup because the almost raw garlic and ginger have
antibacterial and antiviral properties; good to sweat out a fever or kick a sore throat in the pants. The unpasteurized kimchi or sauerkraut gives it added benefits, as these fermented foods are full of enzymes and the fermented cabbage aids in intestinal health. (Especially essential if you have taken antibiotics!)

This recipe is what my friend calls a soup-salad. It is raw veggies in a bowl with a warming broth poured over top, this creates a super quick to make, crunchy, vibrant, nearly raw soup.

Time: 20 minutes

Serves 2

Ingredients

  • 1 Liter stock or water (you can use homemade chicken, beef, mushroom or vegetable stock, but even water is fine.)
  • 1 teaspoon minced or grated ginger
  • 1 clove garlic, minced, pressed or grated
  • 1/2 Thai chili, chopped finely (or more, or none)
  • 3-4 leaves of kale
  • 2 carrots, made into ribbons or ‘noodles’ with a vegetable peeler. Daikon is a good substitute or addition to this, also peeled like the carrots.
  • 1/4 cup Miso (I use genmai or brown miso)
  • 1/4 cup, or your preference of unpasteurized sauerkraut or kimchi (or Sea ‘Chi)

Optional (more filling) Noodles: I like the thicker pad Thai rice noodles, or super-fine rice vermicelli. Get the brown rice variety if you can.

Directions:

  1. In a medium pot, bring stock or water to a boil.
  2. Add the garlic, ginger and chili to the liquid. Add noodles and cook until almost done. For rice noodles, this can be 1 minute or so. Once noodles are nearly done, take the pot off of the heat.
  3. Meanwhile, make a paste with miso in a bowl and some water to thin it out. It should be the consistency of peanut butter. (This makes it easier to incorporate into the soup than adding the miso directly.)
  4. Whisk in miso.
  5. Prepare bowls with shredded raw vegetables in the bottom. Pour soup over veggies.
  6. Now add a generous amount of unpasteurized sauerkraut or kimchi. Garnish with green onions or cilantro if you like.

Variations: Use this basic broth as a base for other broth soups- like add frozen wontons, homemade raviolis, seaweed or quickly cook broccoli for a hearty broccoli broth soup.

About the Author

Immunity Miso Soup Recipe and Immune Boosting Benefits | Gaia (3)

Andrea Potter is a classically trained Chef and a Registered Holistic Nutritionist. Her love of nutrition and organic, whole foods and healthy lifestyle brought her to Radha Yoga and Eatery; a culinary vegetarian hot spot in Vancouver, where she was the head chef for over 3 years. While at Radha she studied at the Canadian School of Natural Nutrition, graduating as a Registered Holistic Nutritionist in 2009. This is also where she started bringing her knowledge of nutrition and food to the public by teaching healthy cooking classes. Through her business, Rooted Nutrition, Andrea teaches healthy cooking classes and offers one-on-one nutrition consultations, helping her clients to integrate healthy and delicious food choices into their lives. Her cooking classes pair sound nutrition information with whole foods-based, beautifully prepared recipes. Cutting the confusion about nutrition and food, these classes empower the students through education and practical culinary know-how to live well by eating well and by bringing creativity and joy into their home kitchens.

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Conscious Cooking: Mushroom Broth

2 min read

By Aimey Terry |

February 8, 2016 |

  1. Transformation
  2. ,
  3. Alternative Health
  4. ,
  5. Recipes

Immunity Miso Soup Recipe and Immune Boosting Benefits | Gaia (4)

Sipping Broths are all the rage in the “foodie-world,” but broth – or stock – has been a big deal in the culinary world for a long time. The earliest form of stock was probably made around the same time that humans began boiling water. It’s a known fact that some of the oldest recipes are the simplest, and therefore they are most likely to be passed on throughout history. Many probably started from the same place, the same idea, the same accident. Someone, somewhere, a long time ago dropped their scraps into a pot of water because they were either curious or desperately needed to eat and tried to make the most of what they had. And that led to stock, which led to soup, which led to stew, which led to gravy, which led to sauce, which led to everything we eat today, in some way, shape or form. But the original survived as stock.

Sipping Broth: Stock That Can Stand Alone

Every good chef knows how to make a stock, whether it be beef, chicken, fish, or some variation of vegetable; but every great chef knows how to make a broth that can be eaten on its own–without anything fancy to cover it up or hide it from the world–just a spoon and maybe a piece of bread. And that’s what happened with the sipping broth trend. Some trendy restaurant decided to serve their beef broth on its own and people went crazy over it.

At first I was slightly annoyed by this trend (“Why are people drinking broth? It’s meant to be cooked with!”), but then I realized that if people were buying broth to drink, they would eventually be looking for ways to make their own. Broth is, after all, one of the simplest and quickest ways to nourish the body. Because of its long, slow, cook time, the water in stock is able to procure every possible nutrient out of every ingredient within the pot. A slower cooking time means that most of the things that get broken down during our digestion process happen in the pot instead of our bellies, this allows our bodies to better absorb the nutrients in the stock. It means healthier eating habits, and full, happy bellies. The more people who know how to make a good broth, the better.

Taking Stock of Mushrooms

So let’s talk stock. A great stock has a deep earthy quality to it, a slight oiliness, and silky flavor. The best kind of stock, in my humble opinion, is made with mushrooms–just plain, old mushrooms. Mushrooms are incredible. They have a healing power. They have intricate root systems, they are made up of beautiful bacteria, they are fungi, they pop up seemingly out of nowhere, and they can grow on anything that is fertile enough to host them. Mushrooms have a meatiness to them, and they are full of a natural umami flavor (“umami” is considered the fifth flavor profile that our palate detects, and is identified as both sweet and savory), which makes them perfectly nourishing for a delicious stock. They add depth and earthiness to beef stock, so why not take the bones out of the equation and give the humble mushroom its turn in the spotlight?

Mushroom Sipping Broth

This recipe calls for many nutrient-rich and flavorful ingredients for a reason: it is meant to be eaten, or sipped on, by itself. Though, I would not frown upon using it as a base for a soup, or stew, or even as a substitute for water when cooking rice or quinoa–by all means, cook with it!. That’s what broth is meant for, after all.

Ingredients

  • 18 oz. Button Mushrooms
  • 1 Medium White Onion
  • 1 whole bulb of Garlic
  • 3 Dried Mushrooms
  • 1 Small piece of Kombu Seaweed
  • 1 tsp crushed Red Pepper
  • 0.5 Cup of Sherry
  • 4 Tbsp Soy Sauce
  • 2 Tbsp Olive Oil
  • 5-7 Cups Water

Preparation

Chop the mushrooms into quarters. Slice the onion into strips. Peel a whole head of garlic, separating each individual clove. Crush each clove with the side of your knife. Remove and discard the paper-skin covering the flesh. Add the mushrooms, onions and garlic into the pot along with all of the other ingredients, water should be added last. While adding the water, be mindful of how much broth you would like to have and add about half of a cup more than that amount.

Place the pot on the lowest heat possible and let it come to a simmer, once the water is simmering remove the Kombu from the pot. Allow the rest of the ingredients to stay at a low simmer for 1-1.5 hours, covered. Do not let the stock come to a boil as this will produce a cloudy and separated stock. The gentler the simmer, the better. Stir occasionally. When you are ready, pour the broth into a large bowl through a colander and let it cool to room temperature. Store the broth in an airtight container in the fridge or freezer.

Mind-Tummy-Body Connection

Complement your sipping broth with a yoga practice to Detox and Renew or explore the benefits of meditation with Gaia’s 14-Day How to Meditate Guide.

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