Comfort Food

I wrote more about her books HERE with excerpts from her “Sick Room Necessities” booklet. Two years ago, I wrote a post about comfort foods and shared snippets of the Soup book. You can read it HERE. When I wrote this post yesterday, I thought it was a brand new subject. You can imagine how I felt when I discovered I wrote the same title and subject matter two years ago! But no worries, I have more information in this post, than the one two years ago!

Another secret, is to refrigerate the soup overnight. The next day, I get rid of the fat that solidifies on top of the soup.

What are your favorite comfort foods?

26 thoughts on “Comfort Food

  1. I have three favorites in the winter cold weather:

    I do a soup every week to have for lunchs or a light dinner. Different focus- vegetarian and lots of plant protein (lentils and chickpeas are my favorite) and tons of warm spices (think curry, garam masala, smoked paprika, cumin, oregano…) plus I use coconut milk for a creamy touch and the small bit of sweetness plays well against any/all of those spices.

    Curries over brown jasmine rice. Yum and so easy to change up ingredients.

    I also like to do simple baked potatoes (russet or sweet) and top with veg (steamed broccoli, sauted mushrooms/spinach, roasted veg, beans. Baked potatoes make a great base for so many toppings and I love getting to the crispy skin at the end!

    • All three sound delicious. I love making soups and my kids have introduced me to amazing lentil dishes. They live on mostly vegetarian food. I’m also a fan of baked potatoes and veggies.

  2. Comfort food? How about when the temps start to go crazy like this week . . . we call it Survival food. Ha, ha, I’m not a big soup eater, but when it gets really, really cold, it’s one of the few things that warms me up! Ha, Hal

  3. Very cool to have these cook booklets by your great-grandmother. I agree with you about the wagon story. I suspect Ripley stated the series and the market for them and sold the name to her. Even into my parents generation most married women went by their husband’s name. I was instructed to address mail to my aunt as Mrs. Treslin Halse after she was widowed. Same for my grandmother. I have obituaries for many women who aren’t even given their own names when they die!

    • Can you further explain about Ripley? I have tried to look it up but can’t find info that works in the same years she produced the books. Isn’t that sad about women not having their own names in their obituaries?

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