Friday
Short version: Chile, cornbread
Long version: I had about a pound of uncooked ground beef left from the day before's hamburgers and an opened can of black beans that needed to be used. Sounds like chile to me.
This was not New Mexico chile. This was more basic, Americanized chile, but, if I may be so bold as to say it, I nailed it.
I made ground-beef-and-bean chile awhile ago after my kids had it and loved it at our friends' house. The problem with children is that the first version of anything they eat and like is the way it must be forever more. This is why it's so important to start them off with things like, say, natural peanut butter instead of the sugar+palm oil kind (I did not do this and still regret it) or homemade macaroni and cheese instead of boxed. For my children, their Platonic ideal of chile will always be the chile they had at their friends' house, and the one I made last time was not like that.
They admitted this most recent version was pretty close to that, though, and they all had two bowls. So now I must write it down so I can remember what was in it.
Ground beef, onions, bell pepper, green garlic, one can of black beans, one jar of pinto beans, the juice and half the tomatoes from a big can of whole tomatoes diced, a jar of beef stock, pureed calabaza, cumin, red chile pepper, paprika, salt.
The pureed calabaza is the secret ingredient here. Both because my kids didn't know it was in there (sneaky Mom), and also because it both slightly sweetened and thickened the chile. The ready-made spice mixture my friend uses has both brown sugar and molasses in it, as well as masa to thicken, so the calabaza replaced both those things.
I simmered it almost two hours so the flavors were completely melded, and also left the top off for the last 45 minutes or so of simmering to thicken it some more. This made a very mild chile. I put out minced raw onions and green chile paste for those who wanted to make it a bit--or a lot--spicier. As well as grated cheese, because everyone likes cheese on chile.
The cornbread was this recipe for corn muffins I always use, except I spread it out in a 13"x9" Pyrex because I loathe cleaning my muffin tin. Also, I use yogurt+milk instead of buttermilk. It makes a very different sort of cornbread due to the fact that it uses corn flour rather than meal, and an equal amount of buttermilk (or yogurt). The resulting cornbread is more like a tangy cake. But not sweet.
Saturday
Short version: Carnitas-style pork, mashed potatoes, sauteed zucchini/tomatoes/onion, raw tomatoes
Long version: This I mostly made ahead of time, because we were at church until 5 p.m. So the pork was cooked and just needed to be fried; the potatoes were peeled and in chunks in water, waiting to be boiled and mashed; and the zucchini was cooked. Dinner was on the table half an hour after we got home.
Sunday
Short version: Steaks, rice, asparagus, raw cabbage, custard
Long version: I finally cleared the meat freezer out enough on top that I could reach down to the boxes on the bottom. And one of them was a box of steaks. Steak bonanza ahoy!
Two T-bones and one large ribeye. With the asparagus from the garden, it made for a very high-quality meal.
Monday
Short version: Leftover pork, rice, cucumbers
Long version: We ended up being at a sort of unexpected church service until 7 p.m., after being at school all day, so I just heated up the pork with barbecue sauce, heated up the leftover rice with butter, cut up a cucumber, and called it good.
Tuesday
Short version: Breakfast sausage links, cafeteria rolls, green peas, pureed calabaza, asparagus, random chicken patties
Long version: I had to work again, and sausage links cook quickly. The rolls and chicken patties were cafeteria lunch leftovers. The rolls are homemade and incredibly good. The chicken patties not so much, but the kids still like them, and they all got eaten.
Asparagus from the garden again. The nice thing about asparagus season is that since you can only harvest it for about six weeks in the spring before you have to let the spears grow into mature plants, you never get sick of it. At least, I don't.
Wednesday
Short version: Beef and bean tacos, leftovers, radishes
Long version: The lady who delivers commodities dropped off a giant box of mostly pantry things this day (I am absolutely overrun with spaghetti and boxed macaroni and cheese now), which randomly included a pound of ground beef. It's been awhile since I had cooked store ground beef, and I forgot how . . . wet it is.
I browned that meat (and poured off the excess liquid--gross) and then added a can of rinsed black beans, a little already-cooked onion, half a can of tomatoes sitting in the refrigerator, salsa, cumin, garlic powder, and chile powder.
The kids had that. A. and I finished the steak, mine in a salad.
Thursday
Short version: Top sirloin steaks, spaghetti with pesto, leftover calabaza and cabbage, raw cucumber
Long version: Yes, we will be eating a lot more steak now that I've found that box. Also, warmer weather is coming, and steak is relatively quick-cooking so it doesn't heat the kitchen up so much.
Okay, your turn! What'd you eat this week?
11 comments:
Sat- probably pasta and garlic bread. We were out much of yhe day so I went easy.
Sun- grilled chicken, broccoli, corn, rice. We finally had a nice day without high winds so grilling happened. Also I cooked a few beyond burgers for teenage vegetarian- they go in the fridge for her to eat at random times. She's a HS junior and works about 15 hrs a week, so she's not always home at dinner.
Mon- burgers ( cooked inside because of rotten weather) fries, asparagus which was getting old but roasted up okay,,applesauce.
Tues- leftover chicken, vegetable fried rice, broccoli, bagels to fill some kids up.
Wed- bacon, grilled cheese, broccoli again?
Thurs- guest coming, so beef stew, homemade bread, mashed potatoes (instant since I forgot to buy real ones) and leftover vegetables.
Fri- my guest might cook ( I love when my sister visits!) but if I do, it will be roast pork or Mac and cheese. Depends if it warms up or not. A very disappointing spring so far.
I did bake more this week - cheese braid and crumb cake for some breakfasts, cookies, muffins , and banana bread. My kids were thrilled with this.
The child on the horse is so cute! I don't trust horses at all, but I know that most of them are nice if trained.
I view horses like I view lions, tigers, and moose- large animals with a lot of muscles and no regard for social niceties.
me: Well, luckily for humans, horses are actually domesticated, unlike lions, tigers, and moose. They are large, though, and caution is always a good idea.
Love asparagus, too!
takeout
grilled pork chops, roasted vegetables
BBQ chicken bowl (rice, beans, romaine, tomatoes, avocado, ranch)
beef stew, broccoli
fish tacos, broccoli
chicken/vegetable quesadillas
And for tonight chicken patties, asparagus saute.
Linda
Friday-egg salad, sourdough bread, broccoli
Saturday-swiss steak, biscuits, coleslaw, lemon cookies. The 7 year old had biscuits and yogurt.
Sunday-meatloaf, baked potatoes, peas. The 7 year old had bread and butter and a piece of cheese.
Monday-curried lentils, coleslaw
Tuesday-salmon loaf, baked potatoes, broccoli
Wednesday-leftover swiss steak, rice, peas
Thursday-turkey casserole with cornbread crust, peas
Kit: I have to admit that my favorite part of your comments is what the 7 year old ate. That child doesn't know how good he/she has it. I would love to eat at your house.
I just planted asparagus, I'm looking forward to harvesting it in 3 years 🙄
Sunday - at my in-laws in France, we had potato gratin and lamb
Mon - nettle soup, cheese and bread (brought back from France)
Tue - chard and blue cheese risotto
Wed - out for dinner with colleagues
Thu - pizza and green salad
Fri - skirt steaks, crispy potatoes and roasted asparagus
Tonight: not quite sure yet, I have leftover shredded kid meat from Easter in the freezer so I might make savourycrepes with kid in hoisin sauce and wild garlic
Hi Claire! I was wondering how you were doing. Asparagus is an excellent addition to a garden. Little care required, a harvest every year without re-planting, and one of the first things to be edible in spring.
Hi Kristin! Sorry that I haven't been commenting lately, it was a busy season at work and family-wise. But everything is fine, thanks for asking.
Yes I love perennial plants, you put in the work once, and harvest every year after that. Last year we planted berry bushes and an elderflower sapling, and this year asparagus and rhubarb. Our garden already has cherry, plum and apple trees, fingers crossed that the fruit don't get whipped out by frost like last year, it was terrible, we had just one single plum, which the birds ate.
so far I haven't sunk to serving hot dogs and macaroni and cheese on alternate nights!!!
And now I feel like I was a little unfair to her - she does eat oatmeal for breakfast and apples and things like that. But cooked food not so much.
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