Category Archives: Recipe Ideas

These are ideas that can let your personality shine

Summit

When a business uses the term “Summit” up here, they mean it. I took Zoe to a “kennel” today and had to park the car in a small lot, head-in, that would have tumbled down a 200′ ravine if I went an inch too far. I erred on the side of caution. There isn’t even a curb!

But we liked the place and at first she was afraid it was a vet or that I was going to leave her there, then she didn’t want to leave! Always a good sign. The dogs play during the day, and eat meals and sleep in kennels at night.

As to dinner I’m going to try my own Bolognese sauce, cook some farfalle, mix in some fresh mozz and top with parmesan and bake it. Will let you know how it goes. Perhaps I should cook the pasta and sauce a la minute and put the leftovers in an 8″X8″ baking pan to heat up for dinner over the weekend.

The longer we’re here the more things I need and don’t want to buy duplicates or they’re irreplaceable. Such as files. Something comes up and I need a file. It’s halfway across the country buried in a storage unit. Luckily when I gave away my Dell to my b-i-l, Jim took all the files off the hard drive and moved them to the new (now old) Mac.

I hope all is going well for you in life and in the kitchen. We’re doing just fine in the mountains, enjoying the scenery and wildlife. Cheers! Dee

Live Long and Prosper

We went down the mountain today for lunch and to see the new Star Trek movie. It was truly a blast. Best mainstream movie to come out in months, so it was worth the trip.

Tonight it’s baked ham with a dijon mustard and brown sugar glaze, home fries parboiled and sauteed with scallions in olive oil, and red cabbage cole slaw I made last night.

Tomorrow we’re staying away from any suggestion of brunch (Happy Mothers’ Day!) and I’ll have preparation done for a cold lunch if I pick up a loaf of good bread. Dinner will be chicken fajitas.

My husband turned me on to certain sci-fi flicks. I saw the first Star Wars years after it debuted in theaters. The first Star Trek I saw on TV was a re-run. Stunted growth, I know. We trade movies. One sci-fi for one rom-com. No horror flicks and no Jane Austen. Ok, he did sit through Memoirs of a Geisha once with a girlfriend. But a friend of his made us see The Ring so that was payback, pure and simple. No, it wasn’t, I just wanted to see the film!

I started out with the Star Trek motto so will leave you with Star Wars: May the force be with you! Dee

A Change of Scenery

Think mountains, valleys, some of the most spectacular skiing in the US. Think of the next-to-worst skier in the country handing boots, skis and poles and a helmet to one about to become the worst bunny hill skier in history. I’ll be at the bottom of the hill with the paramedics. That would be husband Jim. He’s never been skiing. We went ice skating once. Once.

We’re packing for a six-month trial period. There’s no relocation provided so we’re thinking of a corporate apartment or furnished home while we store our amassed belongings in storage. We’re doing all our packing ourselves (thanks friends who’ve volunteered their precious time to help out with wrapping the furniture!) and will get movers for a couple of hours to move everything into either storage or a truck which a professional will drive while we drive both cars or go together then I get to drive the other car myself. It’ll all work out, I’m certain.

I’ve been sorting through masses of stuff (how much stuff can be in a 1,028 sf loft? Lots). I do several garbage runs a day, am cooking at least two meals a day, mostly three, check out housing opportunities, write lists of what we ABSOLUTELY need to have over the next six months. Every evening for the past four days since the offer was signed we go to bed exhausted and I sleep ’til 3-4 a.m. and then lie awake thinking of more stuff to put on the “to do” or “take with” list while Jim snores.

I’ll be in touch in a couple of days to let you know how it’s coming. I’m getting too old for all this! Next time it’s packers and movers all the way! We intend to take three days to drive out there, limiting our driving to 8-10 hours/day.

At least it’s a good job, and they’re hard to come by these days. Oh, I found “Wobbly” in the freezer yesterday and think she needs two days to thaw out. Wobbly was a calf at Jim’s family’s farm with severe hip dysplasia (sort of like our dog, Zoe but we didn’t eat Zoe) so grew fat really fast. I’ve had a couple of her strip and ribeye steaks and they were very tasty. This is the last of it, a chuck steak that I’m going to use for pot roast. Perhaps I’ll make that tomorrow or Friday. Cheers! Dee

Roast Chicken

Always a favorite, roast chicken is high on my list for Sunday supper and perhaps place the rest in a soup as a good lunch dish with artisinal bread and butter and I’ve Romaine for a salad.

Tonight it’s mashed garlic potatoes and sauteed zucchini. No stuffing tonight, I just tossed in 1/2 onion after seasoning the cavity of the chicken and pre-trussing.

Someday I’ll teach you my version of “chicken bondage,” that if you prep well, you can tie easily in one minute per bird. I had to tie up eight birds a week on prep night at the restaurant where I apprenticed for four weeks and I taught them this system.

There’s something about a roast chicken that is comforting in these stressful days. Perhaps I’ll write more later, after dinner. Cheers, Dee.

Cassoulet

Yes, I’ve read the 40-minute cassoulet from Mark Bittman in the NYTimes. Perhaps I’ll try it. But if one makes everything from scratch, it is a very lengthy process, and a worthwhile endeavor.

Chowhound.com has a link to cassoulet afficionados. I made it once, 20 years ago, and my Dad loved it! And now that we have online ordering, the tarbais beans and duck fat are only a click away. Not to mention the duck confit and saussice de Toulouse.

Cassoulet is a French dish made of beans and meat in a savory broth topped with a bread crumb crust. It only gets better as it’s re-baked and the crust hardens once again, just to be broken. I wrote this simple description because it’s probably the only one that passes muster with all three French towns and other cassoulet lovers. There are many schools of cassoulet.

Twenty years ago I quit my job as a lobbyist in NYC and spent my life savings going to cooking school. Alongside our lessons, many of the dishes we prepared were written by Simone “Simca” Beck, of Mastering the Art of French Cooking fame. Our teacher worked with Simca and Julia Child during the summer months. Given a choice of a beach or the South of France, I’d choose France!

My apprenticeship of four weeks was held at Cafe Beaujolais, a beautiful small restaurant in Mendocino CA. I lived in a cabin with little light and no heat and when the little supermarket bundle of wood was done at 3:00 a.m. I froze my butt off. I was making nothing and had spent my savings on cooking school and a rental car to drive up there and had no TV or radio so my sole “just for fun” purchase was Simca’s Cuisine, from a used bookstore in Fort Bragg.

I am looking at it and its’ cassoulet recipe now. She calls for Great Northern beans, bacon, 2 ducks, hot Italian or Spanish sausage, and aromatics. She calls it “Un diner canaille pour joyeux amis.” That means an earthy dinner for high-spirited friends. She serves the cassoulet with Coquilles St. Jacques, a cold asparagus vinaigrette, a strong cheese and cherries in custard with meringue, flambee.

The entire meal sounds too heavy for me, but I may just try the cassoulet when we’re flush again. Our President spoke, stocks went up, then they revealed the bank solvency test and it went right back down again. Every day seems to be a crap shoot.

Tonight, we have roasted chicken breast, baked potatoes and a choice of vegetable. Red cabbage cole slaw (finishing that up, finally), fresh tomato in balsamico, olive oil, salt, pepper and basil. We also have a newly-made cucumber slaw from the Smoked Butts… cookbook I have on the site.

When I do try cassoulet again, I’ll check recipes and ponder my choices, taste and give you my results. The thing about especially French country cooking, this time from the area around Languedoc, is that people had this stuff made. There was no refrigeration so duck or goose legs were cooked in their own fat and kept covered completely in that fat in a crock in the pantry. Doing this culinary marathon is somewhat pointless for urban dwellers as we have to re-create everything, whether from scratch or from an online catalogue.

This entire one-sided conversation ends with me saying that we should cook local food, in season, the best produce and meats we can find. Don’t mess them up with complications. Serve your family a terrific meal. If you’re in Georgia, how can you use peaches in an entree? Texas, sweet onions, our family usually has tons of pears. Plus BEEF. Jim’s favorite. Support your local farmer, no-one else does.

The EPA wants to put a methane tax of $87.50 per beef cow. Some cows worth 1K to 1.5K are selling for $500. Losing most of their investment plus adding a tax of 20% of the sale price puts the rancher even more in the hole. ‘Nuff said. Cheers, Dee

A Riff on Sweet/Sour Pork

Thanks for the ideas, Mom, Emeril and many others. I’ve done countless riffs on this wonderful dish. This serves two with leftovers. Add another 1/2 chicken breast and this will easily serve four. You might cook 1.5 cups of rice if that is the case.

Today I used chicken. For the sauce, mince and sautee 3-5 garlic cloves, 1-2Tbsp fresh ginger, and a jalapeno without seeds in a bit of veg oil. You’ll want to have on hand:

canned pineapple juice from a can of chunk pineapple in juice, not syrup, 1/2 cup but save the rest for later
1/2 cup catsup
1/4 cup cider vinegar
2 Tbsp soy sauce
a few drops of sesame oil (the dark roasted kind you need to keep in the frig)
Taste and see if it’s too pungent, if so add a Tbsp or two of chicken stock to the sauce.

Add the above ingredients to the garlic/pepper/ginger melee and boil for a few minutes. Add 1 T cornstarch with the same amount of pineapple juice from the can. You should have just enough. Use a fork to make sure there are no lumps to the cornstarch mixture and add, stirring, to the sauce to thicken, then take off the heat.

You’ll need some long-grained rice, about a cup of rice for two, as that’ll leave extra. Follow package directions and please do not use instant rice.

Take an onion, a green or red pepper or two and cut into bite sized chunks. Cut one whole chicken breasts the same. Start cooking the vegetables and then add the chicken, stir-frying as you go. Use little salt but pepper well. When nearly everything is cooked add the sauce and drained pineapple chunks.

Serve over rice with sesame seeds as a garnish. Cheers!

p.s. I buy sesame seeds once a year from a specialty grocery, place them in a zip-top bag with date on it and take out all the air and put it in the freezer so I can take out a bit from time to time for this and for baked goods.

Want Fat?

Try the Bacon Explosion! Favorite of the BBQ circuit. Here’s to you, Bobby! Forget brisket, just do pure pork fat.

Today’s NYTimes online included this work of art and recipe for gluttony.

My less than rudimentary html will not work, and my resource is sound asleep, as he should be, but I thought you’d find this a hoot.

I’ll try to fix this but if I can’t, just check out http://www.nytimes.com or google ny times and bacon explosion. That’s all, folks, Dee

Transparency

Our money, $750 billion of it, went out without a thought about how it would be spent or how its use would be reported back to Washington.  Hopefully when reports got to D.C. they would share that information with the people who paid for it.  Those people are us, the U.S. taxpayers.

Now we find that billions have gone out in bonuses to stock traders, and it is lamented that they couldn’t pay more of our money out to buy Ferraris and other minimal luxuries for these workers while others are laid off and the banking industry is in chaos and has to depend on taxpayer money to survive.

This is an insult to tax-paying Americans.  Billions in TARP money (our money) was used for bonuses.  Please, new Administration, get your priorities straight.

IF more aid to banks is needed, there needs to be transparency, a cause for any funding and quarterly reporting to their lenders (us, the US people).

A real plan for jump-starting our economy is required.

No funds should be expended for insurance companies – AIG was a huge mistake – unless they agree to be regulated federally (as are the banks). Insurance companies don’t exist to pay out when someone hits your bumper, they are investment companies who invest our premiums for money and never reduce premiums when we reduce their payouts (witness seat belt laws).  Same for reinsurance companies.

As to the Big Three auto-makers, they should have made themselves more competitive in the 1970’s.  Forget about the give and take of fuel prices, look to the next step and do it!  They deserve to fend for themselves and not have any more bailouts.  Management blames it on unions, unions blame it on management.  Let those folks on the board earn the perks they get, for once, and make things right.  And let the engineers and workers do what they do best, build cars.

You’re spending our money here, Mr. President, Senate and House.  We elected you and expect you to act in the best interests of your constituents, not your lobbyists.

Perhaps the White House and House and Senate cafeterias should start offering only franks and beans or the stuff that’s in their freezer or walk-in frig.   That way they can feel like we do when we’re laid off.  Cheers, Dee.

p.s. We thank the banks that didn’t invest imprudently and didn’t need taxpayer assistance, same to the auto manufacturers.  May you continue your prudent work and investments in the future.

The resulting soup

“Today I took the cold stock and removed the fat, and added a 28 oz. can of tomatoes and their juice, 2 stalks celery and a couple of carrots, sliced, 2 15 oz. cans white beans (drained and rinsed), chopped romaine lettuce and some partially cooked egg noodles. It’s still kind of bland so I’m simmering it a while before I add more salt and pepper. I did put in some dried marjoram and basil. Will let you know how it turns out.”  This is from a comment from the prior post.

Now, I let it simmer for another 45 minutes and reduce by a cup or two.  Then I added salt and pepper.  Jim went back for seconds, in the large lion’s head bowl!  Now the kitchen smells like tomato and I’d prefer for it to smell like chicken broth, but it was good and we’ve at least 12 cups of soup left in the frig.  More frugal food, yea!  No, the broth didn’t get to be Zoe accoutrements to her dog food.  More about that later.  I cleaned out a beef stock box that I don’t really like for her food the other day.  She loved the boiled chicken off the bone today in the after-stock cache, however.

We enjoyed the soup with BJ’s sausage from East TX and frozen french fries.  Jim had ketchup, of course.  Cheers!  Dee

Chicken Stock/Broth

Yesterday I cooked a 5# chicken with stuffing.  Oh, it was so good.  Today I cut up come celery, carrot and onion and added a couple of fresh-frozen bay leaves from the freezer.  I added the carcass of yesterday’s chicken, plus half the meat and all the bones for stock.

The rest of the meat was hand-shredded and tossed with fresh lime juice and cayenne and tabasco, plus salt and pepper and marinated for a couple of hours.

First I sauteed onions and peppers, while in a dry skillet I toasted the flour tortillas. They went along with pico di gallo, sharp cheddar cheese, homemade guacamole, lime wedges, and a bit of sour cream.  A good meal.

It was a great dinner.  Hope yours was as good.  Talk more tomorrow.  Cheers!  Dee