Friday
Short version: Poppy's Frito Pie, car salad and sushi rolls
Long version: I was gone at dinnertime, driving to the airport to pick up the traveler. Poppy was unhappy that she wasn't coming with me, so I assigned her to make dinner as a way of distraction. There was leftover chili for Frito pie, so it was really just microwaving, chopping, and gathering things together.
I wrote out everything she needed to do and put all the necessary items together in the refrigerator.
Saturday
Short version: Creamy duck soup, garlic bread, peanut butter cookies
Long version: Turkey soup is pretty ubiquitous in most households after Thanksgiving. This was the duck version, made with the carcass from our Thanksgiving duck. I added some cream, too, which always makes soups better.
I had made the garlic bread a few days previously when I was baking bread, with no particular plan in mind for it. It was perfect to go with the soup, though.
As were the peanut butter cookies.
Sunday
Short version: Pork loin chops, Thanksgiving leftovers, cheater's chocolate fondue
Long version: I used the rest of the duck gravy on the pork chops, and then everyone got some stuffing, corn, and cranberry sauce. All of these things go with pork just as well as with poultry.
A. was gone elk hunting with the youngest son, so for the three children at home, I just melted chocolate chips and coconut oil in little bowls and let them choose from graham crackers, marshmallows, or peanut butter cookies to dip in it. One chose the graham crackers. The other two went with marshmallows.
Monday
Short version: Hardboiled eggs and toast, duck soup and toast, pork, cherry tomatoes
Long version: We were kind of all over the place for dinner this night. I didn't get home from work until 5 p.m., and at that point, only two children were home with me. One of them had been sick. I had several hardboiled eggs on hand, so for those two children, I heated up mashed hardboiled eggs with lots of butter, and they had those with toast.
I had two boneless pork chops still, so I fried those. One was for me, and I had it with pickled carrot ribbons. The other was for the basketball player. For him, I microwaved a potato, which I then chopped and fried with his pork chop. He had the tomatoes, too.
The (successful!) hunters returned around 7 p.m. They hadn't eaten dinner yet, so for them, I heated up bowls of the duck soup. And then they had toast with strawberry jam.
Tuesday
Short version: Roasted chicken leg pieces, baked potatoes, green salad with vinaigrette
Long version: One package of chicken leg quarters is four drumsticks and four thighs. This is not quite enough for my family. Two packages is (I'm sure you figured this out) eight of each. This is too much for my family. However, I figured too much was better than not quite enough, so I cooked the entire two packages.
All I did was salt them for an hour or so--this seems to help a lot with grocery store chicken flavor and texture, though I'm not sure why--and then heavily season them with paprika and garlic powder before roasting them at 400 degrees with some butter in the pans.
They took WAY longer than I thought they would. Mostly the thighs, which were very big and took over an hour to be done. Tasty, though.
Look! Food on a plate!
Fri- leftovers from Thanksgiving.
ReplyDeleteSat-our Thanksgiving visitors had requested Mac and cheese, so I made some that turned out really well. Phew! I don't use a recipe and just throw stuff together, which doesn't always work. Also asparagus, broccoli, corn, bacon, grilled cheese for some.
Sun- gone all day as I drove daughter and her friends back to college, and stopped at sams club in big city on the way home. I got home at 4pm, with nothing ready for dinner. So pasta, sausage, broccoli.
Mon-I bought a huge pack of discount chicken breast at Sam's, so I baked it all and put most of it away. picky eaters had that for dinner, while other had hamburgers. Also chips, apple slices.
Tues- cooked the huge pack of stew meat from Sam's, put most of it away, the rest we had with carrots,broccoli, rice, and fail bread. I made one batch of bread but must have killed the yeast as it did not raise in the oven. Awful. I made a second quick batch which was of course underproved But was at least edible. Also brownies because a certain tried eating a bar of bakers chocolate while I was gone Sunday. Only one small bite lost, and a strong lesson learned.
Wed- basketball night and a dr appt in big city, so leftover pizza from the freezer. I had ramen after the game.
Thurs- basketball night, and I spent the afternoon at DMV getting teen his drivers license. So dinner was whatever- grilled cheese, tortilla chips and salsa. I had popcorn at the game, and cookies when I got home.( game went into double overtime- lasted 1.75 hours. Insane for a 7th grade game.so I was just done with everything.)
Boooo on that extra-long basketball game. I hope you have one of those cushioned seats with a back so you weren't sitting on hard bleachers the whole time.
ReplyDeleteI sat for the first 3 quarters, then wound up in the hallway peaking in the door. I couldn't take the tension!
DeleteAlthough I am impressed with the successful hunters, I think that Poppy is a gem!
ReplyDeleteOh, that was Mary in MN in the comment above. Not a great cook myself!
ReplyDeleteFriday-stirfried hamburger and vegetables, leftover mashed potatoes
ReplyDeleteSaturday-Thanksgiving #2 with leftovers and I baked another pumpkin pie
Sunday-leftover rigatoni, frozen corn, molasses cookies
Monday-turkey sandwiches, brussels sprouts
Tuesday-meatloaf from the freezer, baked potatoes, frozen mixed veg
Wednesday-last of the rigatoni, peas
Thursday-ham and eggs, potatoes, lima beans
congratulations to the hunters and to the new cook!
Look out...more meat! Yes.
ReplyDeleteYay Poppy!
ReplyDeleteSometime when you have the wherewithal, try salting the chicken and leaving it in the fridge overnight. I find this really helps it. I believe this is because grocery store chicken is very wet and the salt draws out the excess liquid. It especially makes the skin nice and crispy, though I also salt skinless chicken in this way.
ReplyDeleteCreamy duck soup sounds delicious! We make turkey vegetable soup with spaetzel noodles and/or white bean chili with turkey. I put about 2/3 of the leftover turkey in the freezer; we'll eat it at a later date, probably in my white bean chili. Yum.
ReplyDelete