Friday, January 4, 2019

Friday Food: More Beef, Forever and Always


Friday

Short version: A Leftover Skillet Special

Long version: Leftover taco meat + leftover pot roast liquid + rice + frozen peas + cheese = dinner

Saturday

Short version: Roast beef, garlic butter, baked potatoes, roasted carrots and onions, accidental okra

Long version: For the roast beef, I used a free Penzeys spice rub sample that came with my Christmas pepper mill. It had salt, pepper, sugar (why?), and turmeric in it. It was kind of reminiscent of curry, what with the turmeric. It was okay, but I much prefer the salt, pepper, thyme, and oregano combination.

Let's pause for a beauty shot of my new pepper mill and salt shaker:


With which I seasoned those carrots in a most aesthetically pleasing manner. Thanks, MiL!

The only reason we had okra is because I accidentally bought it instead of frozen green beans. The bags look almost identical. Except for, well, the photo of okra on the front. Ahem. I didn't notice this until I started dumping out what I thought were green beans into a bowl and I was all, "Those are some really big green beans."

Yup. So then I had to cook okra, which not only have I never cooked, I have never eaten except in gumbo. I looked up some recipes that claimed to mitigate the slime, and then decided to just throw them in the oven with some of the garlic butter to roast.

They tasted pretty good--much like raw green beans, actually--but I have discovered that I am one of those people who is definitely put off by the strands of slime that stretch out when stirring the okra around. Also not a fan of the mucous mouth feel when chewing. I mean, I can eat it, but I'm not going to seek it out.

The kids mostly liked them--except for Charlie, of course--and A. even took a second serving. Nevertheless, once the bag is used up, I will not be buying okra again on purpose.

When I opened the new bag of potatoes to scrub some in preparation for baking, I pulled out this:


Vampire potato has been slain.

Weird.

Sunday

Short version: T-bone steaks, oven fries, green salad

Long version: The best thing about buying a whole cow--other than never having to worry about being out of meat--is casually deciding on T-bone steaks for dinner. I would never, ever buy a steak at the store after seeing the price on the sticker, but when the entire animal is the same price per pound? Then I can cook three T-bone steaks for dinner and not feel like I'm just grilling away our life savings.

Monday

Short version: Fried rabbit, garlic bread, beef and vegetable soup

Long version: A. FINALLY finished the last of his ponudo that I had taken out of the freezer. A momentous occasion, indeed. I thought we'd never see the end of that.

I had quite a bit of roast beef left from the sirloin tip roast, as well as a very awkward bone that still had meat on it I couldn't cut off easily. So I simmered the bone most of the day to make stock, then added the stock and the leftover beef to make a vegetable and beef soup.

I made the garlic bread because I was making bread anyway and ended up with a bit too much dough for my four loaf pans. So I shaped some of it into a round loaf, poured melted butter of the top, shook salt and a lot of garlic powder on it, and baked it in a cast iron skillet. I was careful not to overbake it, so it was nice and soft and really, really good. I should do that more often.

This rabbit was a cottontail A. got. It sat in the fridge for a couple of days and I kind of forgot about it until right before I was about to serve up dinner this night. It really needed to be cooked, so I quickly cut it into four pieces--the two back legs, and the middle part hacked in two--and fried it.

I fried it too quickly, apparently, because A. noted while the children were eating their bread that Cubby's piece was dripping blood. Whoops. I took it all back and cooked it some more. They all loved it. After it wasn't, you know, bleeding. Ahem.


Baby's first rabbit leg. (Please note the sparkly sweater she wore for our rockin' New Year's Eve. Next year maybe she'll brush her hair, too.)


"Why do you only take pictures of the baby eating?" asked Jack. "Take a picture of ME." Okay.

Tuesday

Short version: New Year's Day health, wealth, and happiness

Long version: See this post.

The maple snow ice cream was really good, by the way. It reminded me of the shave ice we would always get in Hawaii on our way back from the beach. I always got vanilla, which for some reason was electric blue at this particular shave-ice stand. Though the maple snow cream tasted like that, it was lacking the excitement of the blue color. For the best, I suspect.


Wednesday

Short version: Meatloaf, baked potatoes, fried cabbage and onions, green peas

Long version: This was our last day of really cold weather, so we re-organized the meat that had been in the Woodchuck Freezer. I managed to get everything that was in the exposed and uncovered tub either in the freezer or in one of the coolers. Except for thirteen packages of ground beef that had frozen right to the bottom of the tub. Sigh. So I had to bring the tub into the kitchen to thaw to get that meat out. 

And that means that I now have thirteen pounds of ground beef to use in the next five days or so. Thus, meatloaf. Or rather, meatloaves. Three of them. 

Oh, you want to see something really exciting?


Re-usable produce bags my sister gave me for Christmas, which I had really been wanting. She didn't even know that, but she sent them to me anyway. Does she know her crazy hippie sister, or what?

Thursday

Short version: Bunless cheeseburgers; leftover rice, black-eyed peas, and collard greens; raw grape tomatoes

Long version: Nah

Okay, your turn! What'd you eat this week?

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Your MiL & sister really know you...two so appropriate gifts for the chef that you are!
Saturday - once again zucchini pizza, pear/spinach salad
Sunday - went out for lunch after church, (Christmas gift card) so just cheese & crackers as we weren't that hungry
Monday - chicken/vegetable stir fry served over rice
Tuesday - took my 98 yr. old father out again to dine on pork, sauerkraut, mashed potatoes & more
Wednesday - sautéed chicken breasts, rice pilaf (not boxed), green beans
Thursday - pizza made with garlic naan bread
Friday - leftovers
Linda

Sara said...

Chicken, chicken, chicken. Basically chicken three meals a day. I was in a bit of a fix like you for freezer space. Yet chicken breasts were on sale crazy cheap. Impulse bought 20 pounds or so, knowing I had no freezer space. I might have said a few bad words, when reality hit.

Fry the okra. No slime. Very tasty. Slice into disks if it isn't already sliced. If it is frozen, let defrost a few minutes so it is a bit moist on the surface. If it is fresh, the moisture from washing it is plenty for the meal to stick. Toss in salted cornmeal. Heat enough grease in the fry pan so it will be about half way up a piece of okra. Fry until golden on both sides. Drain and sprinkle with salt. Eat it all. Should there be leftovers (how?????), warm in oven next day and stick between two slices of fresh bread.

If you like thicker batter-like coating (we don't) dip okra in a beaten egg or buttermilk before coating with cornmeal. The first way, as my very southern grandmother always made it though, results in crisper, less greasy tasting okra. Also you can taste more okra than coating.

mil said...

I've been loving my cloth produce bags AND my linen bread bag. The cloth produce bags work amazingly well, as does the linen bread bag. I've been eating soup of various kinds, eggs, and had a really good meals at Mikey's, including an Essex Farms chicken dinner.

Gemma's person said...

I have made meatloaf burgers in skillet or could do in oven and are quicker than meatloaf. Just patty up the meatloaf mixture you usually use into burger portions.