Now that summer has arrived with its warmer overnight temperatures, I have to put my bread dough in the refrigerator overnight. And then I have to warm it up in the morning.
Sunday, June 7, 2026
Snapshots: Looks Like Summer
Thursday, June 4, 2026
Friday Food: Wrinkly Potatoes
Friday
Short version: Cheese pizza, ranch dip, raw bell pepper
Long version: The older boys were still gone at their FFA convention, so I only had three people eating pizza. That meant I could get away with just one half-sheet-pan pizza. It was just cheese.
Saturday
Short version: Meatloaf, mashed potatoes, green peas, mango-coconut popsicles
Long version: The quintessential Mom Meal to welcome back our weary travelers.
The popsicles were a departure, and were solely the result of my getting an entire box of ripe mangos from commodities. They were very good mangos, but some of them were starting to get black spots on them.
I used several of them to make the popsicles, which handily also used up the last half cup of coconut milk I had frozen after making Poppy's First Communion coconut cake. The recipe I quickly consulted called for two and a half cups of mango to one cup of coconut milk. Because I didn't have enough coconut milk, I made up the difference with milk, cream, and coconut extract. And then I added maple syrup until it seemed sweet enough.
Popsicles are very easy to make, but there is no way to cut up mangos that doesn't make a huge, sticky mess.
Sunday
Short version: Leftovers, chocolate pudding with cream
Long version: I had leftover Italian sausage, meatloaf, and the brisket my mom had sent home with me. I let everyone choose which meat they wanted, and then I portioned out leftover macaroni and cheese from a previous lunch, as well as leftover mashed potatoes. Plus some frozen peas.
I still use this recipe for chocolate pudding, but I double it, use half a cup of heavy cream and the optional cocoa powder, and split the chocolate chips between semi-sweet and dark. This makes a very good pudding. Sieving is also not optional for the best texture. This is unfortunate, because I dislike sieving anything, but it's worth it for pudding.
Monday
Short version: Cheeseburger casserole, leftover peas
Long version: A. came home with a bag of wrinkly potatoes from our elderly neighbor. I put them immediately in a big pot and boiled them whole, figuring if they were cooked, they would get used more readily.
They did. I used about half of them this night in a casserole that also included diced leftover meatloaf, grated American cheese we got from commodities, milk and cream, onion and garlic powder, and all the condiments for cheeseburgers. So ketchup, mustard, and mayonnaise.
This sounds suspect, but it was actually delicious and everyone loved it.
Tuesday
Short version: Pork, fried potatoes, green salad with vinaigrette, rice pudding
Long version: I put a big pork shoulder in the oven early in the morning, along with the rice pudding, and let that cook most of the day. I just broiled the pork with rendered lard and spices, and the fried the rest of the boiled potatoes in more of the lard.
Tuesday, June 2, 2026
Room to Roam (and Park)
Although there are many things about the place I live that are markedly different from mainstream America, one that I am always reminded of when traveling is parking.
Parking, you say? How can that be much different?
Well, let me ask you this: Do the places you park frequently have enough room to pull through in a crew-cab truck pulling a livestock trailer? No? Mine do.
Most places here--including schools, municipal buildings, and everywhere in the village--are set up that way because many people are driving such a set-up at any given time. That sort of thing can't be easily backed and turned, so pull-through parking is pretty much always an option.
I don't ever drive trucks with trailers, but I appreciate having parking set up for them. Back when I drove our 12-passenger van daily, I hated going into town and having to park in a small parking lot somewhere. So nerve-wracking to back that thing up in a tight space with cars hemming me in. But it's not something I have to worry about here.
Wide open spaces for cattle, people, and cars. Just the way I like it.
Sunday, May 31, 2026
Snapshots: Desert Living
Of course these are all from our trip to Arizona. Because that's where I was most of last week.
I didn't have a chance to go to the grocery store ahead of this trip, so I didn't really have any particular traveling food. I made a completely ridiculous statement to A. that I could just stop for lunch at a fast food place. There were only three of us, after all. It wouldn't cost that much; it would be so easy; I wouldn't have to bring a cooler . . .
After we got to my parents' house in Tucson, I actually went for a walk before I even had my coffee, so as to take advantage of the only time of day when I wouldn't have to walk in the merciless sun.
Friday, May 29, 2026
Friday Food: Mostly Arizona
Friday
Short version: Grilled chicken, rice, salad, cookies
Long version: This was the day I left with the younger two children to drive to Phoenix. We arrived around 2 p.m. to the house my parents had rented. My mom and dad made dinner. It was simple, but delicious.
The cookies were like a store version of Girl Scout Samoas that my mom bought because Poppy loves coconut. They were not as good as Samoas, but no one had any trouble eating them.
Saturday
Short version: Hawaiian barbecue, cake
Long version: This was the night of my niece's graduation party, which was the whole reason we were in Phoenix. The graduate's favorite food is Hawaiian barbecue, so they got takeout from a restaurant for the party. I was not familiar with this food, but it was very good. Both beef and chicken in a sweet marinade of some kind--kind of like teriyaki--rice, pasta salad, and Spam and rice rolled up in seaweed. Oh, and Hawaiian rolls, which my children had never had an predictably liked.
Sunday
Short version: Reuben sandwiches, leftover vegetables, potato chips, ice cream
Long version: We went to Mass in Phoenix at 11:30 a.m. before starting the drive to Tucson to stay with my parents.
We had eaten party leftovers with my brother's family for lunch, so I just had some of the vegetables from the corned beef for my dinner. Plus whatever was left from my children's sandwiches, because there's always something.
Monday
Short version: Cheeseburgers, broccoli salad, oven fries, spinach
Long version: We went to see A.'s family this day and swim in the pool at his dad's apartment complex.
Tuesday
Short version: Brisket, roasted vegetables, leftover rice, ice cream
Long version: My mom made an entire brisket, like eight pounds of meat. We ate about half of it this night. Both children had multiple helpings. They certainly burned enough calories with all the swimming and running around we did.
Wednesday
Short version: Jiggety jig soft tacos
Long version: Home again, home again. We arrived home at 4:15 p.m. A. had been eating hamburgers pretty much exclusively since the older boys had left for their FFA convention, and there was still a little ground beef in the refrigerator. There wasn't enough for all of us, but I added a can of pinto beans to it, plus salsa and spices, and that was enough in corn tortillas with cheese.
The children had eaten large quantities of raw vegetables and fruit in the car, so I didn't bother with anything but the tacos.
Thursday
Short version: Italian sausage links, roasted potatoes, canned peas
Long version: A. had defrosted some Italian sausage, which I put right on the pan with the roasted potatoes.
Tuesday, May 26, 2026
Oops
Lately I've been getting Poppy into older, longer* books by starting to read them to her. After several chapters of me reading, she'll get interested enough in the story that she'll start reading them herself.
We did this with The Secret Garden and Heidi, and then we started Little Women.
She took over reading herself in Little Women after maybe five chapters and was happily zipping right along.
Then she came home from school and said her friend told her Beth dies in Little Women. "She doesn't die, does she, Mom?"
Uh. Well. Dang it.
Beth does indeed die. I had forgotten that.
There was no way out of answering this question. So I asked her one of my own first. I asked her if she really wanted to know.
She did. I told her. She cried just thinking about it and then declared that she was not going to read the book anymore.
Fair enough. She can try again when she's a little older maybe. She's only eight years old. She has plenty of time to read the rest of it.
The next book I was going to read with her was Anne of Green Gables. I looked up if anyone dies in that book, because obviously my memory for these things is not to be trusted. Matthew does towards the end of the book. So now I have to determine if that death is going to be as upsetting to Poppy as Beth dying. I don't think so, since Matthew is an old man, not a little girl, but still. Maybe we should wait on that one for a little bit.
Anyone have any suggestions for classic children's books where main characters don't die? You'd think that wouldn't be so hard, but I guess not.
*This works well for older books because they tend to have longer and more complicated sentence structures. When I read them aloud, I can pause to break up the sentence with my voice. I also often have to define words, because the vocabulary in older books tends to be much more advanced, which is one reason I like them. When Poppy reads them on her own, she frequently calls out to me for definitions.
Sunday, May 24, 2026
Snapshots: Just Four
We have had such strange weather this spring. It was in the nineties in March, and then on Wednesday, May 20, I had to start the woodstove.
































