Friday, February 16, 2024

Friday Food: Havin' Big Fun on the Bayou*

Friday 

Short version: Tuna patties, roasted potatoes, green salad with vinaigrette, gingersnaps

Long version: I've been making fish patties with two big cans of tuna and one can of salmon, because we've been getting the salmon from the excess commodities. This time, I used all tuna, and they were better. Darn it.

I hadn't made gingersnaps in awhile, so I, well, did. I use this recipe, except I don't add the white pepper. We find them plenty spicy enough with the other spices in them. They are very good.

Saturday

Short version: Pizza, cucumbers, baked fruit with cream

Long version: One pepperoni pizza, one with just cheese, both with some fresh basil from the pot on the windowsill. I also used one of my frozen bags of roasted tomato sauce, and that makes it so much better. Not that pizza is ever bad, but it's better with garden-tomato sauce.

I still have a very large bag of frozen blueberries from Sysco that really should be used up now. So I combined them with some frozen strawberries and the last half pint of overly sweet peach jam from a couple of summers ago. Also some vanilla. Then I just baked it until most of the liquid was gone, and served it with heavy cream poured over the top.

A very popular dessert. And reasonably healthy, as desserts go.

Sunday

Short version: Birthday lobster, shrimp, sausage, spaghetti, salad, cheesecake

Long version: This was the new 14-year-old's birthday request. I got two lobster tails. The reason I got two is because getting one for each person in the family would have been exorbitantly expensive. Even two were kind of ridiculous, but at least everyone got to taste some.

A. actually cooked the shrimp and lobster tails, using a recipe he found online.


It involved splitting the tails and kind of balancing the meat on top. Better him than me.

The sausage was boudin, the spaghetti had roasted tomato sauce and a lot of butter on it, and the cheesecake was this one (but with some lemon juice added, because I don't think the zest gives enough lemon flavor).

I did not plan well for the cheesecake this year. I forgot to get graham crackers, which is one reason I used that recipe, because the crust is kind of like a shortbread. But I was out of eggs.

Oops.

We tried both the (tiny) stores in our vicinity, each in a different village ten miles from our house, and both stores were closed. We borrowed four eggs from our neighbor, and then we spent Saturday waiting around on our chickens to lay an egg. After several checks of the coop, an egg was triumphantly borne in around noon, and I made the cheesecake.

Hooray for the chickens, the heroes of the cheesecake.

The recipe actually calls for five eggs for the cheesecake filling, but I just used four. It was fine. Or it would have been fine if I had baked it long enough. I followed the instruction to bake it until an inch of the perimeter was set, but even after cooling and chilling, the center was still pretty liquidy. Boo. It did taste good, however, and no one had any trouble eating it.


It also held the candles satisfactorily.

Still kind of annoyed about that, though. And I do prefer the graham cracker crust. This cookie crust was a bit tough.

Monday

Short version: Many leftovers

Long version: There was some shrimp, sausage, and spaghetti left. Some people had the elk stew I had made on Saturday. And then there were leftover cheesecake and baked fruit.

Leftover desserts are the most fun leftover.

Tuesday

Short version: Jambalaya, chocolate pudding with cream

Long version: I celebrate all special occasions with food. Fat Tuesday is definitely a special occasion, especially for those of us with a connection to New Orleans.

Awhile ago, A. was reminiscing about the jambalaya at Popeye's, which was apparently his favorite. So I told him I would make jambalaya for Fat Tuesday.

My mother made jambalaya when I was young, but if she had a recipe, I never got it. I looked at a few online, and then, as I always do, made my own.

I don't have any homemade chicken stock this winter--it's been very sad--but I did have a ham bone in the freezer. Some recipes for jambalaya call for ham. So I boiled the bone with some onion ends for a couple of hours to make a ham stock for the jambalaya. 

I used the ham I pulled off the bone in the jambalaya, along with andouille sausage I already had on hand and a chicken breast I bought specially for this.


All the meats, ready for the rice.

I used the spices in this recipe, which seemed weird--particularly the cumin--but which A. assured me resulted in jambalaya that tasted like Popeye's. I didn't use as much chile powder, though, because I was trying to make this acceptable to those of us in the family who do not like too much spice, and the andouille is pretty spicy.

I used basmati rice, because it was the only long-grain rice I had. When it was done cooking, it tasted good, but was definitely not at all greasy. A.'s main memory of the Popeye's jambalaya, and his favorite thing about it, was the visible orange grease in it. I added about a third cup of lard that had rendered off the pork butt I cooked last week, and that helped with the flavor. It was still not remotely greasy, though. Which makes me wonder how much fat Popeye's is putting in their jambalaya.

Anyway. It was tasty. And a very appropriate Fat Tuesday meal. It was also a very good make-ahead meal, which worked out since I was at both a basketball game and First Communion class (conveniently across the street from each other) until about 5:30 p.m.

The chocolate pudding is not particularly appropriate for Fat Tuesday, but I had some milk that needed to be used. And I didn't mess up the amount of cornstarch this time. 

Wednesday

Short version: Breakfast burritos

Long version: We went to our Ash Wednesday Mass at 5 p.m., which meant we all just stayed in the village after school got out at 4 p.m. So when we got home, everyone was of course famished (particularly the adults, of course, because we had been fasting), and it was late.

Scrambled eggs to the rescue! I scrambled them with cheddar cheese, salsa, and canned pinto beans, then rolled them up in flour tortillas. 

No vegetable. Because . . . I just didn't.

Thursday

Short version: Leftover stew and jambalaya at home, leftover pizza and pudding on the road

Long version: I went to a basketball game in the late afternoon. I brought the pizza and pudding (in a half-pint jar, with cream) for the basketball player to eat in the car on the way home, because they were the most portable leftovers we had. A. fed the other three and himself at home with the elk stew and jambalaya. 

Refrigerator check!


Not bad. Lots of milk.

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

* This is, of course, from a song, appropriately entitled "Jambalaya." It's what I was singing as I was cooking it. Here's the CCR version.

4 comments:

  1. Fri- leftover chicken in gravy, carrots, mashed potatoes, bread, broccoli. Trying to use stuff from freezer.
    Sat- homemade personal pizzas. Pepperoni or sausage or cheese.
    Sun- deli meats, chips, apple slices. It's our traditional superbowl Sunday meal, even though we didn't watch football. I had to bring my daughter's pets back to her in big city that afternoon, so it was a useful, easy meal.
    Mon- cleaning out fridge night: bacon that had to get cooked, sandwiches, grilled cheese for some, chips , tater tots. ( note to self: these kids are not fond of tots. Don't buy again. Husband and I had to eat most of them.)
    Tues- donuts in the morning for colleagues and class, leftovers snack after school. Beef stew, broccoli, bread, carrots. And all the Valentines candy for dessert.
    Wed- grilled cheese and fries for kids. Tuna salad for husband. I had a early dinner of ramen and broccoli. Then nibbled some fries, and blew my fast by eating 2 bags of fruit chews- which I don't even like! Having to be in the kitchen on a fast day is very hard.
    Thurs- vegetable fried rice for a lighter meal,put aside some plain rice, some chicken breast I baked earlier in the week, plain broccoli, and a bagel for picky kid who doesn't like rice. Followed by chocolate layer cake for our anniversary. I was mixing up the batter and was about to pour it in the pans and I thought it looked a little thin- I had forgotten the flour. Hand to dump that in quickly. The frosting was a little pale- but I forgot to boil the water so the cocoa didn't bloom to full flavor. Still tasty.
    I think it's funny that for you, Ash Wednesday fast is no vegetable for a meal! And I hope your chickens ramp up their egg production-Lent is hard without eggs!
    Enjoy the weekend!

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  2. mbmom11: Happy anniversary! I would totally do something like forget the flour for a cake and add it in last minute. I'm counting the salsa in the eggs for a vegetable. :-) And it is very hard to be the cook on a fasting day. I was actually glad I was at work, because even though I have to monitor lunch, I'm at least not around a kitchen and food ALL day.

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  3. Friday-spaghetti with meatballs and Italian sausage, broccoli, maple upside down cake
    Saturday-hot turkey sandwiches (turkey and gravy from the freezer), coleslaw, prayer bars (so-called because they're supposed to be so good you pray for more)
    Sunday-lentil and tomato soup (using up old cans too), cheesy biscuits
    Monday-scrambled eggs, toast, broccoli
    Tuesday-meatloaf, baked potatoes, coleslaw
    Wednesday-leftover lentil soup (very penitential) and biscuits
    Thursday-sloppy joes, coleslaw, corn chips

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  4. Cooking was a challenge this weekend. DH has taken over the kitchen for the most part, but he's gone to a train show this weekend. I'm laid up post-surgery (right foot), so cooking has to be super easy.
    Friday night: reheated soup (homemade, from freezer) and paninis
    Saturday night: Domino's Pizza
    Sunday night: beans in the crock pot, hot dogs

    And tonight DH comes home. Yay!

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