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Chicken Tortilla Soup

March 31, 2014 by Asharae 2 Comments

This past week or so I’ve been learning so much about reaching outside of myself, getting out of my comfort zone, and reaching beyond my computer screen and the safety of my home. I’m naturally a very introverted person. I like a quiet home, I’m perfectly content to be left alone with my thoughts most of the day, I take great pains to avoid answering the phone when it’s a number I don’t know (and sometimes even when it’s a number I do know), and I need major time to recharge after being around people all day while shooting a wedding.

Don’t get me wrong – I love people, I love connecting with them, hearing their stories, and sharing my own. I love learning from others and looking back to see where my story intersected with someone else’s,  the effect that had on both of us, and how we grew from it. If left to my own devices though, I would probably hole up in my house, drink my coffee, do my own thing, and in the end be rather selfish with my time. While I think it’s completely necessary to rest and recharge, I also think (especially for myself) that I often need more encouragement to get out, reach beyond the four walls of my house, and be okay with being outside my comfort zone.

This actually reminds me of a blog post my dear friend Lauren wrote recently (side note – you should go check out her blog! She has such beautiful thoughts!) She wrote about a quote she saw on Pinterest – “Taking time to live will only inspire your work.” I feel like that really embodies these thoughts that are rolling around in my head.

Lately, we’ve been going non-stop – meeting new people almost every day through a variety of opportunities that have come our way. And even though seeing and meeting so many people has drained this introvert of much of her people-energy, it has been SO so good for me. I’m learning that it’s okay to be uncomfortable at times, and to just roll with it.

Confession time: I HATE small talk. It’s not that I can’t do it, but rather I feel like I start rambling and I don’t do a great job at listening while small-talking. Give me your story though, and I’m happy to talk for hours. Share with me what you’re passionate about and ask me what I love to do – we’ll be best friends. But chat about the weather at length, the latest you-tube videos for too long, or give me one word answers to my questions and I won’t know where to go from there. I’d rather hear your life story and try to understand what makes you who you are than chat about something fluffy and gossipy any day.

Last week we met with a bunch of photographers who are local to our area. Tim and I don’t really follow a lot of local artists – we tend to do our own thing and not think too much about what others around us are doing or offering (maybe that’s a fault, I’m not sure.) I tend to compare myself to others easily though, and I get discouraged when it seems like they are doing more beautiful work, or doing crummier work and getting paid more, or they simply seem more “successful” than we are – whatever that means. That being said, we weren’t super familiar with the local photographer scene. We decided last week to get outside ourselves and go to a local meet-up we’d been invited to – it was such a good decision!

We loved chatting with everyone and sharing our hilarious wedding stories, but most of all I loved hearing about them. Why they became a photographer, what they loved most about shooting weddings, how they chose the name for their business. Those were the stories I wanted to hear. A few of us stayed late into the evening, after the group dwindled down to just us, and we laughed and sipped our drinks and nibbled on the crumbs of what was left of our fancy taco dishes and hummus plates.

We talked about life and owning our own businesses and working with clients and relationships and marriage and college and not getting jobs in our area of study and having dogs and planting gardens amongst many other things. We arrived mostly strangers or acquaintances, but we opened ourselves up to one another and shared our stories, the beginning of our fears and our struggles, the excitement of finding what we love to do, and the hopes we have for the future. We arrived mostly strangers or acquaintances and we walked out into the cool breezy night, exchanged hugs, and bid one other good night and exchanged “let’s do this again soon”s. It’s so hard to be vulnerable, to open yourself up to new experiences and new people, to get out of your comfort zone and ask about more than just the weather – but it’s so so worth it in the end.

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If inviting people into your home to share a meal at your table sounds like “getting outside of your comfort zone,” then this recipe is for you. You don’t have to work too hard and you will be a hero at the next get together you host, I promise. This recipe is simple enough to throw together, and it will keep you out of the kitchen so you’re able to spend more time with your friends, chatting and munching on chips and salsa until you’re ready for dinner. The morning-of, sauté up a few veggies and then throw everything in the crockpot, set it on low for 8 hours total. Check on it around hour 5, take the chicken out and shred it, then toss it back in and let it get happy a couple more hours till you’re ready to enjoy it!

I made this when my college roommates came to visit a couple weekends ago – we tossed it all together and then went to the park for a picnic lunch and a little walk in the sunshine! We’ve been having the most glorious weekends lately, but pretty crummy wet weather during the week – I’m so ready for spring really arrive! Until then I’m going to keep making soup to keep me warm and happy!

Chicken Tortilla Soup

Asharae Kroll
Print Recipe Pin Recipe
Prep Time 15 mins
Cook Time 8 hrs
Total Time 8 hrs 15 mins
Servings 6 -8

Ingredients
  

  • 3 boneless skinless chicken breasts
  • 1 yellow onion diced
  • 1-2 jalapeños diced (with seeds for spicy flavor, without for mild)
  • 4 cloves of garlic minced
  • 6 c chicken stock
  • 1 15 oz can black beans drained and rinsed
  • 2 15 oz cans diced tomatoes with juice
  • 1 15 oz can corn drained
  • 1 small can diced green chilies optional
  • 1.5 tsp cumin
  • 1 tsp chili powder
  • 1/4 tsp garlic powder
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 1/4 tsp black pepper
  • Juice of 1-2 limes
  • 1/4 c chopped cilantro
  • Garnish: cheese tortilla chips, avocado, sour cream, lime wedges, cilantro

Instructions
 

  • Saute onion over medium heat until slightly tender 2-4 minutes.
  • Add jalapeño and garlic, sauté 1 more minute. Add to slow cooker.
  • Add all ingredients to the slow cooker, except lime juice, cilantro, and garnishes.
  • Turn the slow cooker on low for 5 hours, remove chicken and shred it with two forks. Return the chicken to the slow cooker and leave on low for 2-3 more hours. (UPDATE: Depending on your slow cooker, this may go much faster! I've found that mine cooks hot, so it only takes 3-5 hours for the chicken to cook on low. I then shred it and place it back in for 30 minutes or so. Adjust your cooking time accordingly so you don't end up with tough, dry chicken.)
  • Add cilantro and lime juice right before serving.
  • Serve garnished with cheese, tortilla chips, avocado, additional lime and cilantro, and even sour cream or hot sauce if you wish.

Notes

If you don't like spice, you can omit the jalapeño and the diced green chilies for a more mild flavor. This recipe is very adaptable to your flavor preferences and what you have on-hand - I'm not sure I've ever made it the exact same way twice. Sometimes I add more spice or less, use frozen corn instead of canned, or omit an ingredient or two because I don't have it in the cabinet that day. This soup is also a great recipe to use if you have leftover chicken or turkey - just shred it all ahead of time and toss it in the crockpot for the flavors to get happy for a few hours.

 

Filed Under: Main Course Tagged With: comfort zone, crock pot, crockpot, easy recipe, introversion, introvert, slow cooker, soup

Simple Crockpot Chili

March 13, 2014 by Asharae 9 Comments

At the beginning of our marriage, Tim and I moved to Seattle for a year so I could intern with the fabulous husband-wife photography team now known as We Are the Rhoads. It was the most incredible opportunity and was exactly where we were supposed to be that year. I’m grateful everyday for the photography/business/marriage/life/pursue-your-dreams wisdom Chris and Sarah shared with me throughout that year. I love looking back and seeing how other people’s stories have affected my own – where their lives intersected with mine, even if just for a short time. It’s incredible the ways we can grow and be challenged by seeing the way other people live their lives, run their businesses, whatever it might be.

That year in Seattle was a hard one for us in many ways. We were still figuring out what it meant to be married, to be college graduates, to do the whole job-search thing, to pay bills and rent and student loans, to live 3000 miles away from our families and everything familiar. Oh and let’s not forget the whole getting-up-for-4-am-shifts learning curve. That one was steep. While in Washington, we always knew it would be temporary – we thought we’d probably stay two or three years and then move back east to “settle” closer to family. I struggled with a weird sort of guilt when we moved after only a year – a teaching job back in NC calling us back east and back toward family.

We see now that we sorta kept to ourselves that year, too afraid to invest much in our church and too fearful and shy to invest deeply in our friendships, knowing we’d have to say goodbye soon. We laugh that most of the friends we made while in Seattle were actually from North Carolina. Go figure. Instead of reaching out, we clung to each other. I remember many early mornings with tears and exhaustion, feeling the guilt of not trying hard enough to invest in the here and the now, and the weariness of just trying to get by with crummy part-time jobs. Someone once told us that perhaps our season in Seattle was difficult for a reason. Perhaps we weren’t meant to stay there for very long, and that’s okay. That was an incredibly freeing thought – to realize that some things are just for a season (most are really), and it’s okay take what you’ve learned, move on, and let things go. Oh the freedom!

Even now we’re still figuring out what it means to invest in what feels like a temporary place. It’s hard when our ideas of where we think we “should” be don’t match up with what actually unfolds. But are we going to live in this in-between place, never fully grounded, never fully accepting that we are here, we are here now, and we are here for a reason? That would be an awfully sad existence. Perhaps today, together, we can find one small way to invest in our here and now. Perhaps that means calling your friend and asking them to dinner rather than just thinking about it. Maybe it’s reaching out to your co-worker and being curious about their story. Maybe it’s slowing down and writing that letter to your grandmother. It’s quite possible it means less Netflix and less Instagram, less of having our eyes on our phones, and more of having them on those around us instead.

A lady once described Seattle to me as a gray old man, with a long gray beard, grumbling away in his home on a gray rainy day. I laughed. And completely agreed with her. But I also had a saying – “when Seattle is beautiful, it is BEAUTIFUL,” and there’s no where else you’d rather be. When the sun is shining and you see mountains in both directions, when you smell the salty air, and feel the wind in your hair – there’s no where else you’d rather be. Really and truly. On that note, when you go to Seattle, go as a visitor – it’s always sunny when visitors come. Most every other day is a mysterious misty gray, a drab depressing gray, or a drizzly cozy sort of gray – and enjoying it is very much about what you choose to do with the gray (and whether or not you’re taking Vitamin D pills). Anyway, enough reminiscing about my love-hate relationship with Seattle. On to the food!

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This recipe is an ode to one I first made while we lived in Seattle. We had one final dinner-party-hurrah before we moved, and this was the simplest thing I could think to make for our Seattle friends! It’s perfect for a cold winter day, or a dreary rainy Seattle one for that matter. Winter is still flirting with us here in North Carolina, and I’m sure we’ll have a few more chilly days before spring really makes an appearance. The wonderful thing about this recipe is that it takes just a few minutes of preparation and then you toss everything in the crockpot to get happy! You can even prep everything the night before, put it all in the bowl of your slow cooker and leave it in the fridge overnight. Just set it on low when you leave for work in the morning and you’ll have a delicious dinner waiting for you when you return! You can substitute ground turkey for a healthier option, or if you have leftover pork shoulder that’s also delicious in this recipe! I love to serve this with cheese, tortilla chips, lime, and cilantro, but you can enjoy it with saltines, or this bread goes really well with it too!

Simple Crockpot Chili

Asharae Kroll
After a short prep, toss all the ingredients in the slow cooker and enjoy a warm, hearty dinner in the evening!
Print Recipe Pin Recipe
Course Chili

Ingredients
  

  • 1 lb ground beef
  • 1 yellow onion diced
  • 2 15 oz cans diced tomatoes with juice
  • 2 15 oz cans red kidney beans drained and rinsed
  • 1 15 oz can black beans drained and rinsed
  • 1 15 oz can corn drained
  • 1 15 oz can tomato sauce or 1 small can tomato paste, and add 1-2 small cans water
  • 2 Tbs chili powder
  • 1 tsp red pepper flakes
  • 1 1/2 tsp garlic powder
  • 1 1/2 tsp cumin
  • A pinch of black pepper
  • A pinch of allspice
  • Salt to taste
  • 1-2 cans of water if you don't want your chili to be so thick

Instructions
 

  • Brown ground beef over medium heat. Drain and add to slow cooker.
  • Saute onions in the same pan until tender. Add to slow cooker.
  • Add the rest of the ingredients. Stir to combine.
  • Cook 8 hours on low or 4 hours on high.
  • Alternately, you can prep everything the night before, combine it all in your slow cooker pot, place it all in the fridge, and put it on to cook in the morning. I like to think this helps the flavors get happy overnight!
  • Serve with your choice of tortilla chips, lime, cilantro, cheese, crackers, hot sauce (for those who like it spicier), or whatever makes you happy!

Notes

Adjust this recipe to your tastes - if you like it spicier, add more red pepper flakes, if you want it mild, eliminate them all together! Play around with the amount of spices and the types of beans you add. Maybe add jalapeños or sautéed green bell pepper! Let me know if you try something new that you really enjoy! I'd love to hear about it!

 

Filed Under: Main Course Tagged With: chili, crockpot, easy recipe, slow cooker

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Hello there!

My name is Asharae. I’m a photographer by trade, wife to an amazing man, and mama to three little ones. I am passionate about creating good food, sharing meaningful conversation around the table, trying new things, and encouraging others to do the same.

Welcome to This Wild Season! This is a place for sharing what I’m learning in the kitchen and outside of it. Most of all, it is a challenge to myself and to you to slow down, be present in the moment, and re-learn how to savor food and conversation around the table.

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