Friday, October 9, 2020

Friday Food: Turken, Curry, and More Elk

 

Friday

Short version: Choice of stews, garlic bread

Long version: I cleaned out the small freezer over the refrigerator and found . . . MORE ELK! 

I thought I was done with the elk, but it wasn't done with me.

There were two small bags in there. One of pretty gnarly pieces I had trimmed off while making something else and that A. had insisted I save, and one of a rather large and clean chunk that I have no memory of whatsoever.

Anyway, with those, and a container of cooked posole leftover from A.'s last stew (found in the freezer excavation), plus onion, garlic, and tomatoes, I made him more stew. It also had green chilis in it, which I thought would make it really spicy, but didn't. Usually, I think the amount of chili I'm using will be mild, and then it isn't, so obviously, chilis remain a mystery to me.

Anyway.

I added leftover rice to it, too, which made it quite filling.

I also made a curry stew with some curried split peas I had made the day before and to which I added far too much curry powder. So to tone it down, I added a container of beef juices and tomato juices leftover from cooking a brisket (also from the small freezer, yes), potatoes, carrots, green beans, and sour cream. 

Charlie, who is not a fan of curry, had the elk along with A. The rest of us had curry, and everyone had garlic bread.

Saturday

Short version: Brisket, fried potatoes, mashed squash, green salad with ranch dressing

Long version: Nothing too exciting here, although making more brisket meant another opportunity to make rice pudding. This time I made it without raisins for Charlie, who doesn't like them, and added the raisins to the bowls of those who wanted them. 

Those bowls were consumed* for breakfast the next day because we've been out of cereal for a few weeks now and there must be a special Sunday breakfast before church. And the special breakfast must be fast, because church is at 8 a.m.

Rice pudding works.

Sunday

Short version: Bunless cheeseburgers, rice, green beans, fruit-filled oat bars

Long version: I make a lot of hamburgers, although I really don't enjoy doing it. And the reason I don't enjoy it is because of this:


Guh-ross.

"But Kristin," you say, "Why don't you just use a spatter guard or lid?" Because I have to fry so many dang hamburgers that I use the cast iron griddle pan that goes across two whole burners. And that means a lot of spattering grease.


The oat bars were Cubby's choice for our Sunday dessert. He likes to go through my old Better Homes and Gardens Cookbook and find different recipes to make. This one called for quick-cooking oats, which I don't usually have, but Miss Amelia had given me a big container awhile ago. So I was happy to use some of those up. 

The method was to make a crust by cutting butter into the oats and flour and sugar, then putting on a layer of fruit filling and a bit more of the oat mixture on top.

I had some ground almonds and sugar in the freezer that have been hanging around since I made cheesecake for Cubby's birthday in February, so I decided to use that instead of flour so A. could eat this, too. I also added a bit of the last of the coconut flour I wanted to use up to the crust. 

There were a couple of options for the fruit filling, and Cubby chose the apricot one. It was supposed to be apricot and coconut, but we didn't have any coconut. Instead I put in the rest of the coconut flour, which thickened it up nicely.

It came out well, although it was quite sweet. A. ate it with some maple-syrup-sweetened yogurt (in lieu of cream, which we didn't have) and loved it. Everyone except Charlie enjoyed theirs, too. I don't care for coconut flour, so I wasn't wild about that, but with regular flour it would be quite good. 

It's certainly not a recipe I would have chosen myself, so hooray for expanding horizons and all that.

Monday

Short version: Loose meat sandwiches, tomatoes

Long version: Hello, workday dinner! 

I'm down to my last jar of New York State barbecue sauce, so I didn't use it for the ground beef. Instead I just added ketchup, mustard, maple syrup, and vinegar until it approximated the taste of the sauce. No one noticed, so I guess I'll do it that way from now on.

Gratuitous toddler photo!


Yes, shorts in October. And an almost-freeze in early September. Welcome to the high-altitude west.

Tuesday

Short version: Arroz con Turken

Long version: During our very first summer in New Mexico, when we were still in our rental house, A. grew saffron crocuses. From those flowers, he painstakingly harvested a tablespoon of saffron. I used some of it to make paella a year or so ago, and I was waiting until I had a "clean" chicken (that is, not from a store) to make it again.

Then, last month, my friend asked us if we wanted one of her turkens that turned out to be a rooster. Because everywhere we go, we are a magnet for unwanted roosters.

Turkens, incidentally, are bizarre-looking chickens. They get their name because they have no feathers on their necks, like a turkey.

Anyway. 

A. killed it and skinned it, and it's been sitting in the freezer since then.

I decided the time had come to use it, and the saffron. I didn't make the paella this time, though, instead making Arroz con Pollo, which is a very similar dish. It's usually made with bone-in chicken pieces, but it's really hard to cut up home-raised chickens, because their bones and joints are much stronger than a commercial chicken.

I decided to just poach the turken until I could pull the meat off, which also gave me lots of nice stock to use. Then I cooked onion, garlic, one small bell pepper I had in the garden, the saffron, and a bunch of diced tomatoes in with the chicken chunks until the tomato was cooked down, at which point I added the rice and stock. And then frozen green peas at the end.

A. was in raptures over this meal. Cubby was thrilled, too. I was not. And that is because saffron has a distinct flavor of iodine that makes it taste like fish. I don't like fish.

A. and Cubby do, though, and I'm fine with being a plebeian in this case. 

Wednesday

Short version: Various leftovers featuring rice

Long version: A work day is always a good opportunity to use up some leftovers.

A., Poppy, and Jack finished up the elk chili rice stew thing. Cubby and I had the leftover curry stew (with rice added). Charlie had some of the ground beef sandwich meat, but over rice. And no one had a single extra vegetable other than what was in their stew or whatever. 

Just being honest here.

Thursday

Short version: Carnitas-style pork, rice, coleslaw

Long version: Our fall cabbages are much, much smaller than the ones we planted early in the spring. I suspect that's because of the hot weather and the insects that plague the cabbages in late summer. However, even a small cabbage makes quite a bit of coleslaw, so that's what I did.

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

* Perhaps I should have specified that the bowls of rice pudding were consumed, but I trust you are all intelligent enough to infer that we did not eat the actual bowls.


4 comments:

  1. I think that elk meat multiplied in the freezer.
    pizza, salad
    takeout
    shepherds pie, garlic bread, green beans
    same as yesterday
    chicken, broccoli, rice casserole, garlic bread, squash & mushrooms
    oven fries with steak, mushrooms, onions, spinach, cheese on top, homemade applesauce, garlic bread, asparagus
    And for tonight spaghetti pizza & some kind of vegetable
    Linda

    ReplyDelete
  2. Friday: curried cousa squash, potatoes, peppers, with rice and yogurt
    Saturday: same, with a baked apple and cream for dessert
    Sunday: same, but with some chicken left over from a fire dept barbeque
    Monday: Ham steak and scalloped potatoes, plus some chanterelles in olive oil that the neighbors gave me. Pears and apples
    Tuesday: porch party, so cocktail nibbles
    Wednesday: leftover hummus and blue corn chips (but I had a good leftover ham and potatoes lunch)
    Thursday: popcorn (but I had a chicken and rice noodle bowl from the good Thai restaurant in A....n for lunch. Believe it!

    ReplyDelete
  3. >>>* Perhaps I should have specified....

    Made me laugh!* Never overestimate the intelligence of your readers! Of which I am one, although you would never know it, as I never comment (anywhere. How do folks like you put your thoughts and activities and food consumption and photos and LIFE out there so seemingly effortlessly and transparently?!) Love your wry writing, and also really appreciate your attention to those rapidly-disappearing qualities of correct grammar, spelling, punctuation. Just wanting to say THANKS, after manyish years of quietly but semi-regularly checking in to what you and yours are up to. You are a gem.
    —cyninnnh
    *as your blog so often does

    ReplyDelete
  4. cyninnnh--Thank you for your kind words. I definitely do not underestimate the intelligence of anyone who reads this. You all are obviously the cleverest, most grammatically correct, and loveliest people on the Internet. And I count you in that, of course. :-) Thanks for reading for so many years.

    ReplyDelete