Today, my oil change ended up being an all day affair so my daughter ate her lunch of honey-roasted peanuts and raisins from the vending machine. We'll be headed to dinner soon with my wonderful parents. Not high cuisine, but the local diner.
Saturday, January 31, 2009
With the grandparents
Today, my oil change ended up being an all day affair so my daughter ate her lunch of honey-roasted peanuts and raisins from the vending machine. We'll be headed to dinner soon with my wonderful parents. Not high cuisine, but the local diner.
End of month review
I hate to do an entry without a photo, so this is a photo of the fritos and dip we had the other day. The dip was an organic ranch mix that you add to sour cream. It was the first time I tried it, and being me, I added It's a dilly to give it some zing. The family loved it. That little cup was all I made, just enough for a little snack for each of us.
Thursday, January 29, 2009
Picnic Lunch: Tuna melts and orange-mango smoothies
You can always recognize a good cookbook in someone's kitchen. It's dirty, warped and maybe even unidentifiably sticky. I have Italian cookbooks, Chinese cookbooks, vegan cookbooks, vegetarian cookbooks, French cookbooks, chocolate cookbooks, casserole cookbooks, even a pasta cookbook.
- 1 cup fresh orange juice
- 1/2 cup low fat vanilla yogurt
- 1/4 cup seltzer or sparkling water (optional)
- dash of vanilla extract (optional)
- ice (optional)
Wednesday, January 28, 2009
Recycling
Snow Day Cocoa
Artichoke and black olive pizza
Tuesday, January 27, 2009
Peorogies with spinach and feta & roasted red pepper tomato soup
My daughter had one of those hollow leg days, where she eats and eats and eats.
Since my lunch had been pilfered, I poured some of this cajun trail mix I bought at Aldi. She ate half that too. I normally make my own trail mix (not as yummy as Gayle's), but this big bag was $3 and I liked that it was spicy, something different for the old taste buds.
Pineapple picnic
This house certainly operates on the feast or famine principle. This week will be the famine menu. It started yesterday with a breakfast meeting of the Northampton County Penn State Cooperative Extension advisory board, where my daughter and I each had an order of cinnamon raisin French toast. Of course, my daughter also had a banana before we left home.
Sunday, January 25, 2009
Another round of grocery shopping
- Two 8-0unce blocks of cheese, one Vermont cheddar and one mild cheddar, $1.99 each (same price as Aldi)
- Brummel and Brown margarine
- Stonyfield Yogurt Organic YoBaby Drinkable Yogurt, four servings, $3.29 (This is an utter waste of money. But I'm addicted. And I start school this week, and I could use an on-the-go snack. And it has calcium. But I could have made my creamsicle-yogurt smoothies for a fraction of the cost.)
- Wegman's organic chocolate soy milk, half gallon, $2.79
- Coffeemate Chocolate Raspberry non-dairy creamer, 32-ounces, $2.99 (totally an indulgence. If we get really poor, the creamer AND the coffee will go and we'll drink tea. It's cheaper)
- Eggs
- Frozens veggies, wegmans brand, one each of cauliflower, corn and peas, 0.89 cents a bag.
- Spinach and feta pierogies, box of 12 for $1.69. Again, the Wegmans brand. They had the plain, the onion and the cheddar. In the bottom of the case, they had three funky flavors, the spinach, sour cream and chive and some mushroom one. When spinach is an option I always nab it, because it turns out that like the ravioli trick, the pierogies with spinach also have more nutritional punch than the other flavors.
- the artichoke hearts
- Hong Kong stir fry vegetables, $2.19
- Ice Cream: one half-gallon of Wegmans brownie sundae $2.29
- Wegmans no-sugar added juices, apple with calcium ($1.89) and cherry blend ($2.39)
- Tortilla chips $2.50 (nachos at some point)
- snack bags, aluminum foil
- dryer sheets, color catcher dye catching sheets, one dryel starter kit
- moist wipes, $2.79. (Now, when my daughter was a baby, I used wash clothes to clean her bottom. I rarely bought baby wipes. Used them when she made a mess, if you know what I mean, but used wash clothes the rest of the time. We've had some issues with wiping well, so my husband suggested the wipes. For some extra training. I'm not convinced it's worth the money.)
- Wegmans Chunky Pizza Sauce, 2 bottles, $0.99 each (see my pizza entry for info on why Wegmans, briefly, more nutrition).
- Organic Bulk Spring Mix (for the tortoise)
- broccoli crowns
- blueberries (which my daughter ate all by herself before dinner hit the table)
"Pork with Peaches"
Fruit Salad
Ooey Gooeys
.
Friday, January 23, 2009
Food Today: Insta-dinner Mac N cheese
I worked unexpectedly long at the office today and came home exhausted. We had no fresh vegetables in the house and I was starved so my husband whipped up this specialty: Wegmans spiral macaroni and cheese dinner (2 boxes) with extra noodles, monterey jack cheese, garlic pepper, frozen broccoli and chopped morningstar vegetarian hot dogs. I washed it down with some instant vanilla nut cappucino and a few drops of cold pressed just cranberry juice diluted with water. We bought the juice the other day when we feared our daughter might have gotten a urinary tract infection, but it turned out to be a false alarm. Now I have a $9 bottle of super strong, no sugar cranberry juice.
Thursday, January 22, 2009
Almond-Oatmeal-Apple Cookies
My four-year-old devours every drop of batter from the bowl as the oatmeal cookies bake in the oven. I didn't use eggs, so that makes it allowable for me to let her eat the raw sugar, oats and butter.
Mystery Curry Quiche
Return to Normalcy: Granola
Shannon left yesterday and I returned to the office (and bought my textbooks for my next round of classes). Tonight has been a day of laundry, cooking and catching up. For dinner, my mother-in-law made another Sam's Club rotisserie chicken (it looked worse whole than it did in pieces last time), jarred turkey gravy, reheated boxed stuffing with extra celery and onions (remember I hate both), and extra soggy and buttery carrots and peas. Then they stayed to eat with us so it was hard to choke enough down to please her.
Tuesday, January 20, 2009
Hamburger-stuffed bread
Monday, January 19, 2009
Apple Tarte Tartin
I made an Apple Tarte Tartin this morning... I started with Ina Garten's Plum Tartin recipe, and whereas I normally use pears instead today I used fresh apples. I added a bit of honey, probably about a teaspoon, to the sugar syrup as I boiled it. Then in place of confectioner's sugar I sprinkled a dust of cinnamon sugar on top. Yum!
Friday, January 16, 2009
Shan's Ham Hock and Black Bean Soup
Shann wanted to cook for us, specifically her super easy, fairly fast black bean and ham hock soup. We went to the store for dried black beans and ham hocks, surprised to find that the only dry black beans were in the international foods and the ham hocks only came in smoked.
Yogurt with Bananas and Graham Crackers
Ten a.m. around here usually means a morning snack. Today I suddenly remembered that I had purchased Stonyfield Farms Lowfat Vanilla Yogurt at the store.
The Week in Food
Wednesday, January 14, 2009
Brioche, part three
When I got up today and made it into the kitchen... (It was almost seven by then). I shaped and cooked the brioche.
Tuesday, January 13, 2009
Brioche, part two
Bread exhaustion (Brioche 1)
Shannon wanted to learn to how to make bread so we started baguettes AND brioche this morning. I am exhausted, and we're only half way through the process. The baguette recipe has already been posted, click on French or bread to find it.
Monday, January 12, 2009
Tuna Sandwiches and store bought bagged salad
Sunday, January 11, 2009
Daddy's Breakfast Fry
Saturday, January 10, 2009
Shannon Day One: Garlic French Bread Veggie Pizzas
For dinner last night, we threw together a plain old spaghetti. Then my girlfriend Shannon finally arrived around 11 p.m. With everyone else in bed, we shared glasses of Chartreuse (which she thought tasted heavily and solely like pine) and had our own private Christmas. It was lovely.
We're in the middle of a mild storm (though the roads have frozen) and Shann has gone to visit her grandmother. I figure since she's out visiting family, the least I can do is cook a meal. We'll save the pizza for a day when we're cavorting and shopping all day. But pizza remains the inspiration. I took a loaf of my homemade French bread from the freezer and plan to make garlic bread vegetable pizzas.
Friday, January 9, 2009
Amy's Tofu Scramble
One of my dear girlfriends has invited me shopping, or perhaps she suggested lunch and I turned it into window shopping... Because I don't have any money. So, my daughter and I are splitting an Amy's Tofu Scramble. (And Dad gets one of his own. I only have two.) I think these are very yummy. "Made with organic tofu, red peppers and Shiitake mushrooms." Tons of sodium, but 11 g protein, 6 g fat (no sat), 20% RDA vit C, 4% vit A and calcium. So in a pinch, a tasty meal substitute.
Applesauce Cake
In the depths of my cold last night, I craved a cake. No matter how much I hounded my husband he would not indulge me and bake a cake. So, this morning I baked a cake which may or may not get done before he leaves for the office.
Wednesday, January 7, 2009
Un-Chicken Melts
I made the ugly bean dip for lunch (and today I threw in some of the parsley from last week's beef burgundy) and served with blue tortilla chips (a find at Aldi). For dinner, I wanted Wonton or Italian Wedding Soup on account of my cold and we don't have anything of the sort. We almost ordered out... but couldn't agree on what and grilled cheese kept popping up as an option.
Bob's and eggs
I have caught a cold. My husband has a delayed opening at work, so we started the day with some Bob's hot cereal with some maple syrup.
But by 9 a.m., I was starving so my husband made me (at my request) an egg sandwich on an English muffin with cheddar and my French honey Dijon mustard. Egg sandwiches are one of my favorite comfort foods... which during my pregnancy and gestational diabetes diet translated into one egg on one slice of bread and mustard. Not the ooey gooey, cheese-laden mess I prefer.
As for the hot cereal, Bob's multigrain cereals are another favorite in this house. Not cheap, compared to oatmeal, but full of some many yummy grains and textures.
I took a photo of the fried egg because my husband did some a pretty job. During the preparation of this sandwich, my daughter had a snack of an apple, two slices of cheddar and a small piece of her great-grandmother's chocolate. She did not join me for eggs, neither did her father.
Tuesday, January 6, 2009
Insta-lunch
I ended up working much longer than I intended yesterday in preparation for my vacation which starts after a staff training seminar today. My husband and I took the leftover beef burgundy for lunch and he used the leftover spinach dip to make macaroni and cheese for dinner. Today, we took some of the pumpkin muffins out of the freezer for breakfast and my daughter is having an apple for a snack now.
The seminar I have to attend is from 3 to 5:30 so Daddy will be in charge of dinner again. We're thinking the leftover mac and cheese and tuna sandwiches on store-bought wheat. I am in the midst of cleaning, since my best friend will arrive tomorrow to spend vacation with me, and we haven't spent any time together in two years... So, for lunch, we'll probably have Pacific Foods Savory White Bean soup and homemade molasses oat bread, and peanut butter if that doesn't fill the bottomless pits my family has for bellies. We have never had this soup before so this is a trial run.
And if my entries become light over the next few weeks, assume I'm cooking things I previously posted and having too much fun to write.
Sunday, January 4, 2009
And the bread comes out of the oven
As I feared, my daughter lost interest in the bread after two rounds of kneading. Because we made so many loaves, we experimented with some flavors. From left, parmesan cheese, herb and sesame seed, plain white; and the wheats: plain, molasses oat, and honey oat. We're still discussing which will have with my hot spinach dip for dinner.
Spice Girl
Maybe I just drank too much coffee but as I was loading the dishwasher my husband and I got an idea. We would clean the twirling spice rack he bought me about five years ago. He meant dust. I interpreted differently. I got the brainstorm to go through the little bottles and dispose of the ones we never opened (savory, bay leaves- I didn't even know we had bay leaves, celery salt, etc.) and run them through the dishwasher and refill them with fresh spices of the type we use. And relabel the lids. Some, like parsley and oregano, I either have fresh now or I grow in the garden come spring, so I need to figure out how to successfully dry my own. Others will be completely changed. Celery salt will become garlic pepper. Mustard seed will become ground mustard. I am way too excited about this project.
The spice rack now contains:
Basil
Chili powder, commercial blend (you know, the silly envelopes. My mother-in-law left it here)
Chili powder, Indian (very hot)
Cinnamon
Cumin
Curry powder
Garlic pepper
Italian Seasoning
It's a Dilly (primarily dill and lemon, with some red pepper I think
Oriental five spice
Ranch mix, organic (no msg)
Red pepper, crushed
Two empty bottles (the other spices left aren't used often enough to have a space)
And one missing bottle...
More bread
My husband and I slept in this morning. So we're sitting around drinking our coffee. My husband is quite smug that he got three containers of International Delight creamer for the cost of one large Coffeemate. I am less smug, because I think International Delight tastes nasty and he forgot the half-and-half. But that is far from important. I will deal...
My four-and-a-half-year old gazes up from playing with her new toys and asks, "Mommy, can we make bread?"
How can I say no? Especially since my good friend Shannon will be staying with us starting this week. And she survives on coffee and carbohydrates. Hence the need for half-and-half. I ask the family if they are all willing to help make a double batch, which is about EIGHT loaves of bread.
It requires the entire family's support because we'll need every surface for bowls and mixing and rolling. They agreed. So, we cleaned the kitchen until it sparkled and began our work. One batch is white, the other wheat. I sneaked some honey into the wheat base. Will update this post throughout the day... You can click on 'bread' or 'French' to find my other discussions of making bread.
It looks like I never posted the (original) recipe. Here it is:
From FamousFrenchDesserts.com
French bread baguettes
4 cups flour
1 TBS dry yeast
1-2 tsp. salt
2 cups warm water
oil
1. In a bowl, mix together the flour and salt.
2. In another bowl, combine yeast, warm water, and half the flour/salt mixture (I use more). Using your hands, mix until a dough forms. Cover with a dish cloth and let sit at room temperature for three hours. It should triple in size.
3. Gently incorporate the rest of the flour/salt using your hands.
4. Place on lightly flour surface and knead for ten minutes. It should be supple and elastic.
5. Lightly oil a bowl. Place dough in bowl. Cover with dishtowel. Let sit for one hour. It should double in size.
6. Preheat oven to 450. Knead again. Cut dough into three parts and form into baguettes. Place on a baking sheet. Let sit for at least twenty minutes.
7. Place a bowl of water in the oven. Bake baguettes for 15 minutes, remove bowl of water. Cook baguettes for ten minutes more, maybe less. *I often turn mine when I remove the water, helps the consistency of the crust.
Another note... Speaking of bread... My husband and daughter walked to CVS today. We had two dollars in CVS 'extra bucks' to spend and the walk gives them something to do outside. (The ExtraBucks came from an emergency trip to CVS when I needed bathroom supplies and had no grocery stores available.) To my surprise, CVS had the 12-pk of Thomas's English Muffins on sale for $1.99. So my husband bought them and treated our daughter to a cheap pack of stickers. The second six-pack went into the freezer.
Saturday, January 3, 2009
Boeuf Bourgogne
For lunch today, we had PB&J on store-bought wheat. Something about PB&J requires store-bought bread. My friend Gayle says it requires Wonderbread. I think not. Today marked the first time my husband went to the grocery store in January. $30 for items like creamer, tomato sauce, bread, noodles, cooking wine, salad greens, apples, potatoes... I'm not sure what else. Hopefully parsley as I need that for my stew.
The potatoes were buy one get one free so my husband bought two, and sliced one bag into circles and fries to freeze in small portions so we can make our own French fries later. He must have been chopping potatoes for an hour!
Lunch featured a make-your-own PB&J bar. We had blueberry Trappist and organic red raspberry jellies, and apparently my daughter insisted on celery at the store. So she had PB & celery. Celery and onions are the two foods I detest. I even tossed in some Cool Ranch Doritoes. With a nice healthy stew for dinner, we can afford some decadence.
And dinner... Boeuf Bourgogne...
This recipe comes from the Internet, and I did not attribute its source. It was something to do with a particular wine, not a generic recipe site or a chef's site. It claims a pinot is the key to any beef burgundy... My French cookbooks have recipes for this dish, but they are more complex.
As copied from the 'Net:
Boeuf Bourgogne
3 to 4 pounds chuck roast is 2-inch cubes
1 bottle petite sirah (the wine folks developed the recipe remember)
2 TBS olive oil
1/2 cup flour
2 ribs celery (small dice)
2 medium red onions (one small dice, one chunked)
5 medium carrots (one fine dice, others 2-inch chunks)
2 lbs whole button mushrooms
6 cups beef stock
bouquet garni
salt & pepper
Their directions:
1. In a medium sauce pan, reduce beef stock by 50 percent. Reserve.
2. Add beef cubes to a large bowl. Salt and pepper generously. Dust with flour to coat.
3. Heat olive oil in stock pot or roaster with lid under medium-high heat. Add 1/3 of the beef and brown thoroughly (needs to be dark). Remove and do the same to remainder of beef. Remove beef.
4. Add diced celery, carrots and onion and two tablespoons flour. Cook stirring for five minutes.
5. Add wine, stock, bouquet, and put the beef back in. Reduce to simmer. Put lid partially on and simmer for three hours, stirring occasionally.
6. Add onion, carrots and mushrooms. Cook about 45 minutes, until these vegetables are tender and sauce thickens.
Like everything I cook I adapt this. I reduce the volume, for one. Today I used 1.2 pounds of stew beef from Wegmans. Normally I use beef cubes and then I cut them fairly small. I don't use beef stock, I use vegetable and add the drippings from cooking the beef. I used a handful of diced red onions today, instead of the amount the suggest. And I added them while I browned the beef. (I also threw about 3/4 cup browned hamburger into the vegetable stock while I reduced it. The hamburger was left over from the other day. I used 32 ounces of vegetable stock, which I cut with a cup of water. I used a small bottle of red cooking wine instead of sirah. One of these days, I hope to use real French wine, but I can't bring myself to cook with something I would rather drink. I do not use a bouquet garni, but a handful of fresh parsley. And instead of the celery and mushrooms, I use the more American cubes of potatoes. My family likes it, even if it isn't quite as French by the time I get done. So now it's stewing...
Pumpkin spice muffins
I decided to get experimental this morning. I haven't cooked in several days, primarily because my daughter has been out visiting relatives. We had a big lunch with Memmy and Pappy on New Years Day and then my mother took my daughter and still has her. We had my husband's pasta with hamburger for dinner that night, and yesterday I had to work so my husband and I survived on peanut butter crackers until after work. Then we went for pizza. We split a large pie. And ate it all. Four slices each.
So this morning, I have a friend coming to help me with a portfolio project. I said something about muffins. I have no muffin-apropos fruit, so I thought pumpkin... I have an old carrot cake recipe that I hope will adapt itself well. I got it from my neighbor when I was growing up.
Carrot Cake (about to become Pumpkin Spice muffins)
3 cups flour
2 cups sugar
2 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon baking soda
cinnamon
14 ounces carrot baby food
1.5 cups oil
1/2 teaspoon salt
4 eggs
1 cup walnuts (optional)
Preheat oven to 350. grease and flour 13 x 9 pan. Mix flour, sugar, baking soda, baking powder and cinnamon. Sift. Blend in baby food. Then oil and salt. Beat two minutes. Blend in eggs, one at a time. Add walnuts if desired. Bake 50-55 minutes.
So I get to work and the recipe becomes:
2 cups white flour
1 cup wheat flour
3/4 cup sugar
3/4 cup brown sugar
2 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon baking soda
cinnamon
ground cloves
nutmeg
1 cup canola oil
1/2 teaspoon salt
2 eggs
8 tablespoons unsweetened applesauce*
(* 4 tablespoons applesauce generally equals one egg, this is the general formula of how I make a standard cake vegan.)
3/4 cup raisins
A tad more than a cup oats
They took about a half hour to cook. Until the spaghetti inserted in the muffin top came out clean. (I never have toothpicks.) Verdict: very yummy. Raisins were a good choice. Could have added more.