Friday, January 1, 2021

Friday Food: Plan B for Christmas

Happiest of new years to everyone! Let's kick this new year off right: with food.

Friday

Short version: Very merry spaghetti and meatballs, sauteed mushrooms and onions, green salad with ranch dressing, apple pie with vanilla ice cream

Long version: This was not my plan for Christmas dinner. My plan was to make tamales and chocolate roulade, like I did last year.

But I found myself absolutely dreading spending that much time in the kitchen. I was just burned out on cooking, I guess.

So, I didn't.

Instead I made spaghetti and meatballs. I was planning on that for my birthday dinner, but made it for Christmas dinner instead. I had three pounds of fancy Wagyu ground beef my mother brought us in October that I've been saving for this very meal.

Yes, I do plan ahead that much.

It was a very simple meal, because the sauce was already made. All I had to do was make the meatballs in the morning, pull out a couple of bags of Finny's sauce from the freezer, and put it all together at dinnertime. 

We had the mushrooms because many years ago, small Cubby declared that he didn't like mushrooms, except on Christmas. And so now we have mushrooms every Christmas, and every child eats a piece. Actually, Charlie is the only one who doesn't like them now, but even he screws up his face and eats his traditional Christmas mushroom piece.

As traditions go, it's a pretty weird one, but I never claimed we were normal.


Charlie's expression notwithstanding, the children were pleased with their non-traditional Christmas feast.

The pie was made the day before, with the extra pie crust we froze at Thanksgiving and some apples from Miss Amelia that were past their prime for fresh eating.

Saturday

Short version: Ground beef tacos, cucumbers with ranch dressing

Long version: A. and Cubby left for their elk hunting trip this morning, and I gave the remaining kids some of the frozen taco meat heated up in corn tortillas with cheese. Still not feeling motivated to cook.

Sunday

Short version: Leftover spaghetti and meatballs, miniature carrots, garden meatball skillet for me, hot chocolate and bizcochitos

Long version: The only cooking I did for this meal was for me. As it was my birthday, I treated myself to a bunch of preserved garden produce--shredded calabacita, green beans, and Finny's sauce from the freezer--all sauteed with some mushrooms, onions, and meatballs with asadero cheese. It was delicious.

The carrots were from the garden, too. We had a warm spell that thawed the ground pretty well, so I decided to try to dig up some of the fall-planted carrots that have been hanging out in the garden for last three months. They were pretty small--the biggest were only about the size of my pointer finger--but very sweet and good.

I felt no need to make yet another cake or sweet treat, given the quantity of baked goods that have been through my kitchen in the past couple of weeks. Instead, I made hot chocolate and we had that with the remainder of the bizcochito cookies our mail lady gave us. Yum.

Monday

Short version: Ground beef tacos, oyster stew, cucumber spears

Long version: A. and Cubby returned from their elk-hunting expedition without an elk, but with some oysters. They went right through Taos on their way home, so they stopped at the grocery store there, which is where they got the oysters.

I've never cooked oysters before, but A. shucked them for me and I made a very simple stew with them that was, honestly, mostly milk and cream. There was supposed to be about a pint of oysters in it, but since A. only got two pounds of oysters, most of which is the heavy shells, it ended up being about half a cup of oysters. 

A. and Cubby very much enjoyed their stew anyway, though, and even Charlie liked it pretty well.

Jack and Poppy weren't so into it. They had the tacos with some more of the meat from the freezer.

So handy, that meat.

Also handy is the pressure-canned bull meat. A. and Cubby brought a jar of that with them on their hunt and ate it the first night heated on their campfire with some rice and a lot of butter and cheese. They declared it delicious, although I suspect anything tastes delicious when you've been hiking in wet snow for five hours.


Does this look like fun to you? Sure doesn't to me, but that right there is a boy in his element.

Tuesday

Short version: Boneless lamb leg roast, roasted potatoes, green salad with ranch dressing

Long version: I just happened to grab the lamb roast first from the top of the freezer. I marinated it in some of the red wine A. had brought from Taos, along with olive oil, garlic, and salt, then roasted it along with the potatoes at high heat until it was done.

Wednesday

Short version: Leftover lamb, rice, taco meat with rice and cheese, green peas

Long version: Cubby and A. chose the leftover lamb, the rest of the children chose the leftover taco meat. For them, I heated it up with rice, cheese, and green peas right in one bowl, so they had to eat it all together.

One-bowl meals are very useful when feeding small children.

Photo break!


A rare cameo by Jack. (And the blue sky, which is, thankfully, not rare.)

Thursday

Short version: Beef and vegetable soup, garlic bread, cheese

Long version: This was my make-up birthday day, since A. was gone hunting on my actual birthday. He woke up early with me so as to be on hand to field the many and varied demands of children in the morning, and then took them with him to get hay 90 miles away, thereby guaranteeing me four hours of blissful solitude in the house.

Because it was supposed to be a day all about me (not that any day is really like that with little kids, but I was pretending), I decided to make soup for dinner. I love vegetable soup and cheese. 

It also had the benefit of using up the half a jar of bull meat A. brought back from their expedition, along with some of the juices from another jar of bull meat I had opened. And the last bit of sauce from the meatballs. And the last few cups of pheasant/rabbit stock.

Plus a bag of frozen calabacita that I threw in there, and then spent literally all of the meal listening to my children complain about.

There's a reason I don't usually make this for dinner.

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


3 comments:

  1. I can never think to remember all the meals, but I pushed the easy button for Christmas dinner: roasted chicken, salad, and garlic pasta shells. And pie (which I spent a lot of time on the day before): mincemeat (not a huge fan), sweet potato, blueberry, and vinegar. Lots of days of dessert from Christmas Eve baking.

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  2. Happy New Year!
    takeout
    cottage pie made with chicken breast, green beans, garlic bread
    spinach lasagna, garlic bread, salad
    bacon cheeseburgers minus the bun, roasted potatoes & cauliflower
    salmon patties, roasted potatoes & cauliflower (again), salad
    pizza, salad, chocolate chip bar
    And for good luck in 2021, the traditional meal of pork, sauerkraut, mashed potatoes, dressing, & chocolate chip bar.
    Linda

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  3. Somehow I grew up partly in New Mexico and totally missed the bizcochitos tradition. However, I spent a year in Uruguay in college and the Uruguayans were big on the biscochitos as an afternoon snack tradition, kind of like the Brits do tea, I would imagine. What the Uruguayans call biscochitos are a lot more elaborate, though, not so much just a little shortbread cookie as an entire array of small fancy cookie/pastry treats that each can be consumed in a couple bites: cookies, for sure, but also all variety of tiny alfajores (a traditional treat made of two cookies with a layer of dulce de leche in between, often coated with chocolate or powdered meringue), tiny eclairs, tiny kolaches, meringues and so on.
    -- TARA (Karen.'s sister)

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