Friday, July 24, 2020

Friday Food: Cubby's Kitchen Kick


Friday

Short version: Leftovers, homemade pasta with pesto, frozen peas

Long version: Did that say homemade pasta? Yes. Do I have a pasta machine? No. But I do have a rolling pin and a knife!

The last time I made homemade pasta was also the only time I have ever made homemade pasta. On that occasion, I made it with my friend Alyssa and we used her pasta machine. It was surprisingly tricky to figure that machine out.

Or maybe not so surprising, given my difficulty with any machine I have ever encountered. I am not mechanically minded.

So I found making the pasta without the machine to be less challenging. Mentally, anyway.

It was Cubby who wanted to make it. He asked me totally out of the blue in the morning if we could make pasta. How could I say no? It's not like we didn't have the ingredients on hand. And since I already had some pesto made and wasn't planning on making anything else for dinner, I said okay.

We used this recipe, mostly because it didn't call for any separate egg yolks. I dislike separating eggs and having parts of eggs in the refrigerator. I did have to add an extra egg, though.

I actually found it easier to just roll the dough out with the rolling pin. I've never been good with machines, and I don't like washing and storing them, so a rolling pin seems more reasonable than a pasta machine to me.

We made the full recipe, which made four piles of pasta that looked like this:


On a chair, because I ran out of counter space during this endeavor.

We cooked two and froze two, but Cubby said we should have cooked all of it. He really liked it. Of course.

Saturday

Short version: Pork neck meat, rice, frozen green beans

Long version: When A. is in charge of grocery shopping, we end up with a lot of . . . interesting meat. This time he bought some pork neck bones, which I had never dealt with before. However, I know the best way to get meat off of bones like that is to simmer them for a long time until the meat is able to be pulled off the bones.

So that's what I did. It was a pain getting all the little bones separated from the meat, but the meat ended up being really good. I fried it in the lard that was rendered out of the meat.

As a bonus, I ended up with a couple of quarts of highly gelatinous pork stock, which I put in the freezer for soups. Sometime when it's soup weather, which is not now.

Sunday

Short version: Oven-fried chicken, garlic bread, frozen peas, roasted sweet potatoes and onions, chocolate chip cookies

Long version: These were the big chicken leg quarters that I separated into thighs and drumsticks. I didn't have yogurt to marinate the chicken, so I just marinated it in salt and vinegar. I coated it in the same mixture of masa and spices and it came out fine.

Cubby took it upon himself to make cookies for our Sunday dessert. He actually asked me at 5 p.m. the day before if he could make them, but I told him he'd have to wait until the next day. He and Poppy made the cookies all by themselves, and they were perfect.

Monday

Short version: Cheater's pizza, leftovers, carrot sticks

Long version: When I made bread on Sunday, I screwed up the division of the dough and two of the loaves of bread were quite small and kind of thin. So I cut them in half horizontally and used them to make cheese pizzas.


The children were pleased.

A. had the rest of the leftover goulash and rice, too.

Tuesday 

Short version: Bunless hamburgers, leftover boiled potatoes and rice, sauteed mushrooms and onions, frozen peas

Long version: When I was organizing the big chest freezer, I counted ten pounds of ground beef left from the cow we got over a year ago. I was very pleased about this, because there is absolutely no comparison between real ground beef and store ground beef.

We hadn't had hamburgers in awhile. All of the children had seconds.

Random old photo from when A. took the children to the mountains:


You can't go anywhere in New Mexico without finding an old church.

Wednesday

Short version: Brisket, Cubby's tomato soup, garlic bread, roasted sweet potatoes/onions/green beans

Long version: Talk about a seasonally inappropriate meal.

One of the other meats A. came home with was an entire brisket, which you may remember is very, very large. I cut it into several pieces before freezing them. This was one of the pieces.

Brisket cooks for so long in the oven, I decided to cook it overnight at 250 degrees. Then I pulled all the fat off, sliced it, returned it to the pot, and put it in the refrigerator to be re-heated with barbecue sauce at dinner time.

Cubby pulled his cookbook out with the intention of making something, and I suggested that perhaps he should try to make something other than various forms of starch. He decided to make "Creamy, Dreamy Tomato Soup," which doesn't actually have any cream in it. All it is is canned tomatoes, garlic, shallot (we used onion), chicken stock, a small amount of brown sugar, and white bread.

It's the bread that makes it creamy when it's all blended together. So, starch and tomatoes, then.

It was very easy to make, though, and good. Even Charlie, who doesn't like soup, liked it. I might even make a larger batch at some point in the fall and freeze it to have some soup on hand for when sickness inevitably strikes. It should freeze well because it doesn't have any dairy in it.

Thursday

Short version: Pork country ribs, boiled potatoes, leftover mushrooms and onions, raw green beans

Long version: It's been awhile since we've had those thick country ribs. I cooked them for a few hours, covered, in the oven in the morning, then at dinnertime added spices and broiled them until they were crispy.

Just before dinner, I went outside and picked some green beans for the kids' vegetable. I just love doing that. I didn't even bother to cook them. The kids like them better raw, anyway.

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

12 comments:

Anonymous said...

My mil bought a pasta machine for me along time ago, & I remember it being such a pain to figure out & clean up. I only used it once & donated it.
I wrote down the tomato soup recipe for cooler weather. Sounds good.
zucchini pizza, roasted potatoes
leftover zucchini pizza
BLT's, sweet corn
fish taco's
sloppy joes, sweet corn, peach/tomato salad, cherry turnovers
chicken taco's
And for tonight, grilled hot dogs, potato salad, peach/tomato salad
Linda

Gemma's person said...

tenderloin sandwich so big that was all we ate
seasoned rice pasta spinach salad
blankety blank blank blank
deli bbq chicken sides bread
avocado mixed with mayo spread on toasted bagel
flour burrito shell with leftover rice/chicken spinach from earlier in week
sleeping really does wonders for loss of memory

mil said...

It is a very good thing that Cubby is learning to cook and that he has an apprentice in the form of Poppy. I have been in a cooking slump and been eating various combinations of cooked white beans, rice, pesto, sweet corn and sometimes beets, with the occasional burger. Actually, the rice, sweet corn, and pesto combo wasn't bad.

Anonymous said...

Hey GP I wish that sleeping helped my memory loss! HAH!
Linda

Anonymous said...

I know you're not a fan of the crock pot, but long-long cooking pork neckbones is one thing it does very well. And it can do it outside. :)

I'm not a fan of pork neckbones, ha, but that meat does make pretty good barbecue pork sandwiches. I wouldn't have thought of re-cooking it carnitas style — that's a good idea.

Karen.

Anonymous said...

Cheeseburgers on Friday.

Steak and cauliflower on Saturday.

Burger King to the rescue Sunday.

Philly cheese steak sandwiches Monday.

Take and bake Pizza on Tuesday.

Ribs on Wednesday.

Dirty rice on Thursday.

Our rut is deep, and we are pretty comfy stuck in it.

Lucy

Gemma's person said...

No Linda it doesn't help it be better it helps make you have memory loss.:)

Anonymous said...

Hey, GP I believe that!
Linda
Sorry, Kristin for taking up all the comments!

Kristin @ Going Country said...

Linda: No worries. Chat away.

Anonymous said...

Hey, Cubby needs to know that pasta cutting way is easier and more efficient (and fun) if he skips the knife and uses a pizza-cutting wheel instead. Just roll out the pasta and zip, zip, zip up and down to create strips the width he desires (very little pressure required, so no worries about marring the countertop or table unless they're wood -- since he's a kid, he'd probably want to protect them with a cutting board of some kind if they're wood). Then, if he's wanting shorter noodles instead of linguini-length noodles, just zip, zip, zip the other way across them to cut to the length he desires.

Karen.'s sister

Kristin @ Going Country said...

K.S.: That's a really good idea. Although I do think using big knives is part of the fun for him. (Also, I don't have a pizza cutter. I use my kitchen shears to cut pizza.)

Anonymous said...

Saturday - pizza topped with sauteed leek and swiss chard, mushrooms, andouille sausage and salad
Sunday - grilled sausages, pasta salad with roasted summer squash, fresh edible pod peas
Monday - grilled chicken, grilled ribs, sauteed broccolini, steamed green beans, bread
Tuesday - leftovers
Wednesday - grilled sausages, sauteed patty pan squash
Thursday - lemon Caesar chicken salad
Friday - marinated venison strips stir fried with mushrooms, broccolini, pea pods, colored pepper on brown rice