Thanks to the plague descending upon our house, I don't have very many photos this week. I do have Jesus, though.
I used fake flowers up on the saints' pedestals.
Thanks to the plague descending upon our house, I don't have very many photos this week. I do have Jesus, though.
I used fake flowers up on the saints' pedestals.
Friday
Short version: Tuna patties, fried chickpeas with feta, macaroni and cheese or leftover rice, asparagus or raw bell peppers
Long version: Poppy had been asking for tuna patties all through Lent on Fridays, and I still hadn't made them. No reason we can't still eat them now, though, even though Lent is over.
Because there were only four of us at home, I used just one 12-ounce can of tuna and made three patties (I didn't have one). That wouldn't have been quite enough, but I had a lot of chickpeas in the refrigerator too. I fried those in olive oil--which makes a HUGE mess because they pop all over out of the pan--and then when they were crispy, I put some feta cheese on them to melt.
The kids had the macaroni and cheese because I still have many, many boxes of it from excess commodities. They had the bell pepper, too. A. had the rice and the asparagus.
Saturday
Short version: Lamb stew, fried garlic bread, cheese
Long version: When we butcher sheep, I put the shanks and other bony pieces together to make stew. That's what I used for this, which also had pureed calabaza, tomato paste, potatoes, carrots, collard greens, and peas in it. I usually finish stews with cornstarch to thicken the broth a bit, and for lamb stew, I mix the cornstarch with yogurt before adding it to the stew.
Sunday
Short version: Very random casserole, asparagus, chocolate pudding with cream
Long version: I had taken ground beef out to thaw, with the thought that I would make burrito filling with it. But then I thought I hadn't made cheeseburger casserole in awhile, so I started peeling and slicing potatoes for that. I got through the rest of the bag of potatoes I had in the kitchen and went into A.'s office to get the new bag. Which is when I discovered that I didn't have a new bag. No more potatoes. Boooo.
So! Not cheeseburger casserole, then. Instead I made a kind of Mexican casserole with the potatoes, beef, pinto beans, corn, and spices, etc. The beans and corn helped to make up for the fact that there weren't enough potatoes.
Monday
Short version: Lamb steaks, rice, raw radishes
Long version: I did marinate the lamb steaks with olive oil and vinegar, but the rest of this meal was quite plain.
Short version: Leftover random casserole
Long version: Oof. This was a day. Youngest son had been sick since Friday. He thought he was better enough to go to school, but I got a call from the nurse at 9:30 that he was not, in fact, better enough and he wanted to come home.
Eldest had been sick since the day before.
Poppy woke up vomiting in the morning and spent the rest of the day in a feverish haze.
That left just three of us eating.
I heated up the casserole for the other two and had a salad myself in between providing liquids, various medicines, and comfort to the three sick ones.
Wednesday
Short version: Hamburger patties, lamb steaks, rice, green salad with ranch dressing
Long version: We had four out of the six of us actually eating, so at least there was a majority who could handle solid food. I had a couple of lamb steaks still in the marinade that I hadn't cooked on Monday, so I cooked them this day and A. had that, along with leftover rice.
The two children eating had the hamburger patties with rice instead of buns.
Thursday
Short version: Leftovers, clam chowder, eggs and rice, popsicles
Long version: I started to feel not well in the afternoon, though thankfully only in a getting-a-cold kind of way, not a digestive illness. Luckily, I had already been mostly planning on leftovers.
I made Snow's clam chowder for the two children who were still coughing and didn't have huge appetites. A. had leftover lamb steak and rice. One child had a leftover hamburger patty as a sandwich, plus some of the clam chowder. The fourth child was at a track meet.
Given my stuffed-up nose and general malaise, I didn't have a salad as I typically would. Instead I fried two eggs and ate those with rice.
The popsicles were some I had made with the extra of the fruit shake I had made for the sick children earlier in the day. It was frozen banana slices, frozen strawberries, canned peaches, and yogurt. To make the popsicles, I added some cream--to make it less icy when frozen--and strawberry jam before pouring it into the molds.
Refrigerator check:
I guess that should just be gelatin, so as not to use a proprietary name, but then would you know what I'm talking about?
Actually, I guess I really should just call this Mom's Gelatin, because it doesn't resemble the brand-name stuff in anything but texture.
I started making my own gelatin maybe two years ago. I have one child with an unfortunate tendency to frequent digestive upsets. When liquid diets are prudent, gelatin is one of the very few things that can be more or less eaten, rather than consumed as a drink. It's interesting how much one misses chewing when on a liquid diet. Gelatin requires a little chewing, which makes it a nice break from juice or stock.
I didn't do a whole lot of research into the best brand of gelatin. I just went online and bought one that looked good.
The next thing I learned was how important it is to dissolve the gelatin all the way. The general recommendation is to sprinkle the gelatin powder over cold water and let it sit for a bit before stirring it into hot liquid. I don't do that. I just sprinkle it over the hot liquid right in the dish and then vigorously whisk it until it's dissolved. If I see any little lumps, I just fish them out with a spoon.
Flavor is really where this is different from store-bought gelatin. Whatever liquid the gelatin is mixed with needs to be a clear juice. I don't have strawberry or raspberry juice to imitate the flavorings used in the name-brand stuff. What I make most often is lemon gelatin. That's just lemonade--sugar, boiling water, bottled lemon juice, and for this a bit of salt as I'm trying to hydrate the eater--with the gelatin mixed in.
For the child who loves switchel, I'll make switchel with all boiling water and mix in the gelatin. I have also successfully used the liquid poured off of home-canned pears and apples, which makes a gelatin that tastes like apple cider. I bet peach juices would work as well, although I haven't had enough of that to try yet.
It takes a few hours to set the gelatin properly, so it needs to be made well ahead of time. And then you give it to the sick child and cross your fingers that solid food can be consumed before you have to make another batch.
A rare selfie at a track meet in which I am not hiding from the blazing sun under my dorky Mom hat.
Friday
Short version: Fish sticks, baked potatoes, green salad with vinaigrette
Long version: Before Lent started, I bought the biggest available bag of Great Value fish sticks. That was enough for two full meals for our family of six. This was the second of them.
As always, the Great Value ones are just fine, provided you absolutely do not follow the "bake for 18-20 minutes" nonsense on the bag. I baked these for a full hour at 450 degrees and they still could have used more crisping.
The longer baking time makes it convenient for also baking potatoes for an easy side dish, although baked potatoes don't seem to go with fish sticks, somehow. I was going for low effort, though, and this certainly was that.
I didn't even make tartar sauce this time. Everyone made do with ketchup.
Saturday
Short version: Sausage, leftover pasta or fried potatoes, collard greens or still-frozen green beans
Long version: I cooked one package of Italian sausage links and one of jalapeno/cheddar sausages. The leftover pasta was the baked spaghetti I had made with the can of chicken. There wasn't quite enough of that for everyone, but since A. doesn't eat much pasta and one child doesn't like it that much, I just microwaved a couple of potatoes for them. Those I diced and fried in the pan with the sausage.
Sunday
Short version: Lamb gyros; potatoes and onion; peas with mint; strawberry-rhubarb pie, baked custard, brownies, vanilla ice cream; French 75s
Long version: I liked the French 75s so much when we had them on Fat Tuesday that I got everything to make them again. They're very much a special-occasion drink, what with the champagne and all. The champagne also makes them something best made when there are multiple people drinking, so the whole bottle of champagne is used in one night. There were three of us drinking them this night, which worked out. (We had guests. I did not give any to my minor children, thank you.)
When we butchered the two wethers a few weeks ago, A. boned out two of the back legs. I used both of those for our Easter feast. I shoved garlic into slits all over them, then covered them all with many spices plus olive oil before rolling them up and tying them for roasting.
Short version: Leftover lamb, mashed potatoes, leftover peas, leftover brownies
Long version: The only part of this meal I had to make this night was the mashed potatoes, because there weren't enough leftover potatoes from the Easter feast.
Tuesday
Short version: Baked beans and rice, ice cream
Long version: I had some baked beans that had been in the refrigerator for some time and needed to be used. There were only two children at home, because the older boys left this day for the state FFA convention.
I also had one serving of baked beans+ground beef in the freezer. I gave that to A. over rice, and then the children had the plain baked beans. This was a very fast meal to get on the table after getting home with Poppy from her First Communion class.
They had ice cream after dinner because Poppy had her first confession at class and I figured there should be something celebratory for that. Ice cream works.
Wednesday
Short version: Salisbury steaks with milk gravy, leftover mashed potatoes or rice, asparagus yay!
Long version: First asparagus!
Thursday
Short version: Breakfast sausage patties, leftover Salisbury steak, leftover baked beans, garlic bread, asparagus, raw bell peppers
Long version: I took out one tube of breakfast sausage, which was enough because only A. and Poppy ate it. The third son and I had the leftover Salisbury steak. Everyone but me had the beans and garlic bread. The adults had the asparagus. The children had the raw bell pepper.
As an aside, it is SO much easier to cook for four people rather than six, especially because the missing two are teenage boys. I am seeing my future, and it has a lot less cooking in it . . .
Refrigerator check:
* Making two smaller dishes of custard was also helpful because then I had a whole other one to bribe the children to get out of bed on a reluctant Monday morning. Custard is an excellent breakfast.
A few years ago I started buying fresh flowers for our church for Easter. I love fresh flowers, but this is the only time I buy them. Easter is the most important holiday in the Catholic church, and I feel like the altar decorations should reflect that.
Arranging flowers is one of my few hobbies. This is convenient, because buying all the arrangements I make at a florist would be several hundred dollars. Buying random assorted bouquets at Walmart and arranging them myself is much cheaper. Also, then I can make them exactly the way I want them.
Happy Easter! We spent much of yesterday preparing for today, including . . .
Well, I guess I can show you some of the church flowers, since I didn't really arrange these ones much. This year I bought some potted flowers and set them up in front of the Holy Family.