Okay, so I actually work from 7:15 to 4:15. And only two days a week, so I'm definitely not making much of a living at it, but I couldn't resist the song.
Anyway. Food.
Friday
Short version: Found food
Long version: This was the night of the school play, so Cubby and Charlie were at school for dinner before the play started. The remaining four of us were due at Jack's classroom for a pre-play reading of the play's story ("The Emperor's New Clothes," minus the nudity) and a dinner that consisted of hot dogs and chips.
So I didn't actually cook, although I did make several dozen cookies for the bake sale auction fundraiser that runs concurrently with the play.
Cubby helped me make the chocolate chip cookies. Jack helped me make the chocolate peanut butter chip cookies. And there were no raisins to be seen this time. Sorry, raisin people.
A. and I elected to eat before we went to the hot dog supper. A. had leftover taco meat with leftover rice and cheese and I had leftover taco meat with tomatoes and avocado. Then when we got home at 8 p.m., the children claimed they were starving and all had bowls of the rest of the taco meat with rice and cheese.
Good thing there was so much taco meat left over, because it was all eaten.
And here we have Cubby the Money Councilor:
I will not post photo of Charlie the (Very Reluctant) Silkworm, because I couldn't figure out how to crop out all the other kids in the photo. I'm sure you can live without seeing him, although it was pretty funny. He told me before the play, with a very expressive scowl on his face, "I despise being a silk worm." To which I replied, "Okay, just suck it up and do it anyway." He did, albeit without enthusiasm.
Saturday
Short version: Scrambled eggs with green chile and cheese, fried potatoes, sauteed calabacitas, leftover steamed broccoli
Long version: A. used the outdoor grill to char the rest of the big bag of chiles my dad brought me from Hatch. I froze most of them, and then used some in the eggs. Every once in awhile I would get a bite that had a really spicy piece of chile in it, but generally it just made for some really good scrambled eggs.
I'm sure you all remember Rafael's calabacitas from last year, officially known as cucurbita argyrosperma. These are actually the first ones we've gotten from him this year. I need to get some seeds from him and grow some of our own next year. They're better than the average zucchini.
Sunday
Short version: Meatloaf, baked potatoes, roasted green beans, roasted sweet potatoes, roasted summer squash, peach/pear/blueberry betty with vanilla ice cream
Long version: We had so many roasted things because it was only in the high seventies outside, so I cranked up the oven and crammed everything in all together. I love it when I can do this, even if I do have to get creative with my oven space and the single oven shelf.
I made the fruit dessert because I had a convergence of fruits that needed to be used. First I got a final bag of peaches from Nick the Peach-Giver. I canned them in halves, but the bottom came out of one of the jars while it was in the water bath. This is frustrating, but salvageable, as the bottom comes off cleanly and doesn't leave any glass splinters.
So I had a quart of peaches all peeled and everything. To those I added a few peaches we got from the orphan tree by the post office that had a lot of hail damage, but were otherwise fine. Also some pears from the tree in front of the village offices that has a TON of pears this year that no one seems to be using. We just picked up the windfalls and ended up with about ten pounds of small pears. They look like the Seckel pears I'm so familiar with from Blackrock, which means they're small and annoying to peel, but are very tasty.
Last I had some blueberries my parents left with us that were on their way out, so I threw those in there, too.
A betty is a fruit dessert like a crisp, but the topping is made with bread crumbs. I used some of the sourdough bread crumbs I always have in the freezer, plus brown sugar, cinnamon, and melted butter for the topping. The fruit had brown and white sugar, lemon juice, and cinnamon. It turned out really well.
I looked quickly for recipes online before just winging it--my standard operating procedure--and did not see a single betty recipe that combined peaches, pears, and blueberries. So consider this my contribution to the vast online recipe file: Peaches, pears, and blueberries make a delicious betty.
Monday
Short version: Extemporaneous skillet food, cucumbers
Long version: Now that I'm coming in the door on Mondays and Wednesdays at 4:15 p.m. with all four children by myself (A. drops us off before continuing in the bus to bring home the rest of the kids that live farther away) after working all day and then need to make dinner, I'm trying to think ahead a little more. I already had ground beef thawed, and my plan was to use the juices left over from making the pot roast the week before to make a sauce, and then serve it with rice, which cooks in only about half an hour.
However, when I opened the container with the pot roast liquid, it was definitely too old.
Okay! Plan B! Which I did not actually have a plan for, but whatever.
Same ground beef, plus an onion, some roasted green chiles I had frozen in small quantities, cumin, and the juice from a can of tomatoes. The rice was cooking while I was browning the meat. I added some cooked rice to the meat in the skillet, then some grated cheese. And that was dinner.
Are you seeing a theme of meat+rice+cheese in my kitchen? Yeah. Maybe I should write a cookbook about it. Or maybe I've already said all I need to say about that. Not that that stops people from writing the books.
Anyway. Here's Poppy:
Ready for action in a patriotic romper and a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles helmet.
Tuesday
Short version: Roasted chicken pieces (thighs and drumsticks), mashed potatoes, roasted sweet potatoes/bell pepper/onion, sauteed summer squash and mushrooms, tomato and cucumber salad
Long version: You can tell from the relative complexity of this meal that I do not work on Tuesdays.
It's been awhile since I've had to separate chicken legs into thighs and drumsticks. I did not miss it. Gross.
Wednesday
Short version: Bunless cheeseburgers, bread and butter, leftover mashed potatoes and rice, sauteed mushrooms and onions, frozen green beans
Long version: Another work day, another meal featuring ground beef. And frozen green beans that I did not even bother to heat up, because the children prefer them that way and A. and I were eating leftover vegetables.
Thursday
Short version: Beef rib tacos with homemade tortillas, pickled carrot and cucumber ribbons
Long version: Yet more of the never-ending and somewhat unappealing beef ribs. Part of the problem with them is that they're so damn long, I have limited receptacles in which to cook them. This time I just chunked them totally frozen into my big roasting pan and put them in the oven until they were thawed enough to cut up a bit. Then I covered the pan and cooked them until I could pull the meat away from all the nasty bits. Of which there are many on ribs.
The meat I fried in some of the fat from cooking the ribs in the oven, plus salt, cumin, garlic, and some of those very handy frozen roasted green chiles.
I only used two cups of masa to make the tortillas, and someone needs to remind me next time to use at least three cups. We never have enough tortillas, which results in much competition for the last one.
And hey! I made a double batch of zucchini bread this day and remembered to put in the butter. Yes, yes. Applause. Thank you.
Okay, your turn! What'd you eat this week?
S - went to picnic, my contribution was an apple crisp
ReplyDeleteS - zucchini pizza, steamed cauliflower, more apple crisp (I made 2)
M - meatloaf baked with potatoes & carrots, steamed green beans, apple crisp
T - grilled chicken thighs, roasted potatoes, cauliflower, mushrooms, & apple crisp
W - out for husband's birthday
T - pizza, kale salad, apple crisp
F - leftover pizza & kale salad & probably apple crisp
Linda
Let me just say.... you are my hero.
ReplyDeleteG.P.: Because I remembered to put in the butter? I was pretty impressed with myself too. :-)
ReplyDeleteI'm in the middle of doing Whole 30, so our meals are basically I cook a protein and make the Farmer whatever sides he wants and I make myself a big cucumber & tomato salad and some other veggies. It's a lot of sides but at least it's basically one meal instead of two.
ReplyDeleteSaturday -- Chili for him. Taco Chicken salad for me on lettuce & cherry tomatoes.
Sunday -- We ate out, I had a mediocre veggie omlete. He had a burger & fries.
Monday -- Meatballs. His were glazed in bbq sauce, mine in a W30 compliant BBQ sauce. Potatoes. Green beans.
Tuesday -- He had pancakes & sausages. I cooked pork chops that needed to be used. I ate that with sauteed sweet potato & salad.
Wednesday -- Ate at Chili's. I had a average steak & baked potato with guacamole. He had fajitas.
Thursday -- We ate the leftover meatballs over lettuce. Sort of a taco-ish salad vibe.
Friday (tonight) -- Celebrated the end of a very long, stressful week with our good home-grown rib steaks, baked white & sweet potatoes, baked beans for him and big salad for me.
I have a bag of locally grown apples. I would LOVE to make an apple pie but I'm not that strong. I'll wait 18 more days and make it then.
Because of ALL the things you do and remember to do and special things , like home cooking, raising well rounded children, the world would be a better place if you guys had raised all of the world's children and taught folks to be good to their neighbors.
ReplyDeleteMainly because you remember to do anything, let alone all of this, and reporting too.
Kristin, I have just spent the past couple of weeks reading your blog from the beginning. I found you via The Frugal Girl and I have to say I am very impressed with the way your family lives. It’s very obvious from your posts that your children are being raised to be creative and explore their world in a way that so many children miss out on these days. I admire your wit and ability to write about your everyday lives in such a descriptive way, and I feel a little sad that I will now have to wait for each new post! Thank you.
ReplyDeleteG.P.: Thank you. Though I must say, I appreciate that there are lots of different kinds of parents. How boring would it be if everyone were all the same?
ReplyDeleteAnonymous: That is a very kind comment. Thank you so much. I'm afraid the frequency of my posts has taken a big dip in the last few years (can't believe I actually used to post every single day), but at least you can always count on Friday Food. :-)