We Love God!

God: "I looked for someone to take a stand for me, and stand in the gap" (Ezekiel 22:30)

It was your great American wit, Mark Twain, who once said, 'Man is the only animal that blushes, and the only animal that needs to.' We are ashamed, are we not, of things we've done in the past. Nobody is free who is unforgiven. Instead of being able to look God in the face or to look one another in the face, we want to run away and hide when our conscience troubles us.
John Stott

Often our misunderstanding of God's Word is due not to innocent intellectual slips or lack of information, but rather to a deep refusal to submit to God's demands. A person who intends to manage his own affairs, maintain his pride, and secure esteem and glory from his fellow human beings will twist the words of Jesus to support his own self-esteem. The evil of the human heart precedes and gives rise to many of our apparently intellectual misunderstandings of Scripture.
John Piper

Runaway Ranch Chicken Chowder

0
(0)
CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Meats, Grains, Dairy More taste, Soup 7 Servings

INGREDIENTS

1 3/4 lb Skinless chicken breast
3 tb Unsalted butter
5 oz Onion
12 oz Sweet potato, peeled
4 1/2 c Chicken broth, or more
2 Serrano peppers, remove seeds
1/2 ts Ground coriander
1/4 ts Ground cumin
16 oz Hominy, canned, drained
2/3 c Fresh cilantro leaves
Sour cream, if desired

INSTRUCTIONS

Prep: 15 min | Cook: 40 min Yield: 7 cups; 290 cals per cup, 27.7% cff (8.8
g fat). 1. Remove the skin and fat from the chicken. Cut the meat into
3/4-inch cubes. 2. Melt the butter in a 5-quart pan. Add the chicken and
cook over high heat, stirring often, until the meat is no longer pink. Be
careful not to overcook it since it will continue to cook when it's
returned to the soup. Remove from the pan with a slotted spoon and set
aside. 3. Cut the onion and sweet potato into thin slices, either with the
thin (2mm) or medium (3mm) slicer of a food processor or by hand. Thinner
slices will cook more quickly. 4. Add them to the same pan along with 4-1/2
cups of stock or broth. Cover and bring to a boil. Reduce the heat and
simmer until the vegetables are very soft, about 20 minutes. 5. Strain the
solids from the liquid reserving both. Puree the solids with the serrano
peppers, coriander and cumin either in a processor or in batches in a
blender. 6. Return the puree to the pan and add the cooking liquid, chicken
and hominy. The soup can be prepared in advance to this point and
refrigerated for up to 2 days or frozen. To serve, cook the soup just until
heated through. Thin with 1/4 cup broth or water (optional). Add the
cilantro leaves and adjust the seasoning just before serving. Garnish with
sour cream, if desired.
Variation: instead of garnishing with cilantro leaves and the sour cream,
try a dollop of a lowfat cilantro-walnut pesto (commercially prepared; or
make a pesto with broth, no oil).--patH
Abby says: "Sweet potatoes are used to enrich this chowder, sans cream, and
color it a deep, sprightly orange. Hominy and big chunks of chicken add
substance, while fresh cilantro and hot peppers lend Southwestern sparkle.
Given its hearty nature, this soup is best used as a main dish, served with
a basket of warmed flour tortillas or corn muffins."
Recipe by: Abby Mandel (1988) More Taste Than Time Posted to Kitmailbox
Digest  by PATh <phannema@wizard.ucr.edu> on Mar 22, 1997

A Message from our Provider:

“The real God: don’t settle for substitutes”

How useful was this recipe?

Click on a star to rate it!

Average rating 0 / 5. Vote count: 0

No votes so far! Be the first to rate this recipe.

We are sorry that this recipe was not useful for you!

Let us improve this recipe!

Tell us how we can improve this recipe?