Sunday, July 12, 2026
Snapshots: Books and Mystery Flowers
Friday, July 10, 2026
Friday Food: Another Cooking Lesson
Friday
Short version: Tuna things, ice cream
Long version: I am not a huge fan of tuna, but I had some tuna salad in the refrigerator that needed to be used. The only way I like tuna in my salads is if it's sort of disguised with a bunch of other things, and I also like something sweet in there.
This one had a lot of carrots, some bell pepper, cheddar cheese, and dried cranberries.
And then, ice cream. With chocolate sauce.
Tuesday, July 7, 2026
Before and After Kitchen
Before we moved into this house eight years ago, I did a lot of painting. I painted the living room and entry, the dining room, the hallway, and Poppy's bedroom. Even though I got a lot done, I always regretted not painting the kitchen.
The kitchen was in bad shape. I don't know when it was last painted, but it looked terrible. The paint on the cabinets was bubbling and impossible to clean without actually scrubbing the paint off. It was nasty. But having my constantly-in-use kitchen out of commission for days to paint it was not very appealing.
So I never did it. And it got more and more gross.
However! When A. was planning his trip to New York for ten days with three of the four children, I knew my time had come. Accordingly, I asked him to buy me white paint for the ceiling and something yellow-toned for the cabinets.
The only pre-mixed, non-gray paint he could find when he went to Walmart, though, was an almond color. So that's what he got. And that's what I used.
First I painted the ceiling.
Sunday, July 5, 2026
Snapshots: The Glorious Fourth
Happy Fifth of July! Let's see what happened this weekend . . .
And I had a vodka watermelon slushie. Cheers to 250 years!
Saturday, July 4, 2026
Thursday, July 2, 2026
Friday Food: Just the Two of Us
Friday
Short version: Tuna quesadillas, carrot sticks with ranch dip, watermelon
Long version: The FFA boys got home from their camp in time for dinner but weren't hungry, so the rest of the family just had tuna quesadillas. This is like a tuna melt--tuna salad and cheese--except in tortillas instead of bread.
Saturday
Short version: Chicken drumsticks, rice, leftover restaurant food, watermelon
I spent about five hours in the kitchen in the morning making three different meals for my friend with three kids who had back surgery on Monday. This was the same friend who had given me a ten-pound bag of chicken drumsticks a few months ago when she didn't have room in her freezer for it. Given that I had to thaw the entire bag at once, I had in the back of my mind that whenever I cooked them, I would give some of them to her.
And so I did.
I used this recipe and method for the drumsticks, and they came out very well. Unusually for chicken drumsticks, which are not the best cut of chicken.
I didn't have enough of the drumsticks for all of us after I had packaged up what was going to my friend's family, and A. isn't a huge fan of drumsticks anyway. For him, I made a breakfast burritos with the kids' restaurant leftovers from a breakfast they had on their trip. It was the remains of a breakfast burrito, a sausage patty, and some hash browns. I added another scrambled egg to it.
I had a salad with leftover hamburger in it.
And we've been eating watermelon non-stop, thanks to the three watermelons from commodities that our post office lady gave us. Our family of six is certainly much more able to get through a full-sized watermelon than the typical single elderly person that is the majority of our population in our almost-ghost-village.
Sunday
Short version: Steaks, leftover mashed potatoes or spaghetti, carrot sticks, pumpkin custard
Long version: At 3:30 p.m., I had one boy moaning and groaning in dramatic agony because he couldn't believe he had to wait an hour and a half for dinner. So I told him if he started the charcoal on the grill, I would cook the steaks I had thawed and we'd eat whenever they were ready.
This was actually just a ploy on my part to teach him how to get charcoal ready for grilling, so I can delegate that task in the future. And of course, it takes awhile for charcoal to get really hot, so in the end we only ate about fifteen minutes early.
Really good steaks, though.
The pumpkin custard was just this pumpkin pie minus the crust. It's not particularly seasonally appropriate, but I made it because I had the oven on anyway for over an hour the day before to cook the chicken, and I wanted to put something else in there, too. And I still have a few bags of squash puree in the freezer from last year's garden. I prefer this without the crust, myself. Pumpkin pie crust always just seems soggy and unnecessary to me.
Monday
Short version: A succession of randomness
Long version: A. flew to New York this day with the three younger children, leaving me at home with the eldest, who was sick. Luckily, he wasn't going on this trip, anyway, so he was free to stay home and blow his nose.
Eldest had leftover mashed potatoes and spaghetti (not together) for dinner, and then some of the butterscotch pudding I had made to use up excess milk.
I had spent all afternoon painting the kitchen.
Wednesday
Short version: Fried steak and potatoes
Long version: I had one small steak left. This would not have been enough by itself for me and the son at home, but combined with potatoes, it was.
I microwaved a couple of potatoes until they were cooked, then diced them and fried them in bacon grease with the steak, onion powder, frozen peas, and shredded cheese.
Tuesday, June 30, 2026
Embattled Collards
Last year's exuberant collard greens were an unqualified success in the garden. A. was delighted and declared we will grow collards forevermore. Accordingly, he bought six collard starts in April and we planted them out.
Then it didn't rain. Like, at all.
It's interesting that not all water is created equal for plants. Our garden plants will, grudgingly, survive when watered by a hose with well water, but they don't really thrive. They want rain water. I'm guessing this has something to do with the minerals in our well water? I don't know, but I do know that there are definitely some seeds that won't even germinate on well water (notably, root vegetables like carrots and beets), and that the garden doesn't grow well until it actually rains.
The collards were displeased by the well water and just kind of sulked there, waiting for rain.
Then it started to rain! Hooray!
And then the harlequin beetles showed up, right on cue.
The harlequin beetles arrive in great numbers at the beginning of June every year, and brassicas are their favorite plants to eat. They're not that hard to get rid of, it's just that there are so many of them. When the infestation is the worst, I use a bucket of soapy water and drop them in there to drown. Thereafter, I just inspect the plants whenever I'm out there and squish the ones I find.
Incidentally, if you ever have to hunt harlequin beetles, it's helpful to know their habits. When they sense you hovering, they'll scuttle to the underside of a leaf to hide. If you grab at them and miss, they'll drop to the ground, where they can be squished quite easily. They never fly, which is helpful.
Anyway.
The rains also came with two separate nasty hail storms, about a week apart, that were particularly detrimental to the big, spreading leaves of the collard plants.
The end result of all of this is, well, sad.





























