Friday, February 21, 2020

Friday Food: Turkey or Chicken?


Friday

Short version: Leftover sausage, potato cakes, green salad

Long version: The day before, I had made the children bacon sandwiches for breakfast, and they inexplicably did not really eat them. I have no idea why. I mean, BACON SANDWICHES, HELLO.

Anyway.

I cut up the remaining toasted bread, doused it with olive oil, salt, and garlic powder, and shoved it in the oven while it was on to cook some old pumpkins for the livestock. Result: croutons. Yum.

The remaining bacon was used in the potato cakes, which I made with leftover mashed potatoes, the diced bacon, a bit of flour, an egg, and some grated cheese. Half of the children loved them; half did not. A pretty standard reception to a new food.

Saturday

Short version: Elk bites, oven fries, frozen green peas, sauteed mushrooms and onions

Long version: "Elk bites" is chunks of elk marinated in olive oil, vinegar, salt, pepper, and garlic, then seared and served with ketchup for dipping. Boring, but serviceable.

Sunday

Short version: Roasted chicken, baked potatoes, carrots

Long version: I have a confession to make: I dislike whole chickens. I dislike cooking them; I dislike cutting them up; I even dislike eating them.

I buy them sometimes anyway, though, just as a break from red meat and because they're cheap.

So then I had this chicken to roast, and it was HUUGE. Like, Charlie came in the kitchen while I was prepping it and asked, "Is that a turkey?"

Nope, just an eight-pound chicken.

Yuck.

It was so big that I had to cut it up after a couple of hours in the oven just so it would actually get cooked in time for us to eat. I cut off the legs, then sliced the breast through in a few places without actually cutting it off.

I seasoned it with lemon and garlic inside, and melted butter and lemon on the outside (plus salt and pepper, of course), and then made a quick sauce with the pan juices, Dijon mustard, and heavy cream. It came out pretty well in the end. And we had quite a bit left over, because eight pounds, remember?

It was incredibly warm this day, so A. deputized the children to continue the stone wall he's building around the backyard garden.


Many (small) hands make (slightly) light (-er) work. Maybe.

Monday

Short version: Skillet of leftover chicken, leftover rice, leftover chicken sauce, and frozen peas

Long version: Surprisingly tasty, if not gourmet. Does the job for a work night, anyway.

Tuesday

Short version: Pizza elk, pasta with marinara, frozen green peas

Long version: Same old, same old. Another bag of elk down.

Some day I'm going to have fresh vegetables from the garden again. At the moment, most of the infant fresh vegetables are living in the children's bathroom in the upgraded grow box A. put together for me.


Same lights, but we switched out the busted laundry basket for a discarded drawer from the children's bunk bed. Roomier, and more aesthetically pleasing. My grandfather, who made that bunk bed and these drawers, would be pleased with the newest incarnation of his woodworking, I'm sure.

The lettuce and arugula are still alive outside, if tiny. Hooray! And while they grow, there are frozen peas.

Wednesday

Short version: Chicken quesadillas for the children, soup for me, pinto beans and frozen green beans for all

Long version: Miss Amelia called on Tuesday to let us know she had some pinto beans for us. When A. went to get them, he returned with a box that contained two jars of beans, a package of flour tortillas, some slices of American cheese, a small container of honey, a stick of butter, and a single serving of soup.

Thanks to Miss Amelia's box, I was able to make very exciting flour tortilla quesadillas for the children. I never buy flour tortillas, so this was a big treat. I shredded the last of the leftover chicken and heated it with salsa and garlic powder before putting it in the tortillas with cheese--cheddar for Charlie, who does not like American cheese, and American cheese for the rest.

I think the soup was ham, chicken, and potato with green chili. I wasn't sure about the ingredients, but it sure did taste good. And it was very nice to come home from a challenging day of work and eat some soup that I did not have to make.

Thank you, Miss Amelia.

Thursday

Short version: Pan-fried elk steaks, leftover pasta, cabbage

Long version: I forgot I had already prepped some elk steaks from the piece of elk I was using for the pizza elk on Tuesday. Very efficient of me, but not very useful had I completely forgotten they were sitting in the refrigerator.

Anyway.

They were just pieces that I pounded thinner with the rolling pin, then seasoned with salt, pepper, and garlic powder, and paprika and fried. The children ate theirs with ketchup. I ate mine with barbecue sauce.

I didn't have any sauce for the leftover pasta, so I just heated it in the microwave with butter, cream cheese, garlic powder, and a little cream. Cream cheese with pasta is way better than it has any right to be.

I cooked most of the cabbage in a pan with onions and carrots. But Charlie and Jack ate their cabbage raw. Weirdos.

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

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Bless Miss Amelia.
chicken cheese steaks, broccoli
takeout pizza & chips
shepherds pie, green beans
mac n' cheese, sautéed spinach & mushrooms
tilapia, roasted potatoes, sautéed spinach & mushrooms
vegetable, noodle, cheese casserole, garlic bread
and tonight leftover vegetable, noodle, cheese casserole
Linda

Anonymous said...

Good morning!

If I had a bacon sandwitch right now I'd totally eat it

Ms. Amelia sounds like a awsome neighbor

Anyway...to answer your question

Still on the vegitarian bandwagon with daughter...huzbeast hasn't grumbled to much...lol

Monday - spaghetti squash with butter, pesto, and parmesean, cucumbers, and I made baked apples (this was me bribing husband to eat spaghetti squash...lol)

Tuesday - rest of the spaghetti squash tossed with black beans, roasted yams, peppers and onions dressing was avacado vinaigrette

Wednesday- cheese quiche, spinach salad with mandarin oranges, homade bread

Thursday - lentil sloppy joes, garlicky roasted potato wedges and horseradish sauce to dip

Friday - we have a good amount of bits and pieces of leftovers so I plan on having us eat those up....I'll make brownies for dessert to make up for it



mil said...

As to food, who knows. Friday I seem to have eaten really good scalloped potatoes that Dick or Nancy had made for Britt. And I found some leftover steak in the fridge. Some lettuce, some cherry tomatoes. And some beans that I cooked to death--
An omelet here or there. And Thursday I know I had home-made random ingredient plus ham hocks soup and some slices of pizza at a meeting on stream monitoring.
The kids should know that their Uncle Peter would eat cabbage only if it was raw, and that he loved.

Try starting your whole chicken at a very high temp; 500 is not too high. A smaller chicken can be roasted at 450 for the whole time. It would probably be wise to reduce the temperature gradually until the bird is done for a large one, ending up at about 325. Be sure to put butter or oil and salt on the skin prior to roasting. A roast chicken is so easy--

Joellen said...

I’m sure the soup was delicious. Soup made by someone else is always the best.

Kay said...

*Heart* your MIL's advice on the roast chicken!

It's been a long week here but here's the menu.

Monday: Homemade pizza (made the dough Sunday evening, put in fridge and forgot to take out Monday morning so had to finish proofing it in a sink of warm water. It worked.)

Tuesday: In town to get something Farmer needed: Fast food Mexican

Wednesday: Ham & cheese omletes, hash browns, smoothies.

Thursday: In another town for chiropractor appointment and errands: Fast Food Mexican again.

Friday: Salmon in paper, oven fries, cole slaw and I had a cucumber/tomato salad too.

This weekend will be busy with all kinds of things but I hope to grill on Saturday. It's suppose to be in the high 50s.

Anonymous said...

I agree. Bone-in anything is my least favorite kind of cooking, though poultry is far and away my least-least favorite.

Karen.