Let's start with the most exciting thing, shall we?
Sunday, March 15, 2026
Snapshots: Daffodils!
Friday, March 13, 2026
Friday Food: Solo Soup and Salad
Friday
Short version: Soup for me, Spanish tortilla on the road
Long version: Every member of my family left this day for a road trip to Tucson to visit family. I stayed home to take care of the animals. Until they got home on Wednesday, I was only feeding myself.
So!
I had a container of chickpea soup in the freezer that I took out to thaw. It was meatless, so this night I ate it just as it was for my Lenten Friday dinner.
Tuesday, March 10, 2026
Making the Grade
It's school progress-report time! These are viewed with varying levels of interest by my children. The boys mostly don't care, although all of them do very well in school, so they don't have much to worry about.
Poppy, however, is VERY interested in her progress reports and report cards. This is the first year that she's had actual grades, and she scrutinizes them carefully*.
Her latest progress report apparently inspired her to grade me, which was one of the funniest things I've seen in a long time.
Sunday, March 8, 2026
Snapshots: Paw Prints
I got some eggs from my friend, and Poppy was delighted with the tiny egg included.
Friday, March 6, 2026
Friday Food: Fish, Chicken, Pork, Beef
Friday
Short version: Fish sticks, mashed potatoes with cheese, green salad with vinaigrette
Long version: I bought some fish sticks for Lent, which is the only time I do buy them. They were just Great Value ones, which are fine as long as you definitely do NOT follow the instructions for baking on the bag. Baking these for 15-20 minutes at 425 degrees would result in some seriously floppy, nasty fish sticks.
I baked them for at least 45 minutes at 450 degrees. They could even been in longer, but everyone was hungry and they got crispy enough that they weren't gross.
Exceptionally ugly food.
Tuesday, March 3, 2026
Here We Go Again
Last spring, about this time, A. came home with a pack of collard green seedlings for me. There were nine seedlings in the six-cell pack. I planted all of them.
We got quite a bit of rain early in the growing season, which made them grow very quickly.
Even though the grasshoppers got after them, they couldn't kill the collards. The plants were already pretty big, and the grasshoppers ate the bigger leaves towards the outside, leaving the new growth in the center that kept the plant going.
I cut greens for months, sharing them with anyone who wanted them. The cold that made the grasshoppers go away didn't phase the collard greens. They kept growing into the new year, even more luxuriantly without grasshoppers gnawing at them.
When we had our very cold spell, I harvested the rest of the collard leaves, but I left a few of the stalks in the garden. I wanted to see what would happen.
Well . . .
Sunday, March 1, 2026
Snapshots: Subbing and Sheep
I subbed at school last week, so this was the first time I worked in the new building.




























