Instead of using a microwave, add
a little warm broth to yesterday's leftovers and heat it over the stove to steam your meal back to life!
If the raisins seem dry, plump them in
a little warm broth or water.
Deglaze the pan with
a little warm broth, stirring up the brown bits with a wooden spoon.
Not exact matches
I usually don't follow much of a ratio: I pour flour (s) in a big bowl, add whatever liquid I have around (non dairy milk, water, cold
broth, maybe a
little bit apple cider, or some beer too, which gives lightness to the crêpes), some flax gel (1 Tbsp ground flax seeds + 3 TBSP
warm water), some salt or maybe a
little sugar, sometimes spices like curcuma and black pepper, or tandoori spice powder etc, stir until the consistency pleases me, adding more liquid if necessary, let it sit for a few hours on my counter, and voilà.
A
little sweet from the 1/4 cup + 2 Tablespoons fig jam,
warming from 1 Tablespoon chili garlic sauce, tangy from 3-1/2 Tablespoons rice vinegar, and rounded out by 1 cup chicken
broth and 1 Tablespoon gluten - free Tamari or soy sauce (dish will not be GF if using soy sauce.)
While it's
warming up, dissolve the flour in a
little more
broth or water.
For the latter, stir a
little warmed up low sodium organic veggie
broth with plain almond butter in a small bowl until smooth, and add minced garlic, fresh grated ginger, turmeric, and crushed red pepper.
One
little glitch, when whisking the almond butter and
warm broth, my mixture went from creamy to grainy - what caused it to separate like that??
Toss in whatever else you have (carrots, purple potatoes, cauliflower, cabbage, peppers, green beans), sauté a
little longer, then pour in a quart or two of chicken
broth (preferably homemade) and fresh or frozen tomatoes (I prefer frozen whole tomatoes as the skins peel right off with a
little rub under
warm water) and maybe a jar of tomato paste to intensify tomato flavor.
The
warm broth will provide a
little extra comfort for your sore stomach.
I put this in the crock pot before I went to class (I used green instead of puy lentils) and when I came back I added a
little more veggie
broth and let it
warm for a couple more hours.
While furosimide can be administered in a
little pill, a dandelion therapy involves getting your animal to drink
warm tea or take a tincture extract (again, the aforementioned
broth method works nicely).
If your finicky pooch or older dog turns his nose up at a bowl of dry kibble, the addition of
warm water,
warm chicken or beef
broth or a
little bit of gravy can go a long way.
We put some
warm water on it or low fat
broth occasionally, making it a
little soft and crunchy at the same time.
Answer: You don't want to change his food around too much right now or you could potentially upset his stomach - adding just a
little bit of
warm, dilute chicken
broth to his dry food might help if he can't smell his food very well.
I cook two meals a day — I serve up a breakfast burrito (eggs whipped and cooked to a Holladaise sauce consistency & then mixed with dry cat food & cut up turkey hot dogs) and a meaty oatmeal (chicken thighs cooked overnight in a crockpot with a
little water, then the meat separated off, the
broth thinned down with water & used to make oatmeal, then add back the chicken meat & serve up
warm so its nice & sloppy with a lot of juice.
Feed your foster dog plain white rice with a
little warm chicken
broth and a tablespoon of organic canned pumpkin mixed in and small pieces of boiled chicken breast with no fat until his stool firms up.
If your pet tolerates
warmed, mashed potatoes, for the next meal, mix a
little of the chicken used to make the
broth in with the potato.