"Fire burn, and cauldron bubble" MrsLee Cooks in 2024, Part 1

Questo è il seguito della conversazione "Fire burn, and cauldron bubble" MrsLee Cooks in 2023, Part 1.

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"Fire burn, and cauldron bubble" MrsLee Cooks in 2024, Part 1

1MrsLee
Gen 1, 7:44 pm

Whew. The holidays are over (entertainment-wise), except for the clean up and put away.

My DIL made a lovely pot roast with oven roasted vegetables. A delicious combination. Other foods over the weekend included frozen lasagna, roasted sweet potatoes and onions, charcuterie boards (cheeses: Camembert, blue, Parmigiano, Edom), Fried tiny potatoes with eggs and sausages (courtesy my son), empanadas (courtesy of my daughter), scalloped potatoes (son), more eggs, plus a lot of lovely desserts from Italian and German bakeries (daughter), and fresh veggies and fruit. We are not lacking in any way. Somehow we ended up with all the leftovers, as well as some smoked turkey, green bean casserole, truffled provolone and white truffle honey. I think my kids want me to find the ten pounds I lost in December. I have no doubt that I will.

Anyway, no food goals this year except to find the energy and appetite to make and eat it. As most of you know, there is chemical warfare going on inside me at the moment in my war against cancer. Enough about that.

I hope to read two cookbooks, one on Chinese techniques and the other on Indian curries. They are large and in my way and I will report here as reading.

2fuzzi
Gen 1, 10:07 pm

Starred!

3MrsLee
Gen 3, 4:47 pm

Did I mention in my old thread that I have begun making eggnog? It is the most marvelous thing at the moment. I don't like thick, cloggy nog from the store, nor do I like ingredients that don't have to be there. I found the simplest (to me) recipe online that required heating the nog to 160° so I would feel justified not guzzling it. I cut back on the 6 egg yolks to 4 because I like mine thinner. I also cut back on the sugar by 2 T. because I'm not much of a sweet fan. It comes out just the way I like it. I drink about 6 oz. a day. My almost quart of eggnog adds up to $3.50, whereas the closest thing I can get to it in the store is about $9.00 for the same amount.

These days of immunotherapy my appetite is an iffy thing and sometimes just the thought of food makes me ill, but this I can drink with relish and I feel like it is good for what ails me.

4MarthaJeanne
Modificato: Gen 3, 5:59 pm

You might want to try a variation I learned about in Geneva. Our local store sold regular milk, goat's milk, and 'lait de poule' (chicken milk), which turned out to be egg nog, but with vanilla instead of nutmeg.

5fuzzi
Gen 3, 6:10 pm

>3 MrsLee: recipe?

Since I have my own chickens now I know their diet and living conditions. I'm not afraid of raw eggs, just cautious.

6MrsLee
Modificato: Gen 3, 6:53 pm

>4 MarthaJeanne: The recipe I use, which is below, has both! I adjust either one to my mood. Last time I confused the amounts of vanilla vs. nutmeg, but it was still delicious. My grandson calls it "egg-milk" but I like "chicken-milk" better!

>5 fuzzi: My sister remembers my grandma making eggnog and donuts for after school snacks. I don't have that memory, but now I could do it if I wanted to!

Eggnog
4-6 egg yolks (whites can be used for another purpose, or whipped and folded in when eggnog is ready to serve)
1/2 c. (or less) sugar

Mix yolks and sugar well in a 2 c. bowl.

2 c. milk
1 c. whipping cream
pinch of salt
1/2 t. nutmeg

Combine in heavy saucepan and bring to a simmer, stirring a bit so it doesn't stick. You just want it hot and steamy, not boiling. Turn heat off, with ladle in one hand and whisk or fork in the other, add milk to eggs bit by bit mixing well. This will temper the eggs, when most of the milk is in, then pour the egg-milk mixture back into the saucepan and bring heat up to 160° and remove from heat.

Add
1/4 t. vanilla

Stir, strain into jar (unless you like little chunks, yuk), then cool and refrigerate. Stir before serving, fold in egg whites if desired (I never do), serve with brandy, whiskey or rum if desired (not for me). This makes just shy of a quart.

7MrsLee
Gen 3, 9:10 pm

Tonight I used 5 yolks instead of 4, I hate having an uneven number of eggs in the carton. It made 1 qt. That was the only difference, except I forgot the 1/4 t. Vanilla. Will know how it tastes in the morning. Too hot right now.

8MarthaJeanne
Gen 4, 2:18 am

>5 fuzzi: The eggs are cooked, not raw.

9fuzzi
Gen 4, 6:18 am

>8 MarthaJeanne: I just saw that. Hmm, I always thought egg nog had raw eggs, like mayonnaise.

10fuzzi
Gen 4, 6:18 am

>6 MrsLee: thank you! I can do that. I might have to substitute oat milk or goat milk as I'm lactose intolerant, will let you know how it turns out.

11MarthaJeanne
Gen 4, 6:52 am

I use a lot of goat's milk. I like it, and it comes in 1/2 l packages here, which is more convenient for me than litres, but it has only slightly less lactose than cow's milk.

12mnleona
Gen 4, 7:01 am

I have seen some recipes for eggnog on You Tube.

13thornton37814
Gen 4, 10:38 am

I made egg nog years ago. I thought I was going to have to make it this year as it was the 4th store where I finally located it.

14MrsLee
Gen 4, 2:41 pm

>13 thornton37814: I was buying a brand called Strauss. Not sure if it is national, it is made here in California. Comes in an old fashioned milk jar which you can return to the store for a $2.50 redemption. They make a killer ice cream, too.

My daughter made a version that was fermented for a couple of months with a LOT of booze in it. Very yummy, you mixed it with whipped cream when ready to serve. Son bought some eggnog at Costco this year, Kirkland brand, which reminds me of hers. 14% alcohol. I can't drink it, even 2 oz. is too much for me on my present medication.

15thornton37814
Gen 4, 7:17 pm

>14 MrsLee: I purchased Southern Comfort which was without alcohol in spite of the branding. The other option was Borden which was a local dairy to the area.

16MrsLee
Gen 8, 5:36 pm

My appetite is quite finicky these days. Gone are my spicy international foods and fatty meats. Comfort food for the win.

Today I made Split pea soup with a hambone broth. I added lots of extra vegetables and greens so that I can feel virtuous eating it. Blended it together, then added the cup of ham bits off the bone. Hits the spot on a winter day.

17fuzzi
Gen 8, 8:59 pm

>16 MrsLee: oh, I love split pea soup. Aldi's store brand version is really good.

18hfglen
Gen 9, 4:13 am

>16 MrsLee: I like the north-German version, with one or more Frankfurters or similar sliced into it while cooking. In Germany I've seen mustard served on the side.

19MarthaJeanne
Gen 9, 4:32 am

What we used to have here in Austria was called 'Erbswurst'. It sort of looked like a small sausage, but was dried pea soup. It came with or without bacon bits in it. You cut off a section and reconstituted it with boiling water. It was really quite decent soup and very easy to use, even on mountains. But demand let up, and it is no longer made. I miss it.

20MrsLee
Gen 9, 9:53 am

>17 fuzzi: I haven't tried that. I save the ham bone and fat when we have ham, then stick it in the freezer until we want a bean or pea soup. Yesterday I boiled the bone and fat with a bay leaf, whole mustard seed, whole black pepper, whole allspice, bird's eye chili, and cloves. After three hours I removed the solids from the broth, dumped in the split peas, carrots, celery, onion, garlic, ginger, turnip greens and some baby spinach and kale I had frozen. While that was cooking I stripped any meat I could find off the hambone and shredded it into small pieces. When the veggies and peas were done (about 30 minutes) I took my hand blender and mostly pureed them, then added in the ham. Adjusted flavors with salt, pepper and hot sauce. It is delicious, although a little thinner than I usually make it. I wasn't paying attention to how much broth I had.

>18 hfglen: To my north American, California ears, that sounds so wrong! We put frankfurters in beans, so of course I'm sure they are delicious in split peas as well.

>19 MarthaJeanne: That does sound convenient. I wonder if it went by the wayside when dried foods became the thing?

21MrsLee
Gen 15, 11:33 pm

I am not personally cooking, but my freezer is getting fuller! My sister is here visiting. We froze some green pea soup (I made), one of her friends sent me some lovely beef stroganoff, so part of that went in the freezer and part of it was eaten by my family who came to visit tonight. It is delicious! She made it with shredded beef which was moist and tender. I've always made mine with thinly sliced beef. My sister also made creamy Mac n cheese for my birthday tomorrow, but she made a double batch and froze two casseroles of it.

I use the freezer on one refrigerator for ready to eat meals, and the other one for ingredients. Theoretically. I have a lot of green chilies frozen in my ready to eat freezer. In the ingredient freezer are lots of bits and pieces I was using for smoothies. I want to use those up, and make a couple more batches of soup from the broth packages I have frozen (when I have bits and pieces of vegetables or bones from meat I throw them in a ziplock freezer bag until it is full enough for a soup broth starter).

I have all this lovely food and today the random nausea that hits me as a side effect kicked in. I'm going to take the nausea medicine I have until Wednesday and hope to keep it at bay, because my sister also made a lovely German chocolate cake with coconut-pecan icing and I want some!

22fuzzi
Gen 16, 9:30 am

Happy Birthday!!!!!

23thornton37814
Modificato: Gen 16, 10:47 am

Happy Birthday! It snowed here the night before last, all day yesterday, and last night. We have 10 inches on the ground. Last night I made a huge pot of beef vegetable soup. I'll share a bowl with you virtually in case it will work better with your stomach.

"

24MrsLee
Modificato: Gen 16, 6:31 pm

>22 fuzzi: & >23 thornton37814: Thank you!

>23 thornton37814: Yum! I can almost smell that! We had a bowl of clam chowder at a market today. It was really good!

25mdoris
Gen 16, 7:39 pm

Hello MrsLee. I ❤️ soup and your pea soup with a hambone and broth sound scrumptious and made with lots of veg is so good. Hoping that you get well very, very soon and get feeling much better soon too with all your energy back.

26MrsLee
Gen 16, 9:49 pm

>25 mdoris: Thank you! :)

27MrsLee
Gen 16, 11:30 pm

Made it through the birthday dinner with no ill effects so far. It was incredible! Probably cost about $30 a plate, but no way could you get a comparable meal in a restaurant for that, and we have leftovers! 1 pound of scallops is $39.99. I bought almost a pound, 8 scallops.

28MarthaJeanne
Gen 17, 3:13 am

>27 MrsLee: That makes me feel a lot better about buying scallops, which I do about once a month. We love them, butl I try not to notice that I am paying over €30 for eight.

29fuzzi
Gen 17, 6:17 am

>27 MrsLee: my dh loves scallops, so once a year when we go to the shore for a long weekend we find a nice restaurant, and he orders them for dinner.

30mnleona
Gen 17, 6:28 am

Happy Birthday.
Everything sounds so good and looks good.
I am in central Minnesota and barely have any snow of the ground. It will come.
Drive safely.

31MrsLee
Gen 18, 8:48 pm

My best birthday gift this year so far has been from my doctor. No immunotherapy infusion. Instead I had what is called a "Happy Hour" IV drip of saline solution. I was dehydrated, low on sodium, kidneys and liver functions way down, and needed thyroid replacement therapy. So, IV to kickstart,, back on Prednisone, new prescription of synthroid. I felt good enough to drag my sister around Costco for 2 hours looking for healthy and easy food.

Not feeling quite as nice as yesterday, but had the energy to fry oysters for my brother and make a delicious Asian inspired egg drop chicken soup. About 8 c. Swiss chard thinly sliced like noodles, 1c. cooked chicken sliced thin, 2 c. oyster mushrooms, onions, garlic, ginger. I sliced all the veg. thin. Used soy sauce, lemon juice and hot sauce to balance flavor. At the end, I whisked 2 egg whites and slowly poured them in soup. Very yummy!

32lesmel
Gen 19, 8:50 am

>31 MrsLee: I'm not a fan of egg drop soup; but that sounds delicious! I'm glad you got some good news from the doc.

33MrsLee
Gen 19, 3:59 pm

I plan to make salmon patties tonight. I am going to use the leftover oyster juice in them. Also some green onions and mayonnaise, salt and pepper. Then I dip them in egg, then in Panko crumbs. I will let you know if they are edible.

34fuzzi
Gen 19, 6:09 pm

>31 MrsLee: that sounds very yummy!

35MrsLee
Gen 19, 6:35 pm

>32 lesmel: I'm not a big fan either, but there were egg whites to be used and spouse bought oyster mushrooms, so my mind flipped over from from farm veg and chicken, to Asian.

>34 fuzzi: Thanks!

Wrong time of year to find green onions in my garden, but I think I found enough for the salmon patties.

36MrsLee
Gen 20, 1:23 am

>35 MrsLee: Salmon patties accomplished. I had forgotten how to make them, so looked up grandma's salmon loaf for clues. No mayonnaise. 1 can drained Salmon, 1 egg, I used about 1/4 c. Oyster juice, 2 T. minced green onion, celery tips (I had some of these left from celery stick snacks, didn't measure, but probably about 2 T.), 1 t. Dill, less than a t. kosher salt, fresh ground pepper, about 1/2 c. saltine crackers crushed to absorb extra fluid. After it sits a bit to blend flavors, form patties and roll in egg, then panko crumbs. Put in fridge for 1/2 hour, then fry in lots of hot butter. 3 minutes on first side, 2 minutes on second side. Yum. Oh, I squeezed lemon over mine.

37hfglen
Gen 20, 4:10 am

>36 MrsLee: That sounds utterly delicious!

38thornton37814
Gen 20, 8:33 am

It's been a long time since I made salmon patties. My mom didn't add oyster juice or dill to hers, and I think she used regular onion instead of the green ones most of the time--just because that was what was in the house. We didn't have panko back, but I don't remember coating them before frying (in oil instead of butter), although she may have. The egg and crackers were in the mix itself. Her salt would have been regular salt instead of kosher.

39MrsLee
Gen 20, 11:00 am

>37 hfglen: Thank you!

>38 thornton37814: My mom and grandma usually made a loaf covered with a creamy hard boiled egg sauce. My husband's family was Catholic, so fish on Friday. He hated his mom's salmon patties. Said they were dried out and flavorless. He loves mine. :)

Hoping, if energy allows, to make fried rice tonight. If I do, I am going to stir-fry lots of veggies to put in. Carrots, celery, beet greens and stems, ginger, garlic Some eggs and shrimp for protein. Also any bits and pieces of Chinese food which are leftover, but I think there is only rice left now.

Normally I would know about the leftovers, but when we bought the meal, the next day in the middle of lunch I had a bought with nausea (not Chinese food induced, but cancer treatment effect) and it ruined me for the Chinese food. I think reworking it into fried rice will do.

40MrsLee
Gen 21, 9:25 pm

Fried rice accomplished. A bit different than above. No shrimp, lion's mane fungus, but essentially the same. A good reliable way to make a healthy dinner out of leftovers and vegetables that need using.

41MrsLee
Gen 22, 6:39 pm

My sourdough bread is suddenly failing. I don't think it's the sourdough, it bubbles up fine when I feed it. I have been trying to change from the pulling method to the Kitchen-Aid mixer kneading, and I think that is where I'm going wrong. I may be over kneading it with the machine. I will try once more with the machine the next time I make it. I read that you only knead 2 minutes at a time or the dough can overheat (I might have overheated the water I added). After that I will go back to the pulling method.

I made pickled beets today with some changes. I mostly like them on my salad. I had one rutabaga which I added. I made small cubes instead of flat circles or quarters. Then I looked for some Asian inspiration. I used bird eye chilies (tiny things, only 4) toasted with Szechuan pepper. 3 cloves, 1/2 star anise, 2 T. minced ginger, 2 T. minced garlic. I say minced, but it was bigger than a mince, smaller than a chop. 5 T. sugar, soy sauce, vinegar, salt and pepper, and 2 tiny mandarin oranges. When the beets were starting to soften, I tasted and it was slightly bitter, so I removed the mandarins and added some more salt. They are sitting to cool now, but a second taste told me they are pretty good!

42fuzzi
Gen 23, 6:43 am

>41 MrsLee: what an artiste!

I love, LOVE pickled beets, almost anything pickled. I've not tried eggs or pigs' feet though I'm told my grandfather loved both of those.

43MrsLee
Gen 23, 11:10 am

>42 fuzzi: *snort* If you saw my loaf of bread you might not say that! :D I will take a picture for my daughter in law to show her that even if you get it right a lot of the time, sometimes you don't. She needs encouragement.

Today, along with doctor visits, we will pick up some fresh oysters for frying and a lobster tail. Both for recipes in the family cookbook. I made the oysters last week, but forgot to take a photo!

I've never made lobster before. I am opting for a frozen tail as the recipe doesn't mention cooking a live one, and I don't need that learning curve right now. I'm supposed to open the tail in two halves, cut up the meat and sauté lightly, then mix with stuff, put in the shell and bake. Sorry for the vagaries, but I don't have the recipe at hand. Will report more when I actually make it.

44MrsLee
Gen 23, 11:21 am

I mentioned in the reading thread that I am reading Chinese Techniques by Ken Hom. So far it has cost me $45. I ordered some fermented black beans and two varieties of dried mushrooms; shitake and black mushrooms called something like cloud ears. I think a good investment, as all will keep indefinitely if stored correctly.

I am very tempted to order a wok spatula and ladle, but then my practical side kicks in and reminds me that I've been cooking for 40 years using my wooden paddles and other ladle.

45fuzzi
Gen 23, 12:16 pm

>43 MrsLee: my cooking doesn't look pretty!

I made lobster, once, used a live one. No one told me to drop him headfirst into the boiling water...I dropped him in tail-first and he tried to get out. I felt so bad I never made lobster again.

46MarthaJeanne
Gen 23, 12:42 pm

Back in boarding school a friend and I caught crabs in the local streams. One of the other girls in the dorm was incensed that we intended dropping them into boiling water. One of the crabs got loose, and chose her bed to hide under. Suddenly she no longer wanted to fight for its life, but just wanted us to get it out of there.

The crabs tasted very good.

47MrsLee
Gen 23, 1:43 pm

>45 fuzzi: & >46 MarthaJeanne: LOL, this is why I don't feel like getting a live lobster. I have no qualms about the morality of it, but the fuss and bother are not worth it to me. I do love to eat all shellfish though. I married the wrong man for that. He is not fond of any of it, but he isn't allergic.

>42 fuzzi: I forgot to mention, I've not had pickled pig's feet, but I do pickled eggs in a cheating sort of way. Whenever I have a jar of pickled or olive brine left, I toss in a few hard boiled, peeled eggs (just enough so the brine covers them) and leave then for 3 days. Then you can quarter them along sandwiches, use then to make sandwich filling or deviled eggs. They are something special! I only use the brine once for this, because it loses its flavor to the eggs. Oh, I use my pickled beets brine too, then you get pretty pink/fushia eggs. Pickle brine makes a pretty chartreuse egg.

48fuzzi
Gen 23, 2:10 pm

>47 MrsLee: oh, those eggs sound good. If my chickens get prolific in their laying habits I might just try that.

49hfglen
Gen 24, 5:49 am

>45 fuzzi: Back in the day when such things were affordable (50+ years ago!), student scuttlebut was that one should drop the lobster into a bucket of Lieberstein (local cheap white wine -- the best thing about it was the price!) and let it swim around a bit beforee transferring to boiling water. At least it would die happy.

50fuzzi
Gen 24, 6:32 am

>49 hfglen: that's funny, and it reminds me of a joke about a man who drowned in an open vat of beer. His coworkers kept pulling him out and he kept jumping back in...

51MrsLee
Gen 25, 11:32 am

I cooked the lobster tail last night. The recipe is very easy, but I managed to overcook at least the smaller bites of lobster. It calls for lobster to be removed from the shell, cut up, seasoned with salt, pepper and cayenne then braised quickly in butter, add sherry and French mustard and put back in the shell in an ovenproof pan. Pour a mixture of 2 egg yolks and whipping cream over it and broil until browned.

It was just ok. For $39 a pound (I bought a big tail, so it was $39), I would rather have it grilled and dipped in butter. The egg yolk ran down through the lobster, out of the shell and into the bottom of the pan, so it didn't moisten the meat, which I supposed was it's duty.

However, after I popped the lobster in the oven to broil, I threw some spinach in the pan that had butter, sherry and mustard in it and sautéed it. When the lobster came out, I served it beside the spinach, poured the sad lobster pan eggs over the spinach, and that was delicious! Will try to post a photo later.

52MrsLee
Gen 26, 12:03 am

Pork roast and broccoli tonight, nothing special, but delicious. Now I have the fixins for the pork gravy I use when I make Egg foo young, which I will be making to photograph for the family cookbook.

53MrsLee
Modificato: Gen 26, 3:42 pm

Here are some photos of the recipes I've tried recently for the cookbook.

Broiled Lobster with Spinach


Fried Oysters

The lobster photo is for the recipe itself, the oysters photo is for the Seafood Heading page, hence the skeleton. Skeletons on the heading pages will be my signature for this cookbook.

I accidentally discovered that I can cook the oysters a bit longer to make them a deeper gold, but as I live in fear of overcooked seafood, I usually don't. The gills get tough if you go much longer.

54fuzzi
Gen 27, 7:16 pm

>53 MrsLee: yum yum. Nothing like fresh seafood, a few hours from the water.

55MrsLee
Gen 27, 11:00 pm

>54 fuzzi: I wish I could get it that fresh, but the store I shop at, which is 30 miles away, but in the town where my medical treatments are, has very fresh seafood. I think they get daily delivery. I really want some Dungeness crab.

I made the Egg Foo Yung tonight. It took me 2 1/2 hours with all the veggie wash and prep, but I was moving pretty slow. I wanted to enjoy the process and work with my new cleaver. I love it! The feel, balance and weight are easier to use than my French chef knife. I never thought I would say something was better than that knife.

56MarthaJeanne
Gen 28, 6:29 am

It's really amazing when that happens, isn't it? My current favourites were part of a supermarket deal, and I only bought one of the smaller knives when I had just more standard sized chef's knives than made sense. For most of my chopping I now use the smaller, lighter ones. Yes, I managed to get a second one before the offer ran out.

57MrsLee
Gen 28, 12:09 pm

Egg Foo Yung photo for the Heading page of Eggs, Cheese and Dairy in the family cookbook. Every heading page has a skeleton with the food, some are more obvious than others. Since this new lunar year will be the year of the Dragon, I thought I would make that the theme. My book of Chinese Fairy Tales is in the background, but hard to see the dragon on the page.

58MrsLee
Gen 28, 12:24 pm

I'm getting a break in the feeling crappy mode, which is wonderful!

I have to get up by 5:00 a.m. to take my thyroid supplement, then I usually go back to bed until 7:00 a.m. when I have to get up and take some Prednisone to help my with side effects of immunotherapy. Well, the past two mornings I have been wide awake and feeling decent (probably Prednisone effect), so I did small projects.

Yesterday I wanted to see if I could save some sad, failed sourdough bread I made (I think I overheated the dough somewhere in the process because it didn't rise and was very dense). I made a raspberry simple syrup, soaked the bread with that and whipping cream, then layered it with mixed berries. Covered and baked at 350° for about 1 1/2 hours, then uncovered and baked a bit longer. It is like a berry bread pudding! Best save ever.

This morning I had a beef brisket to cook. I made chili Colorado with it. Now I'm simmering the bones and some ham bones to make a broth to cook beans in. Working up to having all the ingredients for a Monster Nacho dinner sometime this week.

59fuzzi
Gen 29, 11:10 am

>58 MrsLee: yum yum.

60MrsLee
Gen 29, 4:57 pm

I have a pie recipe to cook for the cookbook, but I don't want to. If I am going to do it, it needs to be today because this is a fine day and soon we will have a week of rain again. I don't want to eat pie right now because I am supposed to have a PET scan soon and I need to keep my sugar levels low. Besides, not in the mood for sweets. Husband doesn't like pie. But I need that photo for the pie heading page.

61lesmel
Gen 29, 5:16 pm

>60 MrsLee: Can you share it with neighbors? What about the local fire station or library?

62MrsLee
Gen 29, 7:09 pm

>61 lesmel: It is possible. I decided to make grandma's Raisin Pie #2, which is a custard pie served cold with whipped cream, instead of a baked pie. Husband is more likely to eat that.

Grandma's recipe for "Never Fails" pie crust is made by pouring 1/2 c. Boiling water over 1 c. Lard and 1 t. Salt. Stir until it is clear, then stir in 3 c. Flour mixed with 1/2 t. Baking powder.

I have never made a pie crust like this the lard never got clear. It melted, but wasn't clear. It makes a rather wet dough which goes in the refrigerator. Says enough for 3 covered pies. We shall see. I know my pie crust recipe works, but you have to know the technique to make pie crust. I'm not dealing with the crust until 5 o'clock. Then I will roll and bake it.

63MrsLee
Gen 30, 3:59 am

Wow. I'm pretty impressed with that crust! I did a little online research to find a similar recipe with clear instructions and most actually boiled their lard before adding to the flour, they didn't just pour boiling water into it. They also said to work with the dough when it was warm as it would crack if it cooled. They said it was for meat pies. I beg to differ. When I went to get the dough, it was the easiest I had ever worked with. Rolled right out, no cracks, thin as I wanted it and didn't break when I put it in the dish. I did a braided edge for the crust with no problem. The taste? I loved it! Light, melt-in-your-mouth goodness. I can see that the butter crust is a bit richer for desserts, but I like this one fine. I used the leftover bits to make little treats with cinnamon sugar sprinkled on them. Husband was very happy.

We haven't actually tasted the pie yet. I got it ready for the photo, but it was too late at night for me to eat, so I probably won't be eating a piece until tomorrow afternoon. Medical appointments in the morning.

The custard isn't my favorite. The recipe calls for a "heaping" Tablespoon of flour. That seems too much. Plus; I don't like raisins.

In the photo, the teapot, teacups and handkerchiefs belonged to my grandmother Nora, whose recipe this is. I'm not sure she would approve of the skeleton in the photo, but then again, she did let my cousin sing the "Worms Crawl in, the Worms Crawl Out" song at the breakfast table one time.

64MarthaJeanne
Gen 30, 4:40 am

I tend to make my pie crusts with half butter and half lard. I like the taste, and cut into the flour, the lard gives a very flakey crust. I think the one with boiling gives a sturdier result.

65MrsLee
Gen 30, 5:14 am

>64 MarthaJeanne: That is the way I've always made them before. It can be tricky, especially if you haven't made one in awhile, to get the tender crust I love that isn't a real pain to work with. I expected the boiled lard recipe to be tough, or chewy, but it was flaky and lovely.

66MarthaJeanne
Gen 30, 6:42 am

>65 MrsLee: One advantage of half butter half lard is that the lard is much easier to work in. I cut the butter into quite small cubes, and then rub the fat in with my fingers. The cold butter can be hard to rub. But I have cold fingers. Always have. I have tried other methods of combining the fat with the flour, but I gave up on owning a food processor decades ago. More hassle leaning than it was worth to me, and I was constantly having to replace plastic pieces that weren't up what I expected of them. My fingers work better than the various implements I've tried. I need to bale a pumpkin pie soon. 'Vegetable, milk, egg, flour. Nutrition!" It always feels like comfort food. (My other comfort food is rice with banana and yoghurt and a spoonful of hot lime pickle, but I have trouble convincing anybody else.)

67fuzzi
Gen 30, 9:04 am

>63 MrsLee: noted. I use my mom's pie crust recipe which is lard and flour and a tablespoon of milk. It tastes fine but I just can't roll it out with any competence. I have been buying the Aldi's brand of ready-made pie crust and it's quite good. And easy.

682wonderY
Gen 30, 11:56 am

>63 MrsLee: Skelly looks excited to try that pie😁

69MrsLee
Gen 30, 3:00 pm

>68 2wonderY: He kept trying to dip his fingers in it!

I finally was able to eat a slice today, and the problem I had with the custard disappeared overnight. When I tasted it yesterday, the flour had a grainy texture in it. I had pre-browned the flour, thinking it might add a bit of nutty flavor without nuts. Today the custard was smooth as silk. This is a very sweet pie. The raisins are poached before being added to the custard. My grandma Nora was a teetotaler, but I think they would have been good poached in a little brandy or rum. My husband disagrees. He likes it the way it is, but then he likes raisins.

70MarthaJeanne
Gen 30, 3:49 pm

Another possibility is tea. I quite like raisins and other fruit soaked in tea.

71MrsLee
Gen 30, 5:25 pm

>70 MarthaJeanne: I could see that working! Especially a favorite herbal tea, like hibiscus or lavender. I think their delicate flavor would survive in the custard. Or Earl or Lady Grey.

72MrsLee
Gen 30, 7:51 pm

Made my nachos tonight. I cut in half the amount I thought I wanted, and still couldn't eat it all, but the night is young!

Layers in the bowl:
1/2 c. Mashed pinto beans
1/2 c. chili Colorado
Dollops of Velveeta cheese with green roasted chilies in
Dollops of fire roasted tomato salsa (in a can, but whole ingredients)
Heat until hot. I did this on reheat in my air fryer.
Toppings:
Guacamole
Sour cream

73MrsLee
Gen 31, 7:06 pm

Today's recipe trial was Beef Short ribs. The recipe was deceptively simple. I say deceptive because I didn't expect much of it. Brown the ribs, add salt, pepper, (I had to guess all amounts, only ingredients were listed), tomato sauce (I added about 1/3 c. of leftover tomato salsa from yesterday), 1 onion, 6 cloves garlic and water to cover. Simmer until ribs are almost done (1 1/2 hours), add 4-5 potatoes (I used red medium size), simmer another 30 minutes. Adjust for seasoning. It needed no adjustment, it was plain out delicious! This is why people are meat and potato people.

74lesmel
Gen 31, 7:25 pm

>73 MrsLee: That sounds really great!

75MrsLee
Feb 2, 8:22 am

I had extra sourdough starter and pumpkin that needed using, so I'm making Sourdough Pumpkin bread this morning. Correction. I made it last night, I'm baking it this morning. It is a recipe from the internet. A sweet bread, I suppose. I would like to try making an actual loaf of bread using the pumpkin instead of water and light spices. Might try that today or tomorrow. My pumpkin is from a fresh pumpkin which I baked, pureed, then froze. It is runnier than canned pumpkin.

76lesmel
Feb 2, 4:48 pm

You can always cook down the fresh pumpkin. It takes some time; but the interwebs swears by it.

77MarthaJeanne
Modificato: Feb 2, 5:00 pm

I saw one cookie recipe that called for using paper towels to suck up extra liquid (from canned pumpkin).

If I were cooking it down I think I would spread it out on a cookie sheet and use a low oven.

78MrsLee
Feb 2, 5:21 pm

>76 lesmel: & >77 MarthaJeanne: Yes, I usually do this before freezing. I didn't do it to the consistency of canned pumpkin though.

I made my loaf of pumpkin sourdough bread. Added whole wheat flour, some oatmeal, pecans, pumpkin seeds, flax and sesame seeds. I added water slowly as I mixed, and it seems to be a good dough. Won't bake it until tomorrow.

Exciting thunder and lightning storm right now. One cat is hiding in the chimney, the others are in secret places.

79MrsLee
Feb 3, 7:56 pm

The pumpkin sourdough loaf is not a total flop, but I didn't bake it long enough. We will have to toast our slides in the frying pan to finish cooking them. It didn't poof a lot, very dense, but I'm pretty sure I let it rise long enough (when I pushed a finger in it the indent stayed). It is just a dense and moist loaf due to the pumpkin and all the other things in it. Kind of what I wanted, only I was hoping to get it baked all the way through!

I had some things to use up in the refrigerator and they added up to a dish of enchiladas. Chicken, spinach, cheddar cheese, sour cream, onions and sauce. I did this to use up the extra Colorado sauce, but since I put the onions and the leftover tomato salsa in it I still have as much as I was trying to use up.

Also baked some cod. I don't care for baked cod (texture) and I oversalted this. Will mash it and make a cream sauce and put it over toast or noodles.

Not my most glorious day of cooking. As my great-niece would say, I wasn't cooking with my heart.

80MarthaJeanne
Feb 4, 5:05 am

Maybe try your cod over biscuits. I always forget how easy they are, and they feel more special than noodles or toast.

81MrsLee
Feb 4, 8:27 am

>80 MarthaJeanne: Biscuits would be good, but my husband is a big fan of noodles and doesn't get them as often as he thinks he should. I think I will try my seafood spaghetti recipe, but use the cod and maybe some shrimp to supplement. Something in me isn't in the mood for cream sauce right now. Seafood spaghetti is made with cream which has been reduced, and garlic, with Parmigiano cheese. I won't make it until tomorrow though. Too much food to eat at the moment.

82MrsLee
Feb 4, 8:52 pm

Think I'm going to make some chimichangas with the beans I have leftover. Buttery, baked goodness, then what we don't eat we can freeze.

83MrsLee
Feb 6, 8:32 am

I seem to be late to the party again. I have just learned that it is best to keep berries in glass jars in the refrigerator. The information seems to disagree on whether to wash first or not. Last night I washed the strawberries and raspberries, but did not wash the blueberries and grapes. Since the whole point is to put them in the jar as dry as possible, it doesn't make sense to me to wash first.

I also found a sourdough discard recipe for granola that I want to try. I would like to be able to make my own granola that isn't too sweet, but doesn't break your teeth when you try to eat it. Being able to control the nuts and fruits seems like a good idea. I am dehydrating some strawberries right now to see if they will be a texture we like or if they come out like rubber.

84fuzzi
Feb 6, 9:16 am

>83 MrsLee: I look forward to the results.

I don't know about washing berries, but I have read that washing eggs is not recommended until just before using.

85MrsLee
Feb 6, 2:17 pm

Fudge has been made! That is my last recipe needed for photos in the cookbook. Now it is a matter of lauout, proof reading, ans fixing contents and index with page numbers. Getting close! I hope I have some days of not feeling crappy after this infusion.

By the way, my husband is not a fish or seafood fan. Last night when I made the seafood spaghetti with the over-salted cod, he said it was the best fish dish he has ever tasted. Win!

86fuzzi
Feb 6, 8:39 pm

>85 MrsLee: double yippee!

87MrsLee
Feb 7, 12:07 am

I went a little loco today. Perhaps it is the knowledge that tomorrow is my infusion and I might be out of commission or worse, for another month or so made me want to have a last hurrah.

After the doctor appointment we went to a meat & seafood market. I purchased Applewood bacon, a family pack of hamburger (5 lbs.), Mark wanted a pork roast and I wanted a crab! Then at Costco I bought some asparagus and cherries.

Arrived home about 5, put the roast in the oven, dumped the cherries on a towel to dry, washed the asparagus and prepared for roasting (freezing the ends I broke off for soup). I then portioned the hamburger into 1 lb. lumps and froze them. After that I worked on cleaning the crab. I like the body meat in a salad and the claw meat with butter and sourdough bread. Sadly, this crab was not the finest and the flavor was faint. I hope very much that I don't get sick. :P No bad flavor, just not much flavor.

Anyway, the roast and asparagus were delicious.

88johnsnow75371
Feb 7, 4:19 am

Questo utente è stato eliminato perché considerato spam.

89fuzzi
Modificato: Feb 7, 9:46 am

>87 MrsLee: ooh, asparagus. Yum.

We've been praying for you here, will continue.

90MrsLee
Feb 7, 10:41 am

>89 fuzzi: Thank you! Most appreciated. So far no ill effects from the crab. :)

91MrsLee
Feb 13, 12:23 am

Not cooking much but I did make spaghetti today. Feeling OK with reservations so far.

I have proof-read, finished the layout, and completed adding page numbers to the contents and index of the Family Recipes Cookbook I am making. 239 pages. Now I will send it to my daughter to proof-read.

I'm trying to find a photo for the cover. There are not that many photos of my grandmothers in their kitchens. My sister says she has the perfect one, but doesn't know where it is. Thanks, sis. My daughter suggested making a collage of photos of the women and the food they cooked (which I could do from the photos of the food I cooked for the book). I kind of like that idea, I'm just not sure how to do it. Maybe I'll send her the photos and let her do it. :) I would love to have this thing ready to publish before the end of the month.

92MrsLee
Feb 13, 3:42 pm

This is the cover image I created on Canva for my cookbook. Hope I can get it to work on Lulu! The top photos are of grandmas, (two of mine, one of my husband's), the bottom is me, my sister, mom and niece. The food photos are some of the specialties of the ladies featured, especially the grandmas. Pumpkin stew is mine, salsa is my mom's.

93haydninvienna
Feb 13, 5:02 pm

Entirely right, proper and appropriate. Well done. You continue to amaze me as to how productive you are despite all the heavy stuff you're dealing with.

94MrsLee
Feb 13, 5:09 pm

95fuzzi
Feb 13, 7:58 pm

>92 MrsLee: that's a nice design!

962wonderY
Feb 13, 8:21 pm

>92 MrsLee: You found some lovely portraits!

97MrsLee
Feb 13, 9:45 pm

>95 fuzzi: Thank you: )

>96 2wonderY: The black and white one is my grandma Nora in her new kitchen, about 1951. She got a whole new house that grandpa built for her, but she loved her kitchen. All the modern conveniences! As with most women, my sister and niece think that is a terrible photo of them, and I just love it, in spite of wishing it were a better photo of me! lol We all agree that we love mom in it. Aren't women silly? My grandmother Charlotte is at the top eating her ice cream, and Mark's grandma is leaning on her stove in the 1950s. We called her Nana and her heart and personality were as warm as her smile.

98MrsLee
Feb 15, 1:58 pm

Oh dear. I'm afraid the infusion is affecting my appetite again. I can't even work up enthusiasm to cook some squash and cabbage. It must be done though.

I would like to try a recipe for Sourdough brownies, but not sure I will get the energy or will power.

99MrsLee
Feb 15, 8:57 pm

I did cook the veg and brownies. I undercooked the brownies. I have them back in the oven to see if I can fix that. Underbaking things is getting to be a habit with me #*@%$.

100fuzzi
Feb 16, 6:10 pm

>99 MrsLee: I would love to try Sourdough brownies.

101MrsLee
Feb 17, 12:09 am

>100 fuzzi: This is the recipe I used. If you meant you only wanted to taste mine, come on over!

https://littlespoonfarm.com/sourdough-brownies-recipe/

Be warned though, that I was not the only one who had issues with the gooey texture. Others said they baked it up to an hour longer than the recipe called for. I used a glass pan. Another lady said she added 50 g. of flour and baked it 20 minutes longer.

Me? I'm looking hard at those Costco Kirkland brand brownies and remembering how easy they were to bake and how delicious they were. :D

102fuzzi
Feb 17, 7:46 am

>101 MrsLee: thanks!

If I ever get west of the Mississippi again I'd love to take you up on that invitation.

103mdoris
Feb 17, 7:25 pm

Dropping by to say hello!

104mnleona
Feb 18, 4:36 pm

>92 MrsLee: Very nice and full of memories.

105MrsLee
Feb 25, 11:35 pm

>103 mdoris: Hello!

>104 mnleona: Thank you.

I'm in a cooking slump again. I did bake bread yesterday and it came out pretty good in spite of the fact that I forgot to slash it before putting it in the oven.

My cooking inspiration today was sort of a "That was darned good steak and I'm not allowing it to go to waste." and "I need to cook that sweet potato before it goes bad." So I made what was supposed to be hash. Only I didn't get the sweet potato to brown before it got too mushy. I added onion, garlic, sprig of rosemary, sage, salt, pepper and some chipotle chili powder. Put in the diced meat and threw in some leftover rice from last night for good measure. Also a bowl of chicken drippings that was in the back of the refrigerator. Smelled fine, no mold. *crosses fingers* What I ended up with was a tasty way to fill the fuel need, but nothing I would ever put in front of company.

Husband cooked a pot of spaghetti tonight using sauce I made awhile back. That's probably all the cooking that will be happening in this kitchen for awhile.

106mnleona
Feb 28, 7:15 am

>105 MrsLee: Baking bread is an accomplishment. I bet it was good with the pasta.

107MrsLee
Feb 28, 7:51 pm

Finished the cookbook and it's ready to print! I'm taking orders from family and plan to place the order by Monday. So far there are 22 ordered. They came out to $25 each with shipping and taxes. I thought that was pretty reasonable for 329 pages. Very excited, I can't wait to see it!

108mdoris
Feb 29, 7:14 pm

Wow, congratulations!

109mnleona
Mar 1, 10:00 am

>107 MrsLee: That is wonderful. Lots of good memories for everyone.

110MrsLee
Mar 1, 11:53 pm

Placed a second order of cookbooks, up to 40 ordered now! The fun thing is hearing from all the cousins who are spread far and wide. Also a few friends have ordered them. Hope they are not disappointed. I'm not sure they know what they are getting into!

111hfglen
Mar 2, 3:26 am

>110 MrsLee: I can speak as one friend who is very happy reading a pdf of The Book. The pictures are excellently chosen, heartwarming of a family I've never met, and convey precisely what the food should look like. I now have the agonising decision: which recipe to try first. I'm reminded of the alleged last words of Cecil John Rhodes (possibly more famous here than in California!): "So much to do, so little time".

112MrsLee
Mar 2, 12:33 pm

>111 hfglen: I'm glad you are enjoying it! Let me know if you have any questions regarding "same language with different meanings" issues. :) I will be interested to know what you choose to cook!

113MrsLee
Mar 10, 11:26 am

Not doing much creative cooking here. More survival fare. Smoothies in the morning, lots of veggies.

I made some artichoke tea yesterday. First time I've boiled artichokes, we usually steam them. Interesting. I liked how soft they were, easy to eat, but they lost a lot of flavor. Also roasted a leg of lamb. I see curry in my future.

Today I'm making a big pot of "Save the Vegetables" soup. Broth made with the frozen bits of things I keep in the freezer, some ham fat and a turkey neck with skins of onions and other vegetable trimmings. I will strain that when it's done and add baby lima beans, cabbage, carrots, one sad turnip, celery, onion, garlic, ginger and some leftover rice if it passes the smell test. Also a chili and some garden herbs.

114fuzzi
Mar 10, 2:44 pm

>113 MrsLee: that's kind of like "Hobo Stew", which we had in Girl Scouts. Each of us would bring in a can of something, and dump it all in a big soup pot. I don't recall how it tasted.

115MrsLee
Mar 10, 5:53 pm

>114 fuzzi: I think mine is going to be a comfortable soup verging on stew. The rice made the cut, but the turnip didn't. It had gone very pithy on the inside. I won't be cooking or doing much else the next few days, but we won't be suffering. Constantly grateful for the abundance and variety of foods available to us.

116haydninvienna
Mar 11, 8:06 pm

Re your family cookbook project, you might find this interesting:
Where do you find all of these older volumes?

I’m not a big drinker or a big drug user. The greatest high I get in my life is going to library sales and church sales and other book sales in the tristate area. I go picking, and I am wild. When I started out 10 or 12 years ago, it would be me and my dad. My nonna would come because we didn’t have anyone to watch her.

There’s a whole world of people finding and scanning books. There are people that have been doing this for 30, 40, 50 years. It’s a very interesting subculture.
From here.

117MrsLee
Mar 12, 8:27 am

>116 haydninvienna: Nice article. At first, I thought the bold sentence in your post was referring to the volumes mentioned in old cookbooks, like, a teacup of flour, or an egg sized lump of butter or even more obscure mentions like a glug. Lol

Thank goodness for the internet which often helps in researching those terms.

118MarthaJeanne
Mar 12, 9:33 am

I often add a glug of oil of wine or other liquid to a dish when it needs it. Hmm! Safari spell check does not like glug. It does not like a lot of words I use.

119mdoris
Mar 12, 3:40 pm

I love language and use of words like glug. . Google/Safari can take a hike!

120haydninvienna
Mar 12, 6:03 pm

>117 MrsLee: >118 MarthaJeanne: Some of the TV chefs (notably Jamie Oliver) have almost made a technical term of "glug" and "lug".

Much as it hurts to say so, the only decent spell checker is the one in Microsoft Word. The Apple ecosystem has a system-wide spell checker, but it's kind of a pain. The spell checkers in other Microsoft applications such as Teams aren't that great either.

121MarthaJeanne
Modificato: Mar 12, 6:18 pm

If I could turn this one off, I would. I hate it, and haven't updated my iPad since they did this to me.

122MrsLee
Mar 13, 10:13 am

>118 MarthaJeanne: & >120 haydninvienna: My brother and I were looking at one of my dad's recipes for pork marinade yesterday. He wrote things like; "oregano, plenty" and "beer, enough." Brother asked what my idea of plenty was. I said, "enough." You just know it when you see it.

>119 mdoris: Agree!

123fuzzi
Mar 13, 8:34 pm

>119 mdoris: onomatopoeias!

124MrsLee
Mar 14, 10:55 pm

Because my liver and kidneys are being particularly stressed by the cancer treatment I'm receiving, I'm working on feeding them lots of good things. A salad I made yesterday had cabbage, zucchini, carrots, pickled beets, onions, garlic, ginger, cilantro and mint. Then I put in some cumin, fennel and Nigella seeds. A simple glug of oil and a smaller glug of vinegar, some salt, pepper and sugar. Delicious and great for the intestinal bacteria. :)

A smoothie each morning with a vegetable, a fruit or two, oatmeal, flax or chia seeds, almonds and a little plain yogurt along with aromatics like orange peel or ginger. Turmeric spice blend and sometimes cocoa powder. I'm always mixing things up.

I made a loaf of sourdough buckwheat bread today. Successful. For dinner I had a little leftover roasted chicken breast meat. Fried it in avocado oil, added chunks of gouda and cheddar cheese, then poured eggs blended with curry powder and sherry. Garnished with kim chi. Wasn't sure how that would turn out, but husband and I loved it.

I've been drinking hibiscus tea and artichoke tea in the afternoon/evening. No caffeine after noon because between that and my medication I won't sleep.

125mdoris
Modificato: Mar 16, 12:21 pm

>123 fuzzi: Had to look up the definition! Too true! Actually I would know the word if I heard it but have never seen it spelled before so that confused me!

126MrsLee
Modificato: Mar 16, 10:08 am

Birthday party tonight for my son and his wife, their birthdays are 5 days apart.

I have a frozen (well, it was frozen) spiral sliced ham we received as a gift at Christmas. Will make Marion Grasby's mango glaze for it.

Macaroni and cheese casserole my sister made in January and froze.

Cole slaw which involves a lot of chopping, and will be dressed with a Ranch style dressing for my kids (I prefer traditional creamy dressing with mustard, but it isn't my party).

Brussel sprouts, roasted

I am making mashed sweet potatoes with butter, cream and some truffle honey. Never done it this way before, I usually just roast them and if I'm feeling fancy, fry them in butter.

A chocolate espresso cake made with sourdough starter to add a bit of tang, and frosted with espresso frosting. Only I don't have instant espresso powder, so I'm going to use instant coffee powder and powder it somewhat. Served with chocolate or vanilla ice cream.

Last night I made a version of Marion Grasby's Vietnamese three flavors salmon. I say version of because I used some of my red curry paste from the freezer instead of making her sauce. The salmon is fried in a very hot pan, skin side down and pressed with a weight, to crisp the skin. Either my heat was not hot enough, or I didn't let it go long enough, but I didn't get a lot of crisp skin. I did however, get lovely salmon. Served it with a rice dish I made from the leftover rice I used to keep my bread from burning. That is an experiment I won't repeat; the bread part I mean. Anyway, the quite browned rice was cooked in chicken broth with some Asian inspired aromatics; onion, garlic, ginger, star anise, cinnamon, cardamom. Mixed in some chopped fresh herbs just before serving; cilantro, mint & thyme. Very tasty.

Also cooked some frozen veg, and served a platter of sliced cucumber and avocado sprinkled with salt, pepper, lemon juice and cilantro. Very green, delicious.

127fuzzi
Mar 17, 6:15 pm

>124 MrsLee: do you like pickled foods? I do, and I read a suggestion to put hard-boiled eggs in leftover pickle juice. I've tried it with dill-spears juice and after a couple weeks in the refrigerator the eggs taste like deviled eggs, yummy. Be sure to peel the eggs, and don't use any with cracks/openings to the yolk as it makes the brine messy.

I put a couple eggs in pickled beet juice, need to see how they turned out...

128fuzzi
Mar 17, 6:16 pm

>125 mdoris: it's a lovely word, isn't it?

1292wonderY
Mar 17, 6:23 pm

>127 fuzzi: I pickle my own eggs ever since the deli price reached $1 each.

130fuzzi
Mar 17, 6:25 pm

>129 2wonderY: are you doing them proper (water bath, canning jars) or the quick method I've described here?

The hens are giving me 4-6 eggs per day, so I'm enjoying different ways to ingest them!

1312wonderY
Mar 17, 7:58 pm

>130 fuzzi: Just as you describe.

132MrsLee
Mar 18, 8:44 am

>127 fuzzi: Yes, see >47 MrsLee: :)

Yesterday I made a batch of sourdough chocolate chip cookies. They sit in the fridge overnight and are baked the next day. I plan to bake a few, then freeze the rest so we don't have to eat our way through a mountain of cookies, and we can have fresh baked cookies when we want.

133fuzzi
Mar 18, 3:00 pm

>132 MrsLee: bwahaha! I didn't recall you mentioning it. Duh.

134MrsLee
Mar 20, 12:52 pm

Today's cooking aspirations are sourdough bread, a vegetable pasta dish with zucchini, mushrooms, kale, onions and garlic, and a pot of baked beans. I sent my husband to the store for more vegetables, so the menu may change depending on what he brings home.

135MaureenRoy
Mar 20, 11:01 pm

>134 MrsLee: Sounds wonderful, all of it, especially the kale part. I notice that whenever I eat a serving of cooked leafy greens (from fresh, not frozen greens), I always get a great night's sleep! Speaking of bread, I baked a loaf of herb bread today, which did not really taste of herbs at all. Can anyone recommend a decent herb bread recipe?

136MrsLee
Mar 21, 10:38 am

Pasta didn't happen yesterday, but I will work on it this morning. Husband brought asparagus home from the store so that will go into the mix.

Having thought about it during the night when I was trying to get back to sleep after being rudely awakened by cats, this is the process I will use:
Brown the onions in oil and butter and pour over cooked pasta, toss in.
Barely sauté the mushrooms, zucchini, asparagus and kale seasoned with salt and pepper, each separately, make little mounds on the pasta.
Heat some oil, brown a few panko crumbs, then add garlic, red chili flakes and parsley, toss just until garlic is softened. Pour over the pasta dish and toss all together with some Parmesan cheese. I may add pesto if this is too tame, but I can't remember if I have some in the refrigerator or not.

Since I have a lot more veg than will properly fit in the pasta, we will have a nice bowl of them to make salads or just enjoy.

Husband informed me that we have some milk that is expired (still tastes ok), so I will have to make something with it today. I might surprise him with a banana custard pie.

137MaureenRoy
Modificato: Mar 21, 4:26 pm

Update on herb bread recipes --- > see the 75th anniversary edition of Joy Of Cooking ... which has four different variations of fresh herbs, dried, or seeds for herb bread. It also features a revised recipe of their longtime JOY favorite, Dill Batter Loaf.

138MrsLee
Mar 21, 5:25 pm

>137 MaureenRoy: I'm glad you found that. Although I do bake sourdough loaves, I've not ventured much into mixing anything in them except some other forms of grains and seeds. I made a loaf once with garlic and cheese which was nice. I precooked the garlic just until soft. I would imagine that dried herbs would work best in bread?

Pasta has been made and consumed. Delicious. I did not put the kale in it after all. No need.

139MrsLee
Mar 22, 12:15 am

Banana custard pie has been delayed until tomorrow. We had to pick our grandson up at daycare because his mom was stuck in an appointment. This was not a hardship for us, but a privilege. :D Now that I'm thinking about the pie, I might make a chocolate sauce for the top, with some roasted peanuts.

140MrsLee
Mar 22, 4:52 pm

More milk on the edge than I thought! The custard recipe I'm using from my Family Cookbook called for a pint (4 cups), in the cookbook one only makes the custard to make ice cream, which called for 3 cups, that left me with 2 more cups of milk, so I made hot cereal. However, we discovered in the process of serving the cereal that our whipping cream was even sketchier than our milk. Also not much of it; so we used it on the cereal, but then didn't have any to make ice cream. So I made a dinner roll recipe from the book which called for exactly 3 c. milk.

The recipe didn't specify how much flour, just enough to make a stiff dough. So I played with the ingredients a little. About 6 cups bread flour and 2 cups whole wheat flour, some sourdough starter and instant yeast instead of a yeast cake. It's still rising. I plan to bake one pan today and freeze the others to have for Easter weekend.

Also baking a loaf of sourdough which I started yesterday before I knew about the rolls.

The pie is still unknown, custard is cooling, I will be making a graham cracker crust, husband said no to chocolate and peanuts.

141fuzzi
Mar 23, 9:12 am

>140 MrsLee: I used to love chocolate and peanuts with ice cream. Dairy Queen sold buster bars that were like a little parfait on a stick.

142MrsLee
Mar 23, 11:25 am

>141 fuzzi: Chocolate and peanut butter anything is my favorite.

Custard is still runny. Not a pie. I don't know whether I undercooked it or if it is supposed to be that way, since it is made to go in ice cream.

So change of plan. I will bake a yellow cake today and make a sort of trifle with cake, banana custard, graham cracker crust crumbles, chocolate sauce and peanuts! We will be having the grandson this morning, so maybe he will help bake the cake.

143fuzzi
Mar 23, 2:52 pm

>142 MrsLee: that sounds wonderful.

144MrsLee
Mar 24, 12:53 am

>143 fuzzi: It was! So much fun having the grandson help with the cake. I had measured the ingredients like flour and sugar out, having learned from experience that he will stick his hand into any canister for a taste. I showed him how to crack an egg: when he did his it plopped out on the counter, so I scooted it into the bowl. He took over the mixer right away, turned it to speed 4 for mixing in the flour, so we had a nice dusting of flour in the kitchen. Fun day.

145MrsLee
Mar 24, 8:38 pm

Tonight I'm making carnitas to freeze for the taco dinner we are having on Easter. In the process I found a typo in my cookbook. *flowing tears* This should not surprise me, almost every hand written recipe of mine has a misspelling, nonetheless, I am sad.

1462wonderY
Mar 25, 2:23 am

>145 MrsLee: Perfection is not for us mortals. Which heritage makes it a practice to weave a mistake into their rugs? The Navajo?

147MarthaJeanne
Modificato: Mar 25, 3:40 am

>146 2wonderY: Several different ones from around the world. "Only Allah is perfect." I've never had to make a deliberate mistake in any of my weavings, though.

148hfglen
Mar 25, 4:24 am

>145 MrsLee: I'm sure jillmwo will back me up when I say that ALL books contain at least one typo. You are not alone, and your book is blessedly (almost) error-free. Well done!

149MrsLee
Mar 25, 10:52 am

>146 2wonderY: & >147 MarthaJeanne: Thank you for the reassurance. It is like the first scratch on your new car. Initially painful, then we acquiesce to the inevitable.

>148 hfglen: Thank you, for the record, I found an error of omission this morning in my carnitas recipe. I followed it last night (to make sure everything works), and the meat instructions are fine. Delicious. However, in the list of accompaniments at the end, I forgot finely shredded cabbage! :/

150fuzzi
Mar 25, 7:53 pm

>144 MrsLee: I would love to bake with my granddaughters.

We're tentatively planning to meet our daughter and her family halfway between our homes this summer. I reserved a cabin in Kentucky for a few days. I'm thinking maybe we can cook breakfast together one morning.

151MrsLee
Mar 25, 8:39 pm

>150 fuzzi: I hope you can! Something they can get their hands into is usually best. :)

152MrsLee
Mar 31, 11:24 am

Busy family weekend. My youngest son,and his wife and 6 month old son, arrived on Friday afternoon. Sadly I am not feeling well because of some side effects of treatment.

Friday we pulled some beef stroganoff out of the freezer, served it over noodles with a green salad.

Yesterday my daughters-in-law prepared a lovely dinner with a chicken and pasta salad, baby carrots cooked in butter and brown sugar with a little chevre sprinkled over, and my contribution of a fiesta salad (peas, corn, jicama, colorful bell peppers and such). My 2 year old grandson got to hunt eggs twice. Once in the sprinkle of rain in our front yard rock garden, and again after dark with glowing eggs in the backyard.

Everyone is coming over again today for the meal of carnita tacos, also my daughter is coming for the day. Never a dull moment.

153MaureenRoy
Mar 31, 6:28 pm

>138 MrsLee: --- you may be right on the superiority of dried herbs over fresh in herb bread, at least in the case of dill. I used a generous amount of fresh dill in JOY's dill batter loaf recipe, with extremely underwhelming results. My next move will be to use the freshest possible dill (AKA farmers' market fresh dill, stuff that was literally just harvested days ago). And if that does not yield decent results, I will move on to a few other herb loaf recipes. One such recipe does call for a combination of fresh and dried dill, how about that.

Also I just bought two more containers of organic saffron from my local Bristol Farms grocery store to try out a bread recipe for saffron challah, or that's what the recipe calls it. Time will tell.

154fuzzi
Apr 2, 6:29 am

>151 MrsLee: that's the plan, at least. I'm thinking that grandma and Ruthie may be scrambling eggs one morning...

155MrsLee
Apr 3, 4:24 pm

I pulled a bucket full of wild onions this morning. The plan is to dehydrate a lot of them for a salt blend I want to make (onions, seaweed, rosemary, pepper and salt). Also want to try making tempura of the stems and flowers, and fermented baby onions of the bulbs. May try a mayonnaise of the bulbs if I have a lot, and fermenting some of the stems and leaves. Any left will get chopped and frozen.
Of course I might do none of that. We are picking up my grandson from daycare today so grandma won't have much energy left. I have them all in water, so hopefully they will be fine until tomorrow.

Oh, I also picked some redbud blossoms to make tea with, and some leaves for salad. I learned last night they are in the legume family and edible! Apparently lilac blossoms are also edible, so if I get enough of them blooming, I will dehydrate them to add to my herbal tea blend. Going to use the onion flowers for tea as well. I saw a recipe for onion, honey and alcohol elixir for cold prevention, but I'm not much into that.

156MrsLee
Modificato: Apr 4, 7:03 pm

Today I spent three and a half hours processing wild onions. The videos that make it look easy leave out the excessive cleaning that is necessary. These are as bad as/worse than leeks. Dirt works its way into all the layers.

First I cut off twelve blooming stems for the tempura, and all the blossoms for tea. Will be frying shrimp and some regular onions tonight along with the wild blossoms. I made tea last night of some onion blossoms and redbud (mixed them because the redbud doesn't have much flavor and I didn't have enough picked to make a special tea of them). I love the flavor. Somewhere between artichoke, asparagus and onion. Mellow and warm. Dehydrating the extra blossoms for tea.

Second I cut off the bulbs, cleaning as I went and trimming off the roots. Also trimmed up the stems and leaves. The bulbs I put in a pint jar, filled with brine, added a little sauerkraut brine to kickstart it, and a little raw vinegar, a cabbage leaf on top to keep the bulbs under the brine, then topped with a fermenting lid.

Third was the white part of the stems. Cut and washed, opening up as needed to get the dirt out. These stems are very small. I used them to make an onion aeoli for dipping the tempura in. It made about 2 pints, so may use it to dress a coleslaw in a day or two as well.

Forth, the green part of the stems. Sliced enough to cover a large baking tray (rinsing after slicing, more dirt) to dehydrate for a salt blend which will have onions, rosemary, a small amount of black pepper, seaweed and salt.

Fifth and last, the last 3-4 inches of the greens (1/4 lb.) Rinsed, chopped, kneeded with a 1/8 t. sea salt until a brine is formed. Put into 1/2 pint jar, added a t. sauerkraut brine and topped with plastic bag, egg shaped glass and water in it for weight. Ferment 5-7 days. Supposed to be yummy on anything you would use chives on.

This is why people who have a life buy stuff at the store.

157MrsLee
Apr 6, 1:11 am

The tempura onion blossoms were delicious, especially dipped in the aeoli. I also did some shrimp. I prefer going to a restaurant for deep fry though.

That was so filling we couldn't eat all the shrimp I thawed. Instead of dipping and frying them (doesn't keep well), I saved the rest to make shrimp patties tonight. They came out almost as tasty as fried oysters, but without the squish. I used finely chopped celery, green onions and parsley, some bread crumbs, my onion salt, pepper, an egg, a little flour, the shrimp. Mixed that and let it sit while I got the pan and butter hot, then mixed in just enough carbonated water to make the patty stick together. Fried on med. + until golden on each side.

Earlier in the day I made asparagus stem soup. Used this and that, Asian type seasonings, onion, celery, garlic and 1 Thai chili. Cooked just until vegetables were tender then ran in the Vitamix to puree. Added parsley, green onion, a bit of onion salt, a bit of sugar, vinegar and soy sauce. It was just what the doctor ordered. My husband and I are showing symptoms of a cold, but I'm hoping is allergies. This hot/sour soup was perfect. Amazing what one little Thai chili can do! It was about 10 cups of soup.

158MarthaJeanne
Modificato: Apr 6, 5:59 am

I'm glad I have the European wild garlic. I just pick however many leaves as I want (until they flower), put them through the salad spinner, chop them up and use them.

Last week I sautéed a shallot with few leaves of spinach, sorrel and wild garlic in clarified butter, and added the whole lot to some fresh cheese for a spread. It was delicious. I should do it again while I can.

Most restaurants here have Bärlauchsuppe this time of year, and one near us has a lovely Bärlauch risotto.

But I haven't been convinced by attempts to lengthen the season. I suppose I could freeze some, as I really have a lot under the apple tree this year. I think chop it, give it a quick sauté, and freeze spread out so it can be portioned easily from frozen.

159MrsLee
Apr 6, 12:07 pm

>158 MarthaJeanne: I wonder if your wild garlic is the same as what we call wild onion? I read that the names can be interchangeable. This has a very mild, almost sweet flavor. I would liken the flavor more to leeks than onion.

If I can find the energy, I am going to dig a few more out of a flower bed and chop and freeze them. Not bother to cook first. Might do another ferment of the leaves also.

My daughter brought me some Thai chilies and a large fresh galangal root. Ingredients I rarely find fresh here. I used some in my soup yesterday (the root), then chopped the rest. Froze some, dehydrated some. I knew galangal was a tough root, but wow. To chop it I had to use my cleaver with a mallet.

160MarthaJeanne
Apr 6, 12:36 pm

Bärlauch (Allium ursinum) is definitely garlic flavoured. Allium is a big family. This particular species grows wild in Europe and Asia.

161MarthaJeanne
Apr 6, 12:38 pm

Bärlauch (Allium ursinum) is definitely garlic flavoured. Allium is a big family. This particular species grows wild in Europe and Asia. Known as wild garlic, ramsons, cowleekes, cows's leek, cowleek, buckrams, broad-leaved garlic...

162MrsLee
Apr 6, 5:04 pm

>160 MarthaJeanne: Ah, yes. That would be closer to what we call ramps in the states. I don't have them in California. I once spent a pretty large penny to buy some from the east when they were in season. We loved them, but not enough to sacrifice more pennies. Like truffles, they were a one time indulgence.

163MrsLee
Apr 9, 7:48 pm

Not feeling great, but one must eat, and if possible I always feel better eating healthy rather than take out or prepared food.

We have steaks drying in the fridge but husband isn't feeling like grilling tonight so they will be done tomorrow.

I wanted a choppy salad, so chopped up cabbage, cauliflower, celery, carrots, onions, ginger, garlic and cilantro. Used my onion aeoli for the dressing like a coleslaw. It is in the fridge waiting for the ingredients to "get familiar."

Had a little remnant of alphabet pasta we had bought to amuse the grandson. The pasta seems to be more amusing than edible. It dissolves if you cook it the slightest too long, but is hard and chewy otherwise. Thought I would try a Mexican tomato soup with it which calls for the pasta to be fried until brown, then simmered until soft. Not impressed. Pasta is somehow dissolving, but still too chewy. Oh well. The soup is for husband since I don't eat tomatoes.

164catseyegreen
Apr 10, 10:17 am

How strange, I have used alphabet pasta before when my kids were small and it wasn't exciting but it acted like regular pasta. Did you recognize the brand or manufacturer?
Your salad sounds delightful and I hope you enjoyed it. I cannot swallow raw vegetables right now and I find I am missing them. Still, there is always steaming, pickling and soups.

165MrsLee
Apr 10, 11:41 am

>164 catseyegreen: It was a pasta sold in the Mexican section of our grocery. Not a known brand to me, but the only brand that I've ever seen alphabet pasta. My husband cooked more noodles and made the soup into spaghetti. A good save because the soup was very thick. I had used my hand blender to puree it.

Sounds like soup and a hand blender would be a good thing for you at the moment.

1662wonderY
Apr 10, 11:45 am

I have a small jar of alphabet pasta; but it is decades old. We used it for a wizardry lab display at the library once at a Harry Potter celebration. It was an ingredient for a do it yourself spell.

167MrsLee
Modificato: Apr 10, 4:50 pm

>166 2wonderY: IMO that is the best use for it! Or perhaps other crafts as well. My husband says his spaghetti is the closest to Chef Boyardee he's had in years. lol

We have temperatures in the 80s today, so there will be surf and turf for dinner tonight. Grilled steak, and I will deep fry some shrimp Chinese style from my cookbook Chinese Technique.

168MrsLee
Apr 11, 9:57 pm

I took out my frustration of ineffectiveness by cooking today. Plan to send a loving hands at home goodie box to my niece. She can tell my brother about it since he can't eat. I call it motivation for him.

I've been wanting to try some of the recipes online I'm seeing for sourdough discard use. It seems a bit of a fad to put sourdough in everything now, most of the recipes would be great without it too. However, the crackers and the pizza dough are exponentially easier than making a regular dough. I love the crackers. The pizza needs refinement. It was delicious, and crispy good on the bottom, but inside just chewy, not bread-like. Next time I will try flipping it after the prebake and then add toppings to the "bottom." The pop tarts are yummy but in my opinion would be just as yummy with regular pastry dough.

Made Parmesan-onion salt crackers, spiced pecans, Apricot Pop Tarts, Crisp Coconut Cookies topped with chocolate. For our lunch I made pizza. I think it was the massive Prednisone dose I am on that funded the energy, because I am done in now.

The coconut cookies are from the recipe book I made. I used unsweetened coconut and although I like them because I don't love extreme sweet things, they probably would be better with sweetened. I wonder also if it affected the dough. Recipe said to mix until it was a firm dough, but the dough was powdery. I added pineapple tepache by the tablespoon full until the dough held together. They didn't spread out, which surprised me. Sort of like a shortbread Mexican cookie. I flattened the next batch before baking and that was better. Then I dipped them in chocolate on the theory that anything is better dipped in chocolate. Maybe. Problem is, my cold is messing with my taste buds so I'm not exactly sure what they taste like. Husband says good.

169MrsLee
Apr 12, 11:57 pm

I was cleaning and straightening my baking cupboard this morning because I saw a moth that looked suspiciously like a weevil moth. Sometimes when I empty a box or bag of product into my Tupperware it doesn't quite fit so I keep the overflow tucked on the top shelf to be used first. Then I forget about it. Anyway, there was some brown sugar and powdered sugar, both sealed in a ziplock freezer bag. They fit in the containers now so that took care of them. Then there was a little cornmeal in the box. I don't use cornmeal as often as other flours, so I suspected that. Sifted it carefully, found no weevil indication, so measured it and it was 2 cups minus a tablespoon or 2. Enough for 2 cornbread recipes. I also had some buttermilk to use up, which amazingly was exactly the amount I needed for the doubled recipe. I can take a hint, so I made the cornbread, have lots to freeze for future snacks, and my cupboard is tidy and mostly weevil proof.

There is still some rice in a bag, so I will go through that and rinse it then use it to make a casserole with vegetables and some leftover porkchops we froze at Christmas time.

170MrsLee
Apr 13, 1:47 pm

Couldn't sleep past 3:30 this morning so I got up and made the rice and veggie casserole. It is somewhat bland, but my taster isn't working quite right yet so I told husband to season it according to his taste. He thinks it is fine.

171MrsLee
Apr 14, 12:35 am

Tonight's dinner was deep-fry fish, coleslaw and cornbread. I have used my oil 3 times and now I can throw it out and never deep-fry again until I forget why I don't. I do this about every 5 years or so. Watch some shows or read some cookbooks that make it look simple; then try it, get very frustrated and swear I'm never going to do it again.

My daughter told me about a method of cleaning the oil after frying so it can be used again without burnt residue. I've either let it sit, then carefully poured out the good, or used cheesecloth. The new method is gelatin. You mix some up, stir it vigorously into the cooled oil, let it sit and refrigerate overnight, then pour off the oil. The gelatin stays solid in the bottom of the bowl with the crud. In theory, easier and cleaner. I am not convinced. The oil (peanut oil) became thick and hard to pour. There was still a dirty bowl and gelatin goo to get rid of. Then, when I heated the oil tonight, it didn't just sizzle, it exploded! I was prepared with a lid because I had been warned of the sizzle pops, but it could have been a disaster. Eventually that stopped and I got my fish fried, but we are not amused.

I did a splurge today for myself. I have a 2.5 qt. enamel cast iron casserole dish which was my grandmother's, and I love it. Can't remember the brand, but maybe something Dutch. The orange blending to red color. It has chips, the bottom rusts, and it is quite worn, but is great for custards, puddings, sauce and such. Today I bought a new 5 qt. Cuisinart enameled Dutch oven. I have a cast iron one, but when I make a casserole like I made earlier, I don't like to use the cast iron. It's perfect for most stews, but delicate flavors can take on the flavor of the pot. Anyway, I didn't go for the Le Creuset brand because wow. The money. This was about a third of the cost, and had lots of great reviews so since I am likely two thirds done with my life, or more, I thought it would hold up for the time I need it. It is a beautiful blue which will be lovely on my yellow shelves which have some Italian serving dishes in blues and yellow. Sometimes a splurge is nice.

172MrsLee
Apr 14, 12:37 pm

I intend to make a lilac simple syrup today. Trying to get creative with flavors to use in mocktails since it doesn't look like my liver will be able to tolerate alcohol for a long time. It isn't the alcohol itself that I miss. I actually don't care for the physical effects of alcohol. It is the flavor and creativity, the beauty of the cocktails in the glasses. I don't care for sweet drinks, and without the sweet or the alcohol you aren't left with much. So I reach for flavors. The simple syrup will be sweet, but I will add a bit of citric acid and perhaps some bitters to counteract the sweet. A bit of flavored vinegar can also help.

Recipe I'm using:
1 c. Sugar
1 c. Water
1 c. Lilac blossoms
5-8 blueberries for color
1 t. Citric acid granules
Simmer sugar and water until sugar is melted. Add blossoms and blueberries, simmer 10 minutes. Add Citric acid and stir, strain into bottle. Store in refrigerator.

Other goals:
Use up some steak by making beef pot pies, boil a chicken and make some chicken pot pies. These will be frozen for future times. Won't put them together until tomorrow.

Roast second chicken, remove meat and make a rich broth from bones of both chickens.

Problem with all these plans is that my grandson woke up this morning telling his mother that he is coming to our house today. This is a request which cannot be denied. The other issue is that my legs are wobbly today. No strength. I hope a bit of rest will fix that.

173catseyegreen
Apr 14, 4:04 pm

>171 MrsLee: Your new Dutch oven sounds delightful, I love the idea of your yellow shelves and blue pot.
I have a vintage green Dutch oven I inherited from my MIL, unfortunately it is aluminum so I cannot fix tomato dishes in it. I have not purchased anything for my kitchen for a very long time, maybe I will go and look at the Cuisinart line.

174MrsLee
Modificato: Apr 14, 10:09 pm

>173 catseyegreen: I hope you find something to bring you joy in your kitchen. We need that now and then.

Sometimes I think my kitchen is one big If you Give a Mouse a Cookie story. I was working on the 2 chickens* today, turned around and saw that Bob, my sourdough starter, was gently flowing over the sides of his jar into his bowl. Hadn't planned on mixing any bread products today, but due to his exuberance I decided to make what in California we call "Dutch Crust"** sandwich rolls. They won't be ready to bake until tomorrow, but the dough is made. Only have to finish the stretch and pull and the bulk ferment, then pop it in the fridge overnight.

* I roasted one chicken as described in above post >172 MrsLee:, the other I simmered according to the instructions in my Chinese Techniques of Cooking by Ken Hom. Best. Boiled. Chicken. Ever. The flavor, texture and moisture of the meat is much better than the roasted chicken and better than any boiled chicken I have made. This will be my technique when I need cooked chicken in future.

**People make a big deal about "Dutch Crust" bread originating in California. But I found that it is only the name, not the product the came from here. Apparently it is called Tiger or Giraffe bread in England and other countries. I shall now call it tiger bread. It is delicious and I hope the recipe works because it would be lovely to create this at home. I am using the one from
lemonsandanchovies.com

176MrsLee
Apr 15, 9:09 am

>175 haydninvienna: That is the one! Here our upper end grocery store sells it in their bakery in a paper wrapper. They don't slice it. When it is still warm, I could eat a whole loaf. But of course I don't. When the kids lived at home we did! I'm thinking a sandwich roll size will be a good compromise, but it will probably never see a sandwich filling, unless it is a little (or lot of) butter.

177mdoris
Apr 15, 3:44 pm

Hello Mrs. Lee! Isn't butter the best!

178MrsLee
Apr 15, 8:48 pm

>177 mdoris: I'm a fan!

I made the Tiger rolls and they came out perfect! Woo hoo! The first one was eaten with butter, but for dinner I'm going to have a fish sandwich using a roll, the onion aeoli I made the other day, and some pickle. A green salad on the side.

179MrsLee
Apr 16, 3:47 pm

Working on chicken and beef pot pies today. Thinking I can freeze them for future hard times, although I am running out of freezer space!

The inspiration was leftover steak. Grilled steak isn't sitting as well as it used to for my husband and I, and even though we didn't grill much, it is more than we want. So, I'm making beef pot pies. I checked a recipe in Nanny Ogg's Cookbook to make sure I was on the right track, but of course I'm not exactly following it. Ingredients: All chopped to small cubes; beef, onion, garlic, celery, mushrooms, carrots, sweet potatoes, peas, fresh ginger, oregano, sage, red chili, allspice, nutmeg, clove, black pepper, salt, mustard, Worcestershire sauce, broth, pineapple tepache (because I don't have beer), flour, butter. In a pie crust to fit muffin pans.

Southwest Chicken pot pies: chicken, onion, garlic, celery, mushrooms, corn, carrots and sweet potatoes (because I had extra), roasted green chilies, oregano, cilantro, cumin, salt, pepper, gravy made with broth, flour and water. Pie crust.

This may end up being a two day project. The fillings will be made today, but if my energy goes too low I will put them together and bake tomorrow.

Also want to get a cranberry shrub started. Will report back if I do.

180catseyegreen
Apr 17, 10:20 am

>174 MrsLee: I am checking out the website, it looks like fun. I call my sourdough Jaime (J pronounced as an H the way it is in the Hispanic community here). He hasn't been exercised lately, I need to pull him out and at least refresh him. I am out of freezer space right now, maybe I just need to give a loaf of bread to everyone who gives me a ride or provides some other service.

181catseyegreen
Apr 17, 10:22 am

>179 MrsLee: Yes, I would be interested in learning more about your shrub. I seem to be increasingly limited in the solids I can swallow, I have been researching lots of health drinks and tonics.

182lesmel
Apr 17, 12:36 pm

>171 MrsLee: America's Test Kitchen recommends the cornstarch method for cleaning your oil. I don't deep fry because it seems wasteful; but I'd be willing to try the cornstarch method. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qgADlZClDAE

183MrsLee
Apr 17, 1:03 pm

>180 catseyegreen: I'm sure they would like that! If you have the energy to make more, that is. For about 6 months it was almost more than I could manage to bake a loaf of bread, and I don't knead it! Right now I'm on a Prednisone energy kick and can't sit still very long. That's why the massive kitchen explosion of activity. :D

>181 catseyegreen: I will be reporting back here. In the meantime, someone told me today about oxymel beverages. I know nothing except the little I read online. They sound similar to a shrub but a longer fermenting time and no vinegar. Interesting stuff. Would you be interested if I posted some of my yummier smoothie concoctions? I make the as a protein and vitamin supplement because I hate eating in the early mornings but need to for the medicine I'm on. So far I have 2 favorites. Cinnamon Toast Crunch (only there is no Crunch because it's a smoothie) and Reeses Candy Bar. A chocolate and peanut butter inspiration.

>182 lesmel: I think I will stick with the "I don't deep fry because it seems wastful" advice. lol

184MarthaJeanne
Apr 17, 2:12 pm

Way back, when it was just the two of us, I had a 'Fry Baby', which was a tiny deep fryer. It only took about a cup of oil, and made enough for us to eat right out of the machine as I cooked it. I didn't use it that often, but for special treats it didn't seem that wasteful. Once we had kids old enough to want some too, it wasn't useful any more.

Once we were back down to two I looked for something similar, but even the smallest fryers I could find needed quite large amounts of oil, so I gave up on the idea.

One of the engines of the little train in the Prater has been altered to take old oil from the many restaurants. I'm not sure it still does, but it was fun to see it go by smelling of French fries. Without that way of disposing of the used oil it does seem wasteful.

185MrsLee
Apr 17, 4:16 pm

>184 MarthaJeanne: Back in the 1980s my dad built a still, or some such thing to convert cooking oil into fuel for his tractor. I don't think he ran more than a couple of successful batches. He went to local restaurants for the oil, then they wanted to start charging him for it.

186MrsLee
Apr 17, 4:20 pm

Made another sourdough discard pizza today. It was better, not perfect. I activated the discard by adding flour and water, hoping for better bread consistency in the dough, but perhaps it didn't sit long enough. I will try again next week because there is potential here, but at this point I'm thinking it might be easier to make a traditional dough.

187fuzzi
Apr 18, 6:49 am

>156 MrsLee: "This is why people who have a life buy stuff at the store."

Ha! No kidding.

Enjoying all the cooking posts.

188mnleona
Apr 18, 7:31 am

>182 lesmel: I have never seen that method. I will try it. Thanks.

189mnleona
Apr 18, 7:34 am

Mrs Lee- I always like reading your messages. You are very creative.

190catseyegreen
Apr 18, 10:41 am

>183 MrsLee: I am also drinking a smoothie every morning because I am not a breakfast person either. I just found out that I lost another 8 lbs over the last two weeks, so I need all the nutrition I can get. DH is also a cancer survivor and I try to keep an eye on his nutritional status as well.
As far as the bread baking, I really enjoy it, bread is one of my favorite things to make. I am in this weird limbo, knowing I am very sick but stuck trying to get through all the Doctor's preliminaries. I literally have had a doctor visit or procedure every day, sometimes two for the last 2 weeks. I feel exhausted and I have yet to actually reach the treatment phase! Having a big lump pf bread dough to manipulate can be therapeutic.

191MrsLee
Apr 18, 11:24 am

>190 catseyegreen: I think the delays in treatment were what surprised and disturbed me the most at the beginning of my journey. I know there is this horrible thing happening inside me, do you mean the world doesn't stop and tend to it right now?! Get it out! Now my delays are caused by my own body fighting against me making further treatment impossible at this time. Each day is a philosophical journey, as well as physical.

192lesmel
Apr 18, 3:27 pm

>183 MrsLee: Me! Me! I want to know more about your smoothies!

193MrsLee
Apr 18, 7:50 pm

>192 lesmel: OK! :) Disclaimer, I have a Vitamix which turns almost anything I put into it to a very smooth liquid in one minute at the setting of 7. I count five at each setting as I turn it up, run one minute, and count five at each setting as I turn it down.

I add 4 ice cubes to my smoothie before blending because it keeps it from being lukewarm.

I buy green bananas (I read that they are best for the gut biome), peel, cut in half and freeze.

My goal in writing these combinations is to not have to think every morning and create. I want a basic recipe which I can tweak for different flavors according to my mood.

These usually make enough for 2 - 12 oz. Glasses, I'm not good at making less, but then you don't have to make them every day.

Reese's Peanut Butter Cup
3 T. Oatmeal, 1 T. Flax or Chia seed - soak overnight in 3/4 c. milk.
1 heaping T. 100% peanutbutter
1 heaping T. Plain Greek yogurt
2 T. Ovaltine
1 T. Cocoa powder
1/2 banana
2 dates
1 t. Vanilla
Pinch of cayenne powder
1/2 avocado or greens (avocado gives a pudding texture)
1 egg white - optional
1/8 t. Salt
Milk to blend.
4 ice cubes
Put all in blender, add enough milk to bring liquid to 2 c. Mark. Blend.

Cinnamon Toast Crunch
Follow instructions above with the following ingredients.
3 T. Oatmeal
1 T. Flax or Chia seed
1/4 c. Almonds- soak overnight in water, discard water and rinse nuts before using.
2 dates
1/2 banana
1/2 t. Cinnamon
3 T. Malted milk powder
1/4 c. Plain Greek yogurt
2 cardamom pods
1/2 t. Nutmeg
1 t. Vanilla
1/8 t. Salt
1 egg whites- optional
Milk to blend
4 ice cubes

Green Goddess
Follow above instructions using these ingredients.
3 T. Oats
1 T. Flax or Chia seeds
2 T. Almonds
1-2 c. Greens
1/2 banana
1/2 avocado
1" fresh ginger, sliced
2 dates
1-2 T. Plain Greek yogurt
1/2 t. Fennel seed
2 cardamom pods
5 black peppercorns
1 t. Tajin or 1/4 t. Cayenne and lime juice
1/8 t. Salt
1 egg white, optional
1-3 T. Light vinegar
Water to blend
4 ice cubes
If you want a chocolate smoothie, add 2 T. Cocoa powder and maybe don't add some of the spices? Up to you.

194lesmel
Apr 19, 9:47 am

>193 MrsLee: The cinnamon toast crunch smoothie is good! It's really filling, too. I made it this morning. I needed to add ice to the smoothie itself since my Blendtec made it lukewarm even with several cubes in the blender.

195MrsLee
Apr 19, 11:09 am

>194 lesmel: Glad you liked it! It's kinda my favorite too.

196MrsLee
Apr 19, 4:01 pm

Working on shrubs for summer mocktails. So far I have:

Cranberry-orange, ready to strain today. It will then sit in refrigerator for 5-7 days to mellow before use. I will use the fruit I strain out to make a Cranberry-orange loaf bread/cake.

Day before yesterday I started a Watermelon-mint shrub. It is in the refrigerator, will probably strain it tomorrow and use the strained fruit to make smoothies.

Today I cut up some mango for breakfast, so I used the peel and seed to begin a mango-honey shrub.

I am also working on a recipe for cocktail cherries. This is somewhere between a syrup and vinegar/alcohol concoction. Sugar and cherry flavored brandy. I'm letting them soak for a couple days, but I added some water and vinegar to maybe edge the brandy a bit towards sour. Then will put in the refrigerator for some more soaking time. Then I will strain, put the cherries in a jar and taste the juice. At that point I might boil it down some to thicken the syrup, then pour over the cherries. They are supposed to keep in the fridge for at least a year. I'm using elements from several different recipes. One thought I had was to dehydrate the cherries a little when they had soaked to give them a little chewier texture. Not dried out, just dense. If I have extra syrup, I will let it sit exposed to the air and see if it turns from alcohol to vinegar, then make a cherry shrub!

Later today or tomorrow I will start a fennel-celery shrub with the aromatics for gin flavoring. My goal is a nonalcoholic martini!

I also bought a bottle of not so expensive ($13) sparkling wine to make "champagne" vinegar out of for use in shrubs. For good measure, I bought a bottle of "champagne" vinegar too. It was $3.49. Unless the homemade vinegar is outstanding, it isn't worth the price. Probably more cost effective to make the vinegar if you have leftover wine or champagne from an event or dinner. Which I cannot imagine. At least from a dinner. But then I don't open 5 bottles of wine for a dinner, either.

197MrsLee
Apr 19, 8:02 pm

Yesterday I made a shrub mocktail thst tasted like a mild root beer! .75 oz. of homemade grenadine, .50 oz. tonic syrup, .75 oz. homemade elderberry vinegar, a t. of spice balsamic vinegar made by a local company. Carbonated water to taste. My husband liked it too.

198MrsLee
Apr 20, 8:26 pm

For those of you who like a walk on the wild side, I give you:
Jolly Rancher Sour Watermelon Smoothie.
2 T. Oatmeal
1 T. Chia seeds
Soak overnight.
1 c. Watermelon
2. T. Sugar or Watermelon syrup if you have it.
1 T. Lemon juice
1/4 c. Plain Greek yogurt
1-2 T. Pistachios or cashews
1/2 banana
2 T. Coconut flakes (I used unsweetened)
1/4 c. Egg white
1/8 t. Salt
Blend, taste, add vinegar or sugar to get the right balance of sweet and sour. Add 4 ice cubes and blend.

I made this with the Watermelon that was used for the shrub, so it had been soaking in sugar for a couple of days. I don't usually use sugar in my smoothie, and will probably try this with dates, although I don't think the flavor will be as pronounced.

Cranberry loaf was more sour than I'm used to, but husband and I both liked it.

199MrsLee
Modificato: Apr 21, 11:55 am

I've been playing with sourdough recipes, looking for easy and practical ones. I tried one for hamburger buns yesterday. The buns are edible, but not what I had hoped they would be. Recipe called for TWO packets of yeast, plus 1/2 cup sourdough starter and only about 3 cups flour. For all that leavening I thought the buns would be light and fluffy, but they were not. They were somewhat dense. I did follow the recipe instead of my heart on the rising times. I may try this one more time going with my gut.

The second recipe I made was for ciabatta rolls. This one was a success! Very easy and the rolls are exactly as I expected/wanted them to be. Found the recipe at
www.alexandracooks.com

200lesmel
Apr 21, 11:54 am

Have you tried beans in your smoothies? I was seeing something about using white beans as a base like you would banana or avocado.

201MrsLee
Apr 21, 11:57 am

>199 MrsLee: No, I haven't, but that would make a nice neutral protein to add. I'm not sure I need the extra gas though. :D

202MrsLee
Apr 22, 7:38 pm

My doctor told me how she makes a carrot cake smoothie where the carrot flavor comes through. She roasts carrots the night before, then uses some of those and some raw carrots, plus a little maple syrup. This I must try. Will report back.

203MrsLee
Apr 23, 2:22 am

I splurged today and finally tried a Boba taro tea. It was yummy! The place I was at let me choose the sweetness level (25%). I enjoyed the chewiness of the Boba, but I loved the flavor of the taro tea. Looking it up when I got home I realized how good taro can be for you, so I ordered some flour to play with (expensive!). I predict pretty, purple baked goods in my future, and possibly a purple smoothie. I also ordered some butterfly pea blue powder and some seeds to plant. Now to come up with a blue and or purple themed flavor for a smoothie! Blueberries and plums sound too easy. ;)

I will definitely be making some pastry with a pretty taro filling, and maybe some blue and some purple loaves of bread.

I hope to find some taro at the store to cook as well. I've had it before and it is the best substitute for potatoes that I've yet to find.

204MrsLee
Apr 23, 5:11 pm

I'm on my prednisone high. Cooked all these this morning: steamed green beans, steamed asparagus, boiled artichokes (saving water for tea), baked sweet potatoes, roasted carrots, meatloaf in the oven, oxtail stew is about to be started, strained 2 shrubs, fennel-celery (using the vegetables in the stew) and mango-honey (making tepache, a slightly carbonated fruit drink, from leftover fruit scraps of that), started a pineapple tarragon shrub with the pineapple peel, I still need to make a chocolate sauce so Mark can make a chocolate milkshake for me when I get home from the hospital tomorrow, and I made a little blackberry bread pudding with some bread that needs using up. Then I won't have to cook for a week.

205catseyegreen
Apr 24, 9:45 am

>204 MrsLee: Wow, I'm impressed!. It would take me all day to do all that. But not worrying about dimmer for a week would be worth it.

206MrsLee
Apr 24, 6:52 pm

>205 catseyegreen: To be fair, I didn't finish until 10 p.m. I don't think I could have done that without the prednisone, even before I got cancer! Sometimes you gotta take whatever wins you can find. :)

207fuzzi
Apr 24, 7:31 pm

Delurking to say hi!

208MrsLee
Apr 25, 3:09 pm

>207 fuzzi: Hello :)

Carrot Cake Smoothie
3 T. oatmeal
1 T. flax/chia seeds - soak with oats in milk overnight
2 T. pecans/almonds - soak in water overnight, drain & rinse
2 dates
1/2 banana
3/4 c. roasted carrots
1/2 c. raw carrots
1/4 c. plain yogurt
2 T. 100% maple syrup
1/4 t. turmeric/cinnamon blend or only cinnamon
1/4 t. nutmeg
1/8 t. salt
1/4 t. almond flavoring
1/2 t. vanilla
Milk as needed for texture
4 ice cubes
1 egg white optional

Blend and enjoy!

209fuzzi
Apr 25, 3:56 pm

>208 MrsLee: oh, my...

210MrsLee
Modificato: Oggi, 3:36 pm

Lilac Shrub


Smoothie experiment for tomorrow: The Blue Legume, as named by my husband. :D

211MrsLee
Oggi, 3:53 pm

The Blue Legume

3 T. oatmeal
1 T. flax/chia seed
3 T. unsweetened coconut
1-2 t. Butterfly Pea Powder
Soak oatmeal, flax, coconut & pea powder overnight in warm coconut water or milk (warm the fluid to mix, but leave in refrigerator overnight).
2-3 dates
1/4 c. fresh pineapple
1/2 banana
1/4 c. canned/cooked white beans/cashews/macadamia nuts
1/4 c. plain yogurt
1 t. rum flavoring
1/8 t. salt
4 ice cubes
1 egg white (optional)
Blend smooth and drink. Butterfly pea powder is blue unless it meets acid, then it turns a lovely lilac color and you will have a Purple Legume. The first time I made this I used blueberries because I hadn't put enough pea powder in. It turned purple. The second time I thought I would leave the pineapple out too, but the flavor was sadly lacking, so I added it and oddly enough, the drink stayed blue, which it shouldn't have. This is delicious and needs both the coconut and pineapple to make it so. I didn't notice the rum flavoring, didn't want to add more.

It doesn't look as blue in the photo as it did in person, but could have used even more pea powder for a darker blue.

212MrsLee
Oggi, 4:01 pm

In other kitchen news. I'm working to perfect a sourdough sandwich loaf. There are a lot of good recipes out there, but most of them either use yeast or make things a bit complicated. I think I can do it without the extra yeast (who is in a hurry, anyway?), and simplify the method. I cobbled together two recipes on my last batch and was very pleased with the flavor and crumb, but I don't think I let it rise enough before putting it in the oven. I followed a recipe instead of my heart/experience.

Made some more sourdough discard crackers and got that recipe right where I like it. 1 c. discard, 4 T. butter, 1/2 t. salt, 1/4 t. baking soda, 2 T. parmesan cheese. Mix, spread on parchment paper on baking tray as thin as possible. Bake at 350ºF 10 minutes, cut with pizza cutter, put back in oven for 15 minutes, turn pan, 15 more minutes. Remove when golden. A lovely crisp but melt in your mouth texture and tastes cheezy.

Made a no flour desert/muffin thing cup this morning which had oats, chia seed, peanut butter, milk, egg and whatnot. Supposed to be cups to fill with jam. Husband said, "Well, they taste healthy." Yeah. Not saving that recipe. They didn't know whether to be crisp or chewy, needed a bit of sweet for flavor, couldn't taste the peanut butter. Too many strikes against it to bother with.

213MarthaJeanne
Oggi, 4:09 pm

>212 MrsLee: I'll have to try the crackers.