Let's say hello to the sheep, shall we?

Table from Amazon, tile coaster from Poppy.
Let's say hello to the sheep, shall we?

Friday
Short version: Tuna salad, bread, frozen peas or radishes, ice cream
Long version: The children and I went down the hill to swim with our friends this day. We do this every summer, and I know it's a long day that tires everyone out. Me included. I made tuna salad before we left, and then put that on plates with slices of bread. I put butter on the table and let everyone choose whether they wanted to put their tuna on the bread for sandwiches, or eat it separately with bread and butter.
Saturday
Short version: Toasted burritos, corn on the cob, ice cream
Long version: I just made easy taco meat and beans (meaning with salsa and spices) to put in the burritos. I did go to all the effort of frying the burritos in butter, which always makes them better. The corn on the cob was sort of an odd pairing with the burritos, but I had forgotten about it for a couple of days in the refrigerator and wanted to use it.
And then everyone had ice cream. Most of them had both black cherry and butter pecan, although Poppy agreed with me that the black cherry was no bueno. She does love butter pecan, though.
Sunday
Short version: Kristin's Cooking School
Long version: My family all left in the morning for a trip to the mountains to drop the eldest off at an FFA camp before going camping and fishing and then dropping middle son off at the camp a couple of days later.
I spent some time in the kitchen on Saturday making camping food for the travelers. This means things that can either be heated up in the coals of their fire (I wrap it all in aluminum foil), or in a motel microwave if they end up not camping one night.
This means I was by myself at home. Not for long, though.
Our priest, who is a relatively young guy and has become a pretty good friend, doesn't really know how to cook. I mean, he feeds himself, but certainly not well. His younger brother is living with him this summer before he goes to college, and he also does not know how to cook. He, however, wants to learn. Last time he was at our house, he was looking at my tortilla press and said he'd like to learn how to make tortillas.
This gave me the idea that he could come when I was here without so many people to cook for and learn how to make the tortillas, plus what goes in them. I figured it would be much easier to do this when I wasn't having to make such a large quantity of food, and would actually have the focus to teach someone else.
And then one of their other brothers (there are six brothers in this family) who I also know, happened to be coming into town. He came too, so I ended up feeding four people anyway.
I taught them how to make ranch dip (for the vegetables and tortilla chips I set out before dinner), corn tortillas, taco meat, and refried beans. I actually wrote out the recipe for the ranch dip, and then they were making notes on their phone for what to buy next time they go to the store for the other stuff. Like lard and garlic and spices, which apparently they don't currently have. What a sad kitchen.
Anyway.
I also made pots de creme for dessert, but I didn't teach that one to them because I made it in the morning before they came.
Monday
Short version: Eggs and fried potatoes, canned peas
Long version: I actually was by myself this night, as you can tell by my dinner. I love fried potatoes with eggs, but rarely eat them. I just microwaved a small potato until it was mostly cooked, then chopped it and fried it in bacon fat before also frying an egg in the pan.
I still have a couple of cans of peas from commodities, and I still like them well enough that I will just eat them plain. There's no denying the power of childhood conditioning.
I was at the grocery store with the oldest son last week and I told him he could choose an ice cream flavor. He surveyed the options for a minute before deciding on black cherry.
That was pretty much the last flavor available that I would have chosen.
These were the small cartons of ice cream, so I also got butter pecan for the rest of the family. All of them like that one, although again, I don't care about it at all. It doesn't actively repel me like black cherry, but I still won't bother eating it.
I did choose one for myself, though: chocolate moose tracks. Chocolate, peanut butter, and more chocolate? That's more like it.
I had an unfortunate incident with granola this week. I had some in the oven when Poppy came in to tell me about the very boring passage in her children's Bible, in Exodus, that described the Ark of the Covenant in great detail. I told her those details had allowed people to re-create the Ark, and then we got to looking at pictures, and then . . .
Friday
Short version: Chicken, biscuits, tomato/cucumber salad, apple/pear crisp
Long version: I had enough chicken left from the bag of leg quarters I had thawed earlier in the week to separate them into thighs and drumsticks and roast them. Which is what I did.
Standard baking powder biscuits that went in with the chicken.
The salad had cherry tomatoes and cucumbers from the store, which are never as good as garden tomatoes and cucumbers, of course, but good enough with homemade ranch dressing and pickled onions.
Saturday
Short version: Wedding food
Long version: This was the night we were at the giant ranch wedding. The food came from a local (-ish, maybe 130 miles) Mexican restaurant. It was beef or chicken fajitas with flour tortillas, rice, beans, chips and salsa, and, of course, dessert. Way better than most wedding food. The cake was even pretty good. I didn't try the vanilla/raspberry cake, not being a fan of fruit in cakes, but I did like the German chocolate cake.
Because I didn't have to cook dinner, I spent some time canning apricots and rhubarb. All of our apricots got killed by frost, but my friend down the hill in a much warmer town has a couple of trees at her place. She told me last week they were starting to drop their fruit, so I made a trip to town on Wednesday mostly just to pick apricots. It's a long way for fruit, but these are the only apricots we're getting this year, and a year without apricot jam is a sad year indeed.
I ended up with about eight pints of apricot jam. And then, since I had everything out and the kitchen was all sticky already anyway, I made some rhubarb jam, too.
Sunday
Short version: Chicken tetrazzini, apple/pear crisp with vanilla ice cream
Long version: It was quite chilly this day, so that simmering the chicken bones from Friday's meal to make stock provided some welcome heat to the house. With the meat I pulled off those bones, plus the stock, and then spaghetti, onions, garlic, cream, milk, peas, and cheese, I made a casserole of something like chicken tetrazzini. No mushrooms, though.
Monday
Short version: Sloppy joe sandwiches, leftover pasta, carrot sticks, ice cream
Long version: We were supposed to have a guest join us for pizza, but then he re-scheduled for Thursday. Since the main reason he was coming was to try sourdough pizza, I decided to bake the already-prepared crusts with sauce and then freeze them in the pan so we could still have it Thursday. This meant I needed something pretty last-minute for dinner.
Luckily, I had cooked some ground beef earlier in the day just to have on hand, so I made some of that into sloppy joe meat to have on the bread I had baked in the afternoon. One child had the last of the pasta.
Tuesday
Short version: Steaks, mashed potatoes, green salad with ranch dressing
Long version: While I was organizing the big meat freezer a bit, I found some packages of steaks. I thawed one package of rib steaks and one of sirloin steak. We haven't had steak in awhile, and A. was inspired to grill them. This happens very infrequently, but grilling really is the best way to cook meat.
Last year was such a great year for wildflowers. We had multiple kinds for months, starting in May and going through until about September.
This year? Not so much.
We just didn't get rain. At least, not early enough. It was so dry in the spring that nothing grew. No grass, no flowers, no nothing. The rains finally started, but too late for most of the flowers.
What has been coming is late, small, and underwhelming. Last year at this time, the roads were lined with exuberant yellow clover, vibrant orange globe mallows, and lots of other things. I made so many arrangements. For the dining room table, for the bookcase in the living room, for wherever I felt like putting flowers.
This year everything is stunted, sparse, and limited.
But still! I do have some flowers.
When I stopped at the dollar store for milk last week, I was highly amused by this contradictory gardening display outside the store.