YOUR HEALTHY PLATE: Red Crockpot Soup

Through the years I have shared quite a number of crockpot recipes with you on this blog. The crockpot is one of my favorite pieces of kitchen equipment, and my family and I have a long history of looking forward to the recipes that come out of it. I even gave each of my children a going-away present when they left for college: a crockpot of their own, a simple recipe, a large package of dry beans, and a few small spice packets to allow them to fill their crockpot to feed themselves and friends whenever they chose. 

Today I thought I’d repost one particular recipe that I especially like when the weather is getting cold. If you feel like you could go for a large bowl of nourishing soup that will warm you from the inside out, I recommend that you give this recipe a try. Also, there’s something about all the red ingredients — the beans, lentils, tomatoes, and paprika — that will contribute further to the heat that bowl of soup is going to provide.

A few words about this recipe: After the beans have softened and the soup is done, I recommend that you turn off the crockpot and leave it to cool for a couple of hours. This is so you don’t burn yourself inadvertently while trying to fill the jars. Then, once the soup has cooled somewhat, you’ll be able to fill a bunch of Ball jars without having to worry about the ladle catching on the edge of the jar and spilling its contents down your hand. Close the jars tight, and put them in the refrigerator. Or you can fill a jar halfway, place it in the freezer leaning against a frozen package (so the surface of the liquid is diagonal in the jar), and freeze it for another time. 

This recipe will provide you with lunches and dinners for days to come. If you get tired of it, give some away or freeze the rest. In a few weeks you’ll be very glad when you find it in the freezer. Easy-peasy, delicious, and filling.

2 Tbsp. olive oil
3/4 c. red kidney beans, dry
1/2 c. red lentils, dry
2 large potatoes, scrubbed and diced 3/4-inch
2 medium yellow onions, peeled and chopped coarsely
4 large tomatoes, washed and diced 3/4-inch
6-8 collard greens, rinsed, ribbed, rolled and sliced into 1/4-inch ribbons
1 small-medium jalapeno, sliced in half, seeded, sliced thinly
6 cloves of garlic, peeled but otherwise left whole
2 bay leaves
1 tsp. red paprika
2 tsp. salt
1 1/2 tsp. coarse black pepper

Splash the olive oil into the bottom of the crockpot, and sprinkle in the salt and pepper. Add tomatoes, potatoes, onions, beans, lentils, garlic and jalapeno. Fill crockpot 1/2 way with water, add bay leaves, and set to high heat. Allow to cook 2-3 hours, turn down heat to low, and cook 2 hours more until beans are quite soft. Check the crockpot once or twice while cooking, and add water, if necessary, to keep all the vegetables and beans submerged. Once the soup is sufficiently cool, remove the bay leaves and refrigerate. You can store the soup covered in a pitcher (to take up less shelf space), or 2-cup or 4-cup Ball jars.

Eat it with plenty of hot sauce, red of course.


YOUR HEALTHY PLATE: Vegan Cholent (Crockpot Stew)

A happy reprise of my seasonal fall cholent recipe, from when my dad was still here to enjoy it with us:

This past week, I made a version of this recipe for the first night of Sukkot, the fall harvest festival, and we ate it inside our beautiful sukkah that my husband built last week. It warmed us from the inside out in the chilly weather. And then it was gone, I mean really GONE, just a few hours later. Even my father, who said “I don’t like cholent,” ate a huge bowlful and said he changed his mind. Please make a note of that. Continue reading


YOUR HEALTHY PLATE: Red Soup for the Holidays

In the days when my house was full of school-age children, I used to make crockpots full of soup every weekend, and hope that it would last into the beginning of the following week to provide warm lunches or dinners until it was gone. I don’t make weekly crockpots anymore, but I still love using my crockpot to make soup in the fall, around the holidays, and in the early spring, before the weather begins to warm up.

This time of year, with the nights cooling and plenty of holidays on the calendar, it’s always a great feeling to fill the crockpot and see what develops. And it doesn’t have to be chicken thighs. You can also fill your crockpot with beans! An overnight crockpot fills the house with a sublime perfume, the stomach with a delicious and satisfying meal, and the hearts of those you feed with all kinds of warm and cozy feelings. Continue reading


Eating Well and Being Kind to Yourself (with recipe)

I come from a family of knitters. Our family lore includes a story about my mother and maternal grandmother knitting at the movies, with my 10-year-old mom doing the “easy” parts, and passing it to her mother for the sleeves and shaping. And the fact that my grandmother volunteered to knit the less popular dark blue sweaters for the Navy instead of khaki sweaters for the Army. It didn’t matter to her because she could knit in the dark. 

So when I finally decided that it was time for me to learn to knit, it was a little overwhelming. I took some books out of the library, one of which said to make your projects with the best yarn you can afford because the results will be better, and you’ll be more pleased with the finished product. That resonated with me, because it’s exactly what I say about food. Continue reading


YOUR HEALTHY PLATE: Simple Pea Soup

Two of my kids live thousands of miles away, seven time zones to be precise, in Jerusalem. We talk by phone a lot, and we do our very best to visit whenever we can, pandemic notwithstanding. But it’s far for sure, and one way I keep connected is to allow their cooking to inspire my own. We often touch base on Friday mornings and I love when they tell me what’s on the stove. My daughter-in-law is a fabulous cook, as is my son, and they regularly make magic happen in their kitchen. Last week, with popcorn popping in the background all the way from Jerusalem, I got to hear about the happy reception my son’s very special chocolate-drizzled popcorn had received from friends the previous week. And the split pea soup bubbling on the stove got a quick honorable mention. But that was enough to pique my interest, so I went “shopping” in my own cabinets to see if I had any peas. And I did! I used the crockpot because I love being able to set it and leave, but you can also make this on the stove if you like. It took about 2 minutes to collect all the ingredients and 10 minutes to prep the vegetables, and that’s it. It’s hard to imagine a bigger payoff for such a small investment. Continue reading


YOUR HEALTHY PLATE: Red Lentil Soup for the New Year

This coming Monday evening, as the sun slips below the horizon, we will begin our celebration of Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year. Rosh Hashanah dishes traditionally tend toward the sweet and the circular: sweet for a sweet new year, and circular to represent the seasons that run one into the next, year after year, around and around. Instead of the usual braid, even challah is twisted into rounds at this time of year.  Continue reading


YOUR HEALTHY PLATE: Vegan Cholent (Crockpot Stew)

Last weekend, I made this recipe for the first day of Sukkot, the fall harvest festival, and we ate it inside our beautiful sukkah that my husband built last week. It warmed us from the inside out in the chilly 50 degree weather. And then it was gone, I mean really GONE, just a few hours later. Even my father, who said “I don’t like cholent,” ate a huge bowlful and said he changed his mind. Please make a note of that. Continue reading


YOUR HEALTHY PLATE: Simple Lovely Lentil Soup

Partly because we were in the middle of a snowstorm, and partly because we were having lots of company for dinner last Friday evening, I decided that I wanted to come home from work to a lovely pot of soup to get things started. 

But, as usual, I didn’t have a lot of time to get everything organized Friday morning, so I decided to see how simple I could make it and still end up with something worth sharing (and eating!). Basically the only work was chopping the potatoes and onion, which you could even get ready the night before, theoretically, if you wanted to get ready even faster. Here’s what I did:  Continue reading


YOUR HEALTHY PLATE: My Recipe for Baked Beans

This recipe is 100% my own! It’s not super sweet like canned beans, but that doesn’t mean it isn’t sweet at all. You will find that the combination of molasses plus onion plus slow cooking gives these beans a complex mix of spice and sweet that’s flavorful and satisfying to the extreme. It’s guaranteed to warm your bones, whether you’re indoors or out. Continue reading


YOUR HEALTHY PLATE: Yellow Squash Crockpot Soup

This soup, perfect for fall days and nights, cooks up beautifully in a crock pot. If you put together all the ingredients in the morning, the house will smell heavenly all day, and the soup will be ready to eat when dinnertime comes. On the other hand, if evening time works better for prepping the ingredients, the house will smell heavenly when you wake up, and the soup will be ready at lunchtime and also keep til dinnertime. Continue reading