Friday
Short version: Chocolate-chip pancakes
Long version: Yup. That's it. It was just Poppy and me for dinner still, so I made chocolate-chip pancakes.
I could try to justify it by telling you that we ate leftover fried rice with lots of vegetables for breakfast, and vegetable soup for lunch, so we got in our healthy food for the day early. And I could virtuously claim that the pancakes are made of buckwheat flour, which is higher in protein than wheat flour, plus yogurt, eggs, and milk.
And then I would sing, "Mom is great, give us the chocolate pancake."*
But really? They were chocolate-chip pancakes. And they were highly satisfying. So there.
And here we have an unrelated photo of Poppy in action:
Faster than a speeding bullet when fueled by chocolate-chip pancakes.
Saturday
Short version: Meatloaf, baked potatoes, sauteed mushrooms and onions, frozen peas
Long version: I think it's obvious from the completeness of this meal that the family was reunited for dinner this night.
Sunday
Short version: Leftovers
Long version: Cubby and I went to the 4-H awards, which included a catered dinner of beef, mashed potatoes, salad, and desserts. Everyone else had leftover meatloaf, rice, baked potato, and peas.
Monday
Short version: Scrambled eggs, breakfast sausage links, bread and butter, pinto beans, green salad
Long version: My children get incredibly excited about sausage links. Jack actually said, "Sausage! It's just like dessert for us!"
If you say so, Jack.
The green salad was a romaine mix in a bag from the store, and the whole thing tasted like chlorine. Plus, I always feel as if all bagged lettuce is infected with salmonella. All in all, not the most enjoyable salad experience.
I miss my own lettuce.
Tuesday
Short version: Venison and hominy stew, roasted vegetables
Long version: Rafael stopped by on Saturday with a smoked leg of venison and the ribs from the deer. His son-in-law shot it and did the smoking. He gave it to Rafael for his dog, but Rafael wasn't about to waste it on his dog when he knew perfectly well we would eat it.
Yes. We will certainly eat this kind of dog food.
A. cut the meat off the ribs and used it to make one of his chili stews with hominy in it. No pig's feet this time, but only because he didn't know I had put them in the big freezer.
The roasted vegetables included the biggest sweet potato in the world. Seriously. This thing was like four times the size of even a big sweet potato. Rafael got it from the commodities drop-off--which is essentially free food for old people who don't get Social Security--and gave it to us because he knew he would never be able to eat it on his own.
We wouldn't have eaten all it ourselves either, but it gave me an idea . . .
Wednesday
Short version: Leftover meatloaf or A.'s stew, bread and butter, raw tomatoes
Long version: The family ate leftovers while I took a big platter of various roasted vegetables--including the gigantic sweet potato--to the school staff holiday party. So clever. And tasty.
Thursday
Short version: Cabbage and venison soup, fried venison and potatoes, bread and butter
Long version: One of the pieces of meat Rafael gave us was a smoked leg. I cut as much meat off as I could, then boiled the bone to make stock. The meat left after the stock was made had pretty much no flavor, because all the smokiness went into the stock.
I used that stock, plus the smoked meat I had cut off, to make the soup, along with onion, carrot, potato, and cabbage.
The flavorless meat I fried in a lot of sheep tallow with onion, garlic, potatoes, and paprika. Half the family ate this and half ate the soup.
Okay, your turn! What'd you eat this week?
* That whole stand-up routine was one of the funniest things ever, and is therefore even more disappointingly ruined by our current knowledge of Bill Cosby's character. Or lack thereof.
You have given me an idea for a family potluck gathering...
ReplyDeleteI have lots of questions. Did you put any special seasonings on the vegetables? Did you roast the vegetables the night before or the morning of the school potluck? I'm assuming you re-heated them at school or were they served cold? This would be so much better than the salad that I was going to make.
S - shrimp dijon over rice, sautéed cabbage, homemade applesauce
S - take out pizza, chips, & I made a spinach, carrot salad
M - chicken casserole w/spaghetti, bread crumbs, eggs, chicken, broth & milk, mushrooms, sautéed carrots & cabbage, homemade applesauce
T - leftover chicken casserole, sautéed mushrooms, homemade applesauce
W - again more of the chicken casserole, roasted potatoes & mushrooms
T - chicken stir fry, toast, homemade applesauce
F - chicken, vegetable, rice soup, toast, homemade applesauce
Linda
Linda: Roasted vegetables work so well because they can be eaten, cold, hot, or room-temperature, and they can be made ahead. I made mine the night before--one half-sheet pan of sweet potatoes and one of bell peppers, onions (both yellow and purple), and broccoli. Almost anything would work, though. Just olive oil, salt, and pepper, though I think many people like herbs. It looks nice to separate them all into rows of like vegetables--very colorful if you have a variety--so I did that in a Pyrex dish. The party was actually at night, so when I got home from work I heated the Pyrex in a 350 oven until everything was hot again, then brought it that way. I didn't worry about keeping it hot, though. I think it would also be good to dress the vegetables with a vinaigrette and serve them more like a room-temperature salad.
ReplyDeleteI think you need a heat mat and grow light for midwinter lettuce. Because I'm in charge, of course. Ha.
ReplyDeleteWe had much randomness this week. Takeout pizza, for one thing. A Case dealer appreciation dinner, for another. Tuna casserole. The Thanksgiving leftovers casserole my husband loves so much and the children love so little. Tacos. A late night resulting in crock pot soup and then subsequently leftover crock pot soup.
Karen.
Chicken soup again and again and again. Also, plenty of alfalfa sprouts, peanut butter, and cream cheese sandwiches, enhanced with a dribble of honey. Britt reminded me of the efficacy of alfalfa sprouts in controlling nosebleeds, since I had a humdinger Thanksgiving morning. So far, so good.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the info. I do make roasted vegetables for my husband & I, but have never taken them to a potluck. But I will this year.
ReplyDeleteLinda