Friday
Short version: Shrimp, tuna salad, spaghetti with pesto, raw cucumber, pureed calabaza
Long version: Last meatless Friday for Lent, better use the two pounds of shrimp I have in the freezer! They were already peeled and de-veined (ALLELUIA), so I just sauteed them in butter, then added a cube of frozen pesto at the end. Happy Cubby. And A.
I still have at least three meals' worth of pesto cubes in the freezer from last summer. That should last us until I harvest this year's basil. Very pleasing.
Saturday
Short version: Dad's chile, bunless hamburgers, leftovers, watermelon radish
Long version: A few months ago, Rafael brought us a bunch of deer pieces that he had salvaged from someone he knew who shot a deer. Rafael has this tendency to bring us these pieces of random meat, just so they don't get thrown to dogs.
Our dogs ended up getting some of it, though, when I put it on top of the freezer until I could make room for it, and they got to it before I did. Whoops.
They only got one of the bags, though. So I stuck the other bag in the freezer until I felt sufficiently motivated to deal with it.
That took awhile. I finally pulled that meat out of the freezer, though, and dealt with it.
The way I did that was dump it out of the garbage bag it was classily wrapped in directly into my pressure canner. Then I covered the meat--it was the ribs--with water. And then I picked out the hairs and grass that floated to the surface of the water.
You can see why it took me awhile to find the motivation to cook this.
After removing the visible detritus from the deer meat, I added a package of tripe to the pot. A. requested I use that instead of the other package of pigs' feet that was in the freezer. Good call, since the "use by" date on that tripe was, um, three years ago.
So the venison and tripe were pressure-cooked for an hour, at which point I pulled all the bones out of the pot, added a chopped onion, a ton of chopped green garlic, a can of tomato sauce, and about 1/3 cup of minced roasted green chiles. And some cumin and salt. And a bag of posole (hominy) that's probably been in the freezer as long as the tripe.
I cooked all that for about four hours, until the hominy was soft and it was WOAH TOO SPICY. For me, anyway. It was fine for A.
I had a bit of uncooked hamburger from when I made the meatloaf a few days prior and the center of the meat still hadn't thawed in time for mixing the meatloaf. I made four small hamburgers from that, and half the kids had those. The other half had leftover meatloaf. All had leftover spaghetti with pesto and the biggest watermelon radish ever.
I had ordered a one-pound bag of watermelon radishes from Misfits Market, and what came was one radish that was one pound all by itself. It was so big, I thought it was a turnip at first. The kids loved it and ate the whole thing. I wish I could tell them I'll grow them, but radishes don't do well here. It gets too hot, too fast for them.
Sunday
Short version: Easter lamb, sourdough pita bread, tomatoes and cucumbers, carrot cake (with pecan flour)
Long version: This was one of the boneless leg roasts from the ram we butchered a few months ago. We actually cut the boneless legs in half, because none of us particularly care for leftover lamb so smaller is better. I covered it in green garlic paste I had made the day before with a whole row of the dry-land green garlic in the pasture (meaning A. never waters those plants--they survived on the very little rain or snow we've gotten).
Green garlic paste is just pureed green garlic and olive oil, and it is the most vibrant green ever.
Monday
Short version: Rooster and split pea curry, rice, carrot sticks, raw fennel
Long version: I still had three roosters in the freezer, so I took one out and simmered it to make stock and get the meat off. I used the curry powder left from dying eggs (I always drain the water off the spices and save the sludgy spices for cooking) to make curried split peas. It's just yellow split peas, sauteed onion, chicken stock, salt, curry powder, and sour cream at the end.
After pulling the chicken into pieces, I mixed it with some of the curried split peas. This was surprisingly popular with the children, all of whom ate two servings.
Tuesday
Short version: Polish sausage, leftovers
Long version: I had to work, so I decided it was a good night for quick-cooking sausage. I bought this sausage last month at a Walmart about a hundred miles away. It didn't have any weird ingredients and was from a family-owned business in San Antonio, Texas, so I had high hopes.
It was, indeed, very good sausage. I loved it. Everyone else did not. I guess they really just like Italian sausage. They mostly had leftover lamb, rice, and curried split peas. And there was actually enough sausage left for me to bring it for lunch at work the next day. Silver lining.
Wednesday
Short version: Scrambled eggs, leftovers, fruit shake, and a restaurant
Long version: I went to the Junior/Senior banquet for school, so I fed the kids after I got home from work and before I went to the banquet. Three had the scrambled eggs in corn tortillas with cheese and salsa, plus curried split peas. One had lamb, curried split peas, and a piece of bread and butter. All of them had the fruit shake.
I don't like the word "smoothie." It just sounds unappealing to me. I call them fruit shakes, because then it sounds more like milkshake. Right? Right. Anyway, it was 83 degrees and I had a ton of yogurt on hand, so a fruit shake seemed like a good idea. This one had two pears that were sweet but never got soft when they ripened, frozen peaches and blueberries, honey, yogurt, and milk. I think this is the first time I have ever served a fruit shake with dinner. The children were pleased.
A. had more of his never-ending venison and tripe chile.
I had brisket, mashed potatoes, green beans, and a brownie with ice cream at the restaurant that hosted the banquet. Yum.
Thursday
Short version: Bunless cheeseburgers, potato soup, sauteed zucchini, raw cabbage
Long version: It was in the eighties again, and therefore not exactly soup weather, but I had half a gallon of stock left from cooking the rooster on Monday. So. Potatoes, carrots, bacon, onion, milk, sour cream, immersion blender . . . soup.
I put the sliced zucchini right into the pan with the cheeseburgers, along with some chopped green garlic, and it was very good. The children did not agree. They had the raw cabbage.
Okay, your turn! What'd you eat this week?
5 comments:
I hope you made biscuits before you made that garlic paste. ;) The color of the paste is definitely fantastic.
Actually. I bet you could make green biscuits. Hm. I guess let us know if you try it.
We have had a wealth of extremely good food this week, and subsequently lots of good leftovers. Brisket, tuna casserole, beef and broccoli, chicken-green chile enchiladas, hamburgers, tri-tip roast.
tuna divan, roasted potatoes, salad
out for Easter
chili, salad
zucchini pizza, salad
shrimp/rice/broccoli skillet, salad
spaghetti & meatballs, cauliflower
ditto for tonight
Linda
Hello, this week we ate:
Monday - Easter dinner leftovers
Tuesday - Ham and turkey sandwiches (the best part of any holiday meal is the day after...or in this case two days after... sandwiches in my opinion) strawberries and cucumbers.
Wendsday - Spicy shrimp, sauted zucchini and peppers, soba noodles.
Thursday - Huzbeast was out of town so dinner was a batch of popcorn, some dark chocolate covered caramels and a glass of Merlot...enjoyed while reading a book in complete silence...well...almost complete silence, I don't count my cat Gremlin purring loudly while kneading biscuits in my lap as noise...and yes, I shared the popcorn.
Friday - Plan on using up the last of the ham, so ham, bean and potato pot pie with veggies and dip.
Happy weekend everyone.
No exotic meats or vegetables here - just another week of too tired to care about dinner.
Fri - tuna salad and fish sticks, grilled cheese.
Sat - homemade pizza and a pseudo-calzone for the husband.
Sun - Easter dinner was stew and noodles, because that's what was in the freezer. I did make chocolate cream pie and a homemade angel food cake. Adult daughter brought me 12 egg whites left from her pie baking, and I luckily had cake flour on hand. I under whipped the egg whites out of fear of over-whipping (the recipe warned against over whipping repeatedly!). However, children ate it all at lunch so it didn't make it until dinner.
Mon - pasta and garlic bread, broccoli
Tues - taco Tuesday because the kids can customize their tacos, and I had hamburger in the freezer.
Wed - too tired so fried chicken strips, pseudo-chicken patty for the vegetarian, and fries. some baby carrots and applesauce.
Thurs -leftover stew with homemade bread and leftover vegetables.
Fri -Domino's because last week when I ordered they gave me a $3 coupon. Armed with this and a gift card, dinner will be free and easy!
I didn't bake much this week - I made choc chip cookies one day that lasted until the next (highly unusual!) and some choc chip muffins today for after school snack.
Friday-leftover lentil soup, bread and butter
Saturday-grilled cheese pie, chocolate marshmallow bars
Sunday-kielbasa, pierogi, coleslaw, hot cross buns, and various jelly beans and chocolate bunnies
Monday-meatloaf, baked potatoes, roasted carrots
Tuesday-chicken enchiladas, coleslaw
Wednesday-baked beans, cornbread
Thursday-tuna in cheese sauce, baked potatoes, broccoli
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