Friday
Short version: Non-traditional Cheesy Deezy, steamed broccoli
Long version: Cheesy Deezy (no idea how that's spelled, but who cares) was a staple of A.'s childhood. The MiL made it with three ingredients. I didn't use any of them.
She used a box of macaroni. I used a bag of gluten-free corn penne.
She used mozzarella. I used asadero and menonita cheese. Menonita is named after the Mennonites in northern Mexico who apparently make a cheddar-style cheese. Menonita is supposed to be like cheddar. This wasn't. More like saltier, slightly aged mozzarella. Good, but not cheddar.
She used a jar of marinara sauce. I made a tomato sauce with garlic, thinly sliced collard greens and beet greens from our garden, a drained can of whole tomatoes mashed with my potato masher, dried oregano and basil, and some chicken stock.
I did follow the procedure for assembly, though. That is, mix the cooked pasta (slightly undercooked, because corn pasta is no good at all when it gets overcooked, and I knew it would cook further in the oven) with the sauce and a hell of a lot of grated cheese, then top with more grated cheese. I mixed in the asadero and topped it with the menonita. Then I baked it at 400 degrees for about 15 minutes, and finally, I put it under the broiler for just a minute to brown the cheese on top.
It was good. Though I may have to give it a new name that reflects its new ingredients. How about Queso Doble? That means "Double Cheese" in Spanish. Or maybe Queso Divertido ("Fun Cheese").
Or maybe I should forget about being clever and just call it pasta. Probably that.
Hey, guess what? We have a new baby distraction cabinet in this house.
The contents don't make such a satisfying clattering sound as in the one at Blackrock, but they do make a satisfying mess for Mom to trip over while she's cooking.
Saturday
Short version: Bunless cheeseburgers, bread and butter, sauteed mushrooms and onions, green salad, burned sweet potatoes
Long version: The sweet potatoes burned because they were in the oven with the baking bread in the afternoon when A. called to get directions to a Harbor Freight tool store in Springfield, Missouri. By the time I looked it up online and managed to figure out that the Kansas Expressway is also Missouri State Route 13, the sweet potatoes were burned.
It took awhile. Maps are not my forte.
I ate them anyway. The sweet potatoes, I mean. Not the maps.
Sunday
Short version: Antelope, mashed potatoes, tomatoes with mayonnaise
Long version: The antelope wasn't as good this time because I was lazy. I did not brown it in separate batches, so it kind of bubbled and steamed in the liquid released, rather than really browning. I didn't finely dice any onion, instead just shaking on some garlic powder. I forgot to add chicken stock.
Not my finest cooking moment. Oh well. We ate it. And A. was home! HOORAY! Too bad I didn't welcome him home with a more spectacular meal, but after a week of shingles + solo parenting (or rather, thanks to my parents' well-timed visit, five days), it felt like victory that all the children were still alive and dressed in clean clothing.
Low standards. I am all about them.
But at least the tomatoes were good, because A. drove them all the way across the country from Blackrock. Thanks, MiL.
A Tomato Bowl on the counter makes this crazy tomato lady happy.
Monday
Short version: Sausage Surprise, cucumbers
Long version:
Cubby: What's for dinner?
Me: Uh. Something . . . I am . . . making.
Cubby: What're you making?
Me: Um. A sausage skillet?
Cubby, while I was dishing up dinner: I think we should call this Sausage Surprise.
Cubby, eating his second helping: Can you make Sausage Surprise again?
Sure! And to help me remember what the hell I did, here is Cubby's Sausage Surprise: browned spicy "sage sausage" and ground beef, diced onion, garlic, tomato juice and tomato chunks trimmed from the tomatoes that were starting to rot on the counter, rice cooked in chicken stock, green peas, basil, oregano, vinegar, and grated menonita cheese.
Feel free to use that detailed recipe to create your own Sausage Surprise at home. It really will be a surprise. Perhaps a photo of the completed dish would be helpful?
Surprise! It's dog food.
Tuesday
Short version: Chicken, roasted sweet potatoes, roasted bell pepper and onion, choice of leftover rice or mashed potatoes, tomato/cucumber/menonita cheese salad
Long version: I marinated the chicken--drumsticks and thighs--in yogurt, lemon juice, and garlic, and then roasted it with the vegetables, finishing it under the broiler to get crispy. The rest of it is pretty self-explanatory.
Wednesday
Short version: Antelope tacos, pickled carrots, cucumbers
Long version: I didn't have quite enough antelope meat left over to make a full meal. It needed more cooking to tenderize it anyway, as well as more seasoning, so I decided to make it into taco meat. I made a sauce with onion, garlic, tomato, chicken stock, cumin, and chili powder, then simmered the diced antelope meat in that until it was tender. The boys ate theirs on corn tortillas with cheese, carrots, and lettuce.
A. ate the rest of the leftover Sausage Surprise with some of the antelope meat on top.
I made the pickled carrot strips in the morning out of, well, carrot strips (made with a vegetable peeler) submerged in vinegar, salt, and a bit of sugar. They were really good. I like topping tacos with something crunchy and vinegary. It's a good complement. Usually I make Mexican coleslaw with cabbage, but no one else likes it as much as I do. Everyone liked the carrots.
Thursday
Short version: Roast beef, baked potatoes, roasted calabacitas/carrots/onion, creamy cucumber salad
Long version: I made the roast beef exactly the same way as last time, because it was good that way. It was good again.
The calabacita I cut up for roasting was big enough that A. and I were wondering when they start being called calabazas.
Every time I make cucumber salad with onion, sour cream, vinegar, salt, and sugar, I wonder why I bother eating cucumbers any other way. So good.
Of course, the combination of the cucumber salad and the baked potatoes meant rather a lot of sour cream on the plates. No one complained.
Okay, your turn! What'd you eat this week?
Your cheezy deezy sounds similar to baked spaghetti that my mom used to make.
ReplyDeleteSaturday - roast pork loin, cooked with potatoes & carrots, a side of broccoli
Sunday - BLT's
Monday - quiche, salad
Tuesday - spaghetti & meatballs, roasted squash
Wednesday - grilled pork chops, sautéed peppers, mushrooms, onion, spinach, with a side of broccoli
Thursday - hot chicken salad, broccoli, roasted tomatoes & garlic
Friday - leftovers
Linda
I love the cheezy deezy. It’s the names that are awesome. We make “eggy dish” here. An egg strata made with whatever is around...
ReplyDeleteWe were in Vegas for the weekend, so buffets were for dinner. I love buffets - I can get a spoonful of like 20 things.
Sunday night we flew home and the flight connection was too tight to get dinner, so dinner was an emergency Wendy’s hamburger at midnight. Before we died.
The rest of the week in no particular order:
“Mexican” - ground beef with black beans, corn and canned tomatoes. (Looked a lot like the sausage surprise). I had mine over an avocado. Others over rice or in a tortilla.
Delivered pizza
Grilled chicken, rice, steamed green beans
Pork loin, roasted potatoes and asparagus.
Tonight: Italian sausage in marinara, over spiraled zucchini “noodles”
Let's see...
ReplyDeletePork chops, mac n cheese, lemon pepper green beans
Fried chicken, potato salad, peas
Baked Spaghetti, garlic bread
Minestrone Soup, garlic bread, salad
Turkey and Dressing, corn niblets
Hamburger Helper something or other (lazy day)
Scalloped potatoes with ham/cheese, broccoli
Not sure which day was which
ReplyDeletePotato bread and butter - It was baking day. I ran out of time. We aren't picky so called it supper.
Mushroom stroganoff over pasta, broc
zucchini fritters with sour cream
Chicken, broc, Basmati rice casserole - ate leftovers the next day
Vegetable stir fry
BBQ chicken with mashed taters and broc.
Today I know. I was cooking for the freezer so sausage and onions, plain sauteed onions and oatmeal bread. We just ate bites of each when it was cooling and called it good.
Home made yogurt drizzled with honey for dessert every day, including today.
The sausage surprise segment made me laugh out loud. That's how I cook ... almost every time. Mixed results on this side, though. Ha.
ReplyDeleteI have some lingering yogurt so perhaps a marinade is in order for the week ahead. We've never tried marinating with yogurt. Also really like the idea of carrots prepared the way my husband likes cucumbers, so maybe I have a planned meal coming up.
Karen.
I've taken to making a baked pasta dish with ground meat (whatever's handy, ground beef or sausage or chorizo, even), ziti or penne pasta, tomato sauce (homemade and canned, of course) and topped with mozzarella cheese. I've nicknamed it Poor Man's Lasagna because it's so much easier and faster to make.
ReplyDelete