Friday, August 9, 2019

Friday Food: A Week of Ribs and Randomness


Friday

Short version: Beef ribs, rice, frozen green beans

Long version: Beef ribs are always a problem for me. I've yet to settle on a really good way to cook them, and this isn't really the right weather for the slow cooking that seems to work best with them. However, they take up a lot of space in the freezer and we have a lot of them so I took some out anyway to cook.

I just threw them in a covered roasting pan in the morning--still completely frozen--and cooked them at 350 degrees until they were mostly tender. At dinnertime, I spread them in a pan and broiled them with some barbecue sauce on top. They were fine.

Saturday

Short version: Hot dogs and chips for the kids at the fair, leftovers and eggs for the adults

Long version: This was our big day at The County Fair, and the kids' activities weren't over until 5 p.m.


Jack (in the red hat) preparing to dress a goat. The goat was so focused on the hay on the ground that it didn't pay any attention to the t-shirt that was going over its head.

By the time the last activity was done, the boys were starving and A. decided to reward their excellent fair participation with dinner from the concession stand. This is not your normal county fair with tons of food vendors selling fry bread and sausages on a stick or whatever. There is one concession stand and they offer one thing: Hot dogs with potato chips and a soda. So that's what they had.

A. had leftover beef ribs and rice when we got home, and I had some fried eggs. Nobody consumed a vegetable. I don't think we're suffering from a vitamin deficiency, so I didn't worry about it.

Sunday

Short version: Mutton ribs, mashed potatoes, sauteed summer squash and mushrooms, frozen green beans, Otter Pops

Long version: Also taking up a lot of space in the freezer were the packages of ribs from the sheep we butchered several months ago. This is the last of the sheep meat, and it requires A. to be home for a couple of hours to cook it over a fire outside.

To cook them, he marinated them with olive oil, vinegar, and three whole heads of garlic, then dug a pit for charcoal that he constructed a makeshift grill over.


Keeping his lonely rib vigil, with only the horses in the pasture for company.

When the ribs were done, I kept them in a hot oven while I finished mashing the potatoes and dishing everything else up. It's very important with sheep meat, especially the fatty cuts, that the meat is eaten as hot as possible. The fat solidifies quickly when it cools and is very unappetizing when it does.

A. was completely enraptured with his ribs. They were exactly what he wanted. That's the benefit of being the cook.

Sunday is supposed to be the day for a homemade dessert, but we had so many Otter Pops in the freezer from the county parade--this is the only parade I've ever been to where they throw Otter Pops--that I just gave those to the kids for their dessert. No complaints.

Monday

Short version: Roasted chicken, leftover mutton ribs, roasted potatoes and onions, roasted sweet potatoes, raw broccoli with ranch dip

Long version: I can't remember the last time we had chicken, so when I saw whole ones on sale at the grocery store, I bought one. Of course, then I had to roast a chicken, which is not appealing when the kitchen is already 80 degrees. I did spatchcock the chicken to reduce the cooking time, but it still got to 85 degrees in the kitchen before it was done.

I rubbed the chicken with an herb butter that included the top parts of the basil I had to pinch off to prevent flowering, chives, and garlic, and it came out very well. Cubby ate an astonishing quantity of it. Maybe his animal project for the fair next next year should be meat chickens.

Tuesday

Short version: Chicken slop, scrambled eggs with feta and chives, leftover rice and mashed potatoes, leftover roasted vegetables, raw green beans, bread and butter

Long version: The MiL used to make something after Thanksgiving that she called Turkey Slop. It was basically just the leftover turkey heated with the leftover gravy and served over mashed potatoes. I had some really tasty scrapings and juices left in the pan after roasting the chicken, with which I didn't make gravy the night we had the chicken, but which I saved for the next night. This one.

I cooked a bit of extra garlic in some of the chicken fat, then added the saved juices with some cornstarch to thicken and heated the chicken in that. The children ate this with the mashed potatoes, and the raw green beans. These were Charlie's Easter-planted green beans.


The green bean thicket that ate the fence. And the volunteer squash that's taking over my clothesline area.

The children prefer the green beans raw. Along with most other vegetables.

There wasn't enough chicken left for all of us, so A. and I had the eggs and rice. While we were eating, I mentioned that my mother, who grew up in New Orleans, had rice at every meal as a child, regardless of what else was being served. Which led to me asking A. if his dad had bread and butter at every meal--bread being the starch of choice in the northeast--and him replying in the affirmative, and then the children asking for bread and butter after they finished everything else.

Should've seen that one coming.

Wednesday

Short version: Chili, tortillas and cheese, bell pepper strips, watermelon

Long version: This is really not simmering-all-day-on-the-stove chili weather, but we have a lot of stew meat on hand. So I started the chili at 6:15 a.m., thus ensuring that it was done by 10 a.m., when it was already 85 degrees.

The watermelon was, of course, a seeded one, courtesy of A.'s trip to the outside world on Monday.

No-longer-a-baby picture, apropos of nothing:


Baby? Where'd you go, and who is this giant toddler in your place?

Thursday

Short version: Tacos, roasted sweet potato, raw broccoli with ranch dip, watermelon

Long version: Still too hot for a lot of cooking, which is why I just browned a pound of ground beef and then dumped in the remainder of the chili for a very fast taco filling.

The only reason I roasted sweet potatoes is because the oven was on anyway to bake bread. Sourdough doesn't care what the weather is.

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

5 comments:

  1. I grew up in PA & we had bread & butter & jelly or honey or apple butter with every dinner.
    S - veggie burgers with bacon & cheese on top, sautéed mushrooms, peach crisp
    S - grilled turkey burgers, steamed green beans, roasted potatoes & mushrooms
    M - salmon patties, broccoli, garlic bread
    T - chicken, potato salad, asparagus
    W - pizza, chips
    T - BLT's, sweet corn
    F - repeat of Thur. with peach crisp
    Linda

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  2. Friday — leftovers
    Saturday — daughter chose a church cookbook pasta bake recipe for its name, Lickin’ Good, and made it mostly by herself.
    Sunday — village foundation fund potluck and pool party, to which I took from-scratch baked beans and banana muffins.
    Monday — beef/barley/vegetable stew with cornbread.
    Tuesday — Little Caesar’s pizza in the cornfield. A genuine picnic in the Suburban.
    Wednesday — hamburgers, roasted potato cubes, fresh sweet corn, banana cream pudding.
    Thursday — tacos

    Big high five for the fair results and for being proactive with 4-H. I need to gird up my participation-ing and get started.

    Karen.

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  3. Yeah, you gotchyer self a toddler right there for sure.

    I remember when you moved there the "yard" was full of nails, glass and other nasty stuff. That shot of A under the tree is showing quite a bit of green. Looks like things are coming along. Nice.

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  4. Linda: The MiL just sent me an e-mail detailing the many family members she had who had bread with every meal. It's a thing.

    Karen.: It definitely requires a lot of parental participation. At least when they're young.

    Drew: Yeah, that green is mostly weeds. There's definitely a lot less junk on the ground, but also a lot of weeds, so I'll call it a draw. Thanks for the compliment, though.

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  5. I won't go with a whole week, but I was rather pleased tonight. Spaghetti carbonara with green beans from the garden! I was picking lettuce (to feed the pet rabbit) and noticed a handful of beans ready for picking. It was the perfect portion to inspire a batch of spaghetti carbonara with bacon. Yum.
    Meanwhile, tomato sauce simmers in the crock pot. I wish it would simmer down a little faster, but then I would risk burning it. The house smells good.

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