Category Archives: Recipe Ideas

These are ideas that can let your personality shine

Strange Days

They started grooming the trail out back. It’s not plowed, it’s groomed for XC skiers and snowshoers during the winter. But we’ve been having warm (upper 30’s to low 40’s) weather with intermittent rain/sleet for days now. It’s early morning, about 6:30 and I hear snowplows outside. The skid loaders do the driveways and then the big articulated tractor does the street. Amazing, really. I’m waiting until they finish to take out the dog. No-one wants to be in the path of a monster tractor blowing down the street at 30 mph!

While I’ve been sick two weeks now I have gotten a few things done, like decorate a wreath on our front door with ornaments with meaning from my mother-in-law, Margie. It includes a tin ornament she cut and painted when she was pregnant with my dear husband nearly forty years ago. Also a contribution from Jim’s grandmother and one from his great-grandmother, all on his mom’s side of the family. Then Margie looked into her stash and found a couple of recently purchased TX ornaments. One of them required a photo, so I printed out Jim’s brother’s face from a fly-fishing trip out here last year and it’s done. I’ll include a picture but it’s still dark outside. And cold.

I filled a new candle base/vase with red and clear glass dots and set the table for two. I’m trying out a new recipe for an event this weekend, a cauliflower/brussels sprout gratin with sage-infused cream, parmesan and a bread crumb/pine nut topping. Ingredient shopping today, and I’ll put it together tomorrow.

Always searching for new ideas and ways to put familiar flavors together in different combinations I love reading cooking books. As all of mine are in storage and have been for some time, online research has helped me find a few new favorites. I may actually make the chocolate-hazelnut panforte (Italian fruit cake) I tried 20 years ago. Margie and I made it over Thanksgiving and no-one liked it. $60 worth of ingredients alone and no-one liked it. All I need is two cake pans, yet another candy thermometer and tons of dried fruits and nuts and chocolate. Maybe next week. I’ve a gift recipient we may actually see for Christmas this year. Cheers! Dee

How Do You Solve a Problem…

like Dee. One of my favorite movies of all time is one I saw when it emerged in the theaters, perhaps three times, then again on tv, VHS and disc. The Sound of Music, and the problem “Maria” I was today. I’ve many more than her faults and found little redemption in my cooking today.

Let’s start at the very beginning. My husband is having some oral surgery done tomorrow so I plan to make a hearty soup for tomorrow night and wanted a memorable meal. I wanted to make pork with roasted apples and looked into spaetzle, a dough that is pressed into boiling water then drained and usually sauteed in butter. I had the wet and dry ingredients for spaetzle ready to mix together and sit for 10-15 minutes before boiling but Jim was late. Very late. When I called I thought he’d be at the office until after 8:00 p.m. and put everything in the frig.

Forget the apples and cider gravy. I made the best boneless pork ever (marinated in olive oil, salt, pepper, thyme and sage for over an hour) that was coated with flour and sauteed. I had the wrong equipment for the spaetzle. I tried to push it through a colander. It didn’t work and I ended up adding a little milk to loosen the batter. It worked for the most part. Then I briefly sauteed it and added chopped parsley.

I do have a potato ricer but it’s in storage half a country away. Live and learn. The pork was fantastic and I’ll learn more about spaetzle as it was a specialty of my grandmother. It’s easy to make and I’ll check out other recipes and let you know when I’m happy with them. Thanks for reading! Do Re Mi, Dee

Fall?

There’s a tinge of fall in the air, and much rain, lightning and thunder, so we’re not grilling this evening. I have thin-sliced pork chops that I’ll pound even thinner, then dip them in milk, flour, egg and bread crumbs. I have thinly sliced potatoes in the oven with a bit of milk and cream for scalloped potatoes, and have some corn on hand.

Friday morning before leaving for Jim’s mechanic we saw the two adult cranes being stalked by a coyote. I saw one later that afternoon but heard them calling to each other over the weekend and believe I saw the colt (baby) trying to fly. I thought it was the baby because the flying and turns were irregular and its parents are master flyers. So I hope they’re all still alive.

After we dropped Jim’s car off at the shop I took him to work and was two minutes out when he called and said he forgot his badge. I turned off the freeway into a neighborhood and called back. I hoped not to have to drive all the way home, into town again and back home but it was OK. Seconds after getting off the phone I was pulling out to turn around and saw something. Young deer, in about six front yards in 20 seconds, just hopping away, its legs literally springs. I know the homeowners don’t like them eating their veg’s and flowers but this was a beautiful sight.

Dinner went well last night. Jim called them “chicken fried” pork cutlets. I took 1/2 inch cutlets and pounded them thinner, then coated them with milk, flour, egg and breadcrumbs. We saved extra room for potatoes, but I put too much liquid in them and were great but not quite as brown as I’d like.

Tonight I must get started on stuffed peppers. Unfortunately I only have a handful of regular rice so will use a cup of Arborio and probably make something else. Perhaps meat loaf with a very basic risotto and sauteed onions and peppers. Sounds good to me, thanks for the ideas.

The great news is that we saw the entire crane family early this morning, confirming that the parents hid the colt (baby crane) and fended off a coyote on Friday and perhaps over the weekend. It was heartening to see the family out “shopping” for food this morning. If I were a coyote I’d go after less lethal prey. They’re big birds, know how to protect themselves (though have lost one colt this year to predation or disease), will kick and I’ve seen their beaks kill a 1-2 lb. rodent in seconds, fillet it and gulp it in three portions. All in less than two minutes.

When the coyote was stalking them, hours on end, they never flapped their wings and flew away (hence protecting hidden colt). Amazing what beautiful creatures we get to see here. We’ve been here a while but I never tire of nature and mountains. Thanks again for helping me think through dinner. It’ll be good. Jim loves meat loaf, but always puts ketchup on it. Hey, if he did it to an aged NY strip, well, he never would in my presence. Cheers! Dee

Opportunity Knocks

New colleagues have an eight year-old daughter who would love to sit for our dog while we go on vacation. They came by this afternoon, toured the art fair, tried to see the red foxes at their den and actually saw the cranes (the family) this evening.

We bought sodas et al. Also ground beef, hamburger rolls and chipotle sweet potato fries. Everything else we had on hand. First I made a jicama salad with Meyer lemon and olive oil dressing with parsley and green onion slices.

The menu included cheeseburgers with hand-made patties and slices of havarti and emmenthaler cheeses. Whole wheat rolls, grilled. Grilled radicchio with olive oil s&p, iceberg lettuce wedges with yogurt Thousand Island dressing, and grilled peaches with butter, sugar and cinnamon.

Thank you, Bobby Flay for grilling this morning while my husband was asleep as those peaches were fantastic. Everything else just came naturally and easily to me and there were just a lot of dishes to wash and tea towels but that’s easy.

This lovely girl enjoys our dog enough to take good care of her for a few days when we’re away. Our dog is a very happy and excited dog, also very demanding. Both sides were seen tonight, but Zoe was showing off as she usually does for guests.

I guess I try to show off for guests too, but it’s just something I like to do, prepared things I had on hand quickly and tastily and had time to enjoy our dinner. No great French flair, all simple dishes that just require good ingredients. Now I feel guilty. They went to the art fair while I prepped and for a walk after dinner when I cleaned up. My husband went with them, as did the dog on the evening walk. I hope they don’t think I’m anti-social, as I wanted them to have a pleasant evening and have everything prepared at both ends of the meal.

In the end we are thrilled that our young potential sitter enjoys her charge. She’s a smart gal and will be able to negotiate Zoe’s mind games. Plus, she tried a few things I made tonight and disliked most, but did enjoy the grilled peaches even though she didn’t want to like them at all. Cheers! Keep trying new things for your kids, and make them taste before telling them what’s in it. It will change their world. Dee

A Gastronomic Voyage

How many other blogs have been re-subtitled with that name? I would have not chosen it, as I did not have any control over my new home page either, yet both have been set and I’ve yet to register objections.

I admit lacking basic artistic and technical tools, and keep to writing and cooking and providing the occasional photo, mostly of wildlife and not my food.

I just wish they would have asked me before changing things. It may be right but it’s certainly not comfortable and that’s what I made for dinner, comfort. It’s been quite warm here, even at night, for weeks. Lately there’s been a snap in the mornings when Zoe and I walk and I thought it would be nice to make pot roast with egg noodles.

All foodies probably do it, yearn for next season’s bounty before this season is over. I’ve ordered another surprise box to go along with milk, juice, bacon et al that will be delivered in a few hours. Things have been too crazy at work and here with unscheduled, uninvited visitors who disturb our sleep. We still have an orange and sweet onion from last week so let’s see what we can make out of tomorrow’s surprise. Cheers, Dee

Age

My husband had to go into work last night for a midnight software project. He had to work several hours in the morning (with an hour’s r/t commute) then come home and he left before 11 last night and got home at 5:30 this morning.

I tried to keep as much of a normal schedule as possible. About five minutes before he left I apparently fell asleep and awakened nearly immediately after he’d gone. Luckily he took the sandwich I made for him (more on that later), a fruit salad of watermelon, cantaloupe, kiwi and Granny Smith apple, and slices of watermelon and cantaloupe. Plus salt and vinegar chips.

I took the dog out and I was wearing a jean jacket and pajama pants at eleven. Then I tried to go to bed but it was hot upstairs and I didn’t feel safe with the slider open. The dog was going to and from the guest room where she was on full alert watching for Jim to come home, to see me. That lasted 3 1/2 hours. Then I had my phone by the bed instead of downstairs charging and texts were coming in very loudly (I don’t text).

He got home at 5:30, took out the dog, brushed his teeth, got undressed and was snoring 10 minutes later. I was wide awake and got up and went downstairs at six after he was really snoring away.

The result: he feels like he has jet lag. I’m just tired. It’s one thing to accustom oneself to a time zone and another to pop into work at midnight and be “on” for hours then go home to a weekend. I thought it was Sunday all day! What we both realized is that this might be an easy thing to do in one’s mid-twenties, but as one ages it is more difficult. Of course this work requirement was done on a Friday night so that on Monday morning Jim will be ready to go, it only ruins his weekend. How thoughtful.

Given the trend of software guys it’s late, start at noon or later and work well into the night. He would do this naturally but is forced into a 9-5 (more a 9-7 or 8) reality. So this was new although he’s used to scheduled or emergency calls with London or India or Australia in the middle of the night, from home.

We’re getting older. I used to work 18 hours and be back at nine in the morning. Three weeks was about all I could take of that daily but I was in my 20’s. Marriage, schedules, and a herding dog who thrives on “routine” is enough to make this work anomaly worth mentioning.

Do I like to throw off routine and try to go somewhere to “recharge?” You bet, I’m working on it now. We’re happy, just tired. Cheers, Dee

Ominous Skies

The wind kicked up and we’ve had a few minutes of rain but that may escalate. It’s just 6:30 p.m. here and it’s dark as I sit at my computer. I’ve baby back ribs in the oven (similar to the Alton Brown version) that will go on the grill with BBQ sauce for a few minutes to crisp and heat through. We’re still working on the cole slaw and I may make Rosti potatoes, that’s grated potatoes that are squeezed dry in a clean tea towel and made into a cake, stove-top. Also corn on the cob.

It’s shaping up as a busy week. Jim just called and is en route home. The dog and fish are fed and it just started raining, finally. Jim says it’s raining cats and dogs where he is so he’ll probably have that all the way home. Gotta pay some bills and work on dinner. Cheers, Dee

Software Engineer or Busker?

Tonight husband Jim left with the dog and brought along a bag of balloons, as he just started balloon twisting last weekend to have something with which to entertain the kids who belong to his colleagues and staff.

Canary on a Ring

After an hour when dinner was done he was no-where to be found. Oh, he learned the Canary this afternoon. I called to make sure the dog was OK and getting water and his explanation of where he was, well I didn’t understand it. En route to finding them I came upon some fast pitch softball kids who are visiting and gave them an alien baseball cap with eyeballs (balloon eyeballs) and a flower. Then I came across another softball family we’d met who is leaving tomorrow and gave us a ton of fruit salad. Then Jim and Zoe arrived.

They’d been at the town square, it’s not a town and not a square but that’s the best description I have. When I called he said he had a number of orders for space guns and as soon as he was finished, he’d be home with our dog, who was probably panting away by then for lack of water.

A Simple Flower

He came home with $14 in his pocket, about what he spent on balloons, and no-where near what his professional time is worth, for that outing. He didn’t see the first dollars come in, then kids started giving him a dollar, thinking him an itinerant and intermediate level talent. He let them do so as otherwise their parents would have been upset.

One kid asked for his business card. He gave it to him. Lead Software Engineer, Major Company. It amused him to think what the kid and especially parents thought of that! Please know he’s practicing so he can have a few balloons in his desk so when kids come to visit the office he can do something other than give them a piece of candy. He’s not in it to make money! That $14 will be put back into balloons to delight other children.

In the meantime we thank the local kids and all the visitors from the fast-pitch softball championships for letting Jim practice making baseball caps from balloons. Oh, a busker is someone who plays an instrument, sings or recites or does something on the street that passers-by pay to hear/see.

When it comes to money, “earning” $7/hour busking would not allow us to live here or anywhere without a land grant and cabin and vegetable garden and a couple of cows and goats. Let’s just say Jim should keep his day job. Cheers, Dee

A Lovely Luncheon

A girlfriend came over for lunch yesterday and enjoyed her meal.

We had a salad with ribbons of carrot and English cucumber with a splash of rice vinegar, salt and pepper.
The tilapia looked best at the fishmonger so that was our protein, dusted with flour, salt and pepper and sauteed at the last minute in butter with a little canola oil to keep the olive oil from burning. Before I cooked the fish I sauteed baby arugula with garlic slivers in olive oil. I placed a tablespoon or so of the garnish on top of the fish with a splash of lemon juice.

I used a soy glaze/marinade to which I added sesame oil to make cold sesame noodles, Soba noodles garnished with scallions and sesame seeds. We were both happy with it. After she left I put down the shades to keep it from getting too hot in here (it’s been extraordinarily warm this summer) and saw the sight below. Interesting because they’re rarely out during the day, a Greater Sandhill Crane parent and growing colt.

Mother and Colt

I don’t know whether this is half of our pair with two colts. The adult did call out once. Their prehistoric call is kind of like moms checking up to see where their kids are by cell phone, but these voices travel a mile without batteries, towers or phones.

The “balloon man” is off with the dog. This afternoon he learned to make a parrot sitting on a ring. We’re having cold dinner tonight with fruit, veggies, hard-cooked eggs, sliced Black Forest ham, extra-sharp Tillamook cheddar and two loaves of nice breads to choose from. Hope you’re having a great weekend. Happy Pioneer Day! Dee

Ladies’ Lunch

I just came up with a menu for a cold luncheon that I may try in a week or two.

Cucumber-yogurt soup
Salmon with whole grain mustard, chilled
Cold sesame noodles
Light green salad, to be determined

Fruit salad for dessert
Herbal iced tea

Now for the guests! Cheers, Dee