First, an old photo from a couple of weeks ago when I took a kid to the dentist. It's a hundred-mile drive, and most of it was like this on the way there in the morning.
Sunday, December 22, 2024
Snapshots: Pre-Christmas
Friday, December 20, 2024
Friday Food: Done with School!
Friday
Short version: Sloppy joes, raw radishes, yogurt with maple syrup
Long version: Thanks to state requirements increasing the number of instructional hours in our school year, we had to add a couple of Fridays to the school calendar. This was one of them. I had a small jar of barbecue sauce in the refrigerator, so I made sure to thaw some ground beef and then used the sauce and some frozen diced onions to make sloppy joes.
Those who were still hungry after their sandwich had the yogurt.
Saturday
Short version: Chili
Long version: I made this mostly to use up some lamb stock and canned beans that had been hanging around. It made for a good meal to feed those of us at home, and the two hunters when they came back pretty late from bird hunting.
Sunday
Short version: Birthday lamb steaks, quail, dove, fresh bread and butter, green salad with ranch dressing, pumpkin custard with whipped cream
Long version: The previous day's hunt yielded two quail and two doves. The children gutted and plucked these, and then I just roasted them whole. Both are very small. The quail is all white meat, like chicken. Dove is a very dark meat, like a goose.
This was A.'s birthday. He always likes lamb, so I pan fried some steaks from the back leg and then made a sauce with red wine and butter. I used that sauce on the game birds, too.
Tuesday, December 17, 2024
The Annual Tree Excursion
If you've been reading here for some years, you'll know that we always go cut our Christmas tree at a ranch about twenty miles away managed by a friend of ours. When we cut it depends on when we have the time and the weather cooperates.
This year, that day was Sunday. It was a beautiful day, about 55 degrees with that crazy-strong New Mexico sun.
This year we went in the same way and parked in the same spot, but we decided to go a little bit to the right of the track to get down into the draw. As soon as we started walking that way, I saw a tree.
Sunday, December 15, 2024
Snapshots: For the Woodchuck Man
To my everlasting shame, I did not do my traditional Woodchuck Man* song last year on A.'s birthday. I seem to recall my brain just being fried and not being able to come up with anything.
I'm not doing much better this year, as I only have one verse. But at least I have something! Progress!
Here we go . . .
Who can dig the garden
With a shovel all by hand?
Who can grow a giant pumpkin on his very own land?
The woodchuck man
The woodchuck man can
The woodchuck man can
'cause he uses what he has and makes it work for him.
And, since this is supposed to be a snapshots post . . .
* The last one was in 2022. It links to all the previous ones.
Friday, December 13, 2024
Friday Food: Elk
Friday
Short version: Elk steaks, mashed potatoes, green salad with vinaigrette
Long version: A. took the youngest son elk hunting the previous week. Son successfully shot a cow (female) elk, and A. managed to pack out around a hundred pounds of it. Because of the crazy hilly terrain, he could only do one trip with the meat, but he still got a lot.
We left it in the cooler, covered with ice, for four days and cut it all up this day. I kept some of the steaks we cut from the tenderloin for dinner this day.
And they were tough.
Boooooo.
I guess it needed to be aged a lot longer. It tasted really good, though. So I think most of this elk is going to be ground into hamburger meat. Which is what I actually prefer to have on hand anyway.
Saturday
Short version: Chicken taco soup, garlic bread, canned peaches and cottage cheese
Long version: I had a container of chicken stock and meat from the bones I had cooked down earlier in the week. I also had some pureed roasted tomatoes in the refrigerator, so I used those, a can of kidney beans, a can of black beans, some frozen corn, spices, sour cream, and some leftover rice to make a very tasty soup.
I even remembered to use some of the lambs quarters I dried, um, two years ago and have yet to use up.
The soup hater was very displeased with this meal, but he was somewhat mollified by the canned peaches. They were store peaches, which are still pretty good as long as they're the ones in heavy syrup.
Sunday
Short version: Braised elk steaks, carrots, rice, cucumbers with salt and vinegar, apple and rhubarb crisp with vanilla ice cream
Long version: This time I made the steaks more like grillades, cooking them in a tomato sauce for a long time. Still kinda chewy and dry. Definitely needs to be ground.
I threw in the rest of a bag of frozen blanched carrots in there with the meat, too.
I had five green apples left from a bag I got at the store. I used those, plus frozen rhubarb and the juice left from the two cans of peaches and extra sugar to make the crisp.
The topping got partially submerged because of the very juicy rhubarb.
Monday
Short version: Spanish rice
Long version: One of those meals in which I dump a bunch of things in a skillet. This time it was some ground beef that I browned, to which I added leftover rice, the last of the pureed tomatoes that had been in the refrigerator, the last of some cheese sauce I had made over the weekend for a macaroni and cheese lunch, more grated cheddar cheese, taco spices, and frozen corn.
Definitely not fancy, but it gets everyone fed.
Tuesday
Short version: Sausage, chicken-y rice, various leftovers, grape tomatoes
Long version: The day I had made the trek to the dentist with one kid. I bought some smoked sausage at the store, which half the family ate along with rice I had cooked in chicken stock.
One kid had a sore throat and had the last of the chicken taco soup. One had the last of the Spanish rice. One had an iffy stomach and just had some of the rice.
Wednesday
Short version: Beef and bean burritos, beans and rice, radishes
Long version: I had taken out a container of pinto beans cooked with ham to thaw. I had also taken from the little freezer a bag of random beef that I think I pulled off soup bones when I had made stock awhile ago. So all I did was simmer the beef pieces with some of the beans and their liquid, and then season it further with spices and salsa. That's what went in the burritos.
Some people also had the plain beans over rice.
Thursday
Short version: Pork chunks, biscuits, green salad with vinaigrette, crispy rice treats
Long version: Some of those pork loin chunks, fried and then I used the excess liquid from the beans on them. The beans had been cooked with onion, tomato, garlic, and ham, so they were pretty flavorful and the liquid made a good sauce for the pork when it had cooked down a bit.
The biscuits were just my standard baking powder ones. Everyone ate them with butter and strawberry jam.
I made the crispy rice treats as a thank you for the guy who gives us permission to cut our Christmas tree on his ranch every year. We're going this weekend, and his wife had mentioned awhile ago that he loves my crispy rice treats. So I made a half batch of them, set some aside for him, and used the rest for dessert after dinner.
Refrigerator check:
Tuesday, December 10, 2024
A Few Things of Note
It snowed last night. Only about an inch, but it will make my children happy. They, like all children, are really hoping we'll have snow on Christmas.
I have to drive one son to the dentist this morning. Although I'm not much looking forward to the 200 miles I will spend in the car today, it will give me the opportunity to buy the gifts two boys are supposed to have for their class gift exchanges. I was just given the suggested gift ideas yesterday, which means no time to get anything ordered online and delivered. My choices for gift-buying today are Tractor Supply, Dollar General, and the grocery store. I can work with that.
I went to our staff Christmas party last night and I brought this maple popcorn. Holy cow, is it good.
I tripled the recipe, because six cups of popcorn doesn't really go that far*. I also added a full half teaspoon of salt, instead of a few pinches. The recipe as written will make something like caramel corn. If you add more salt to it, it makes something like kettle corn, which I like much better.
Using the dark maple syrup works so well for this. So much flavor.
It was, I must admit, a little bit of a pain. One of these days I should probably get a candy thermometer for things like this, so I'm not messing around with bowls of ice water to determine a "soft ball." Also, I decided halfway through that I didn't have nearly enough, so I was popping popcorn while making the syrup. Also also, I made so much, there was just a lot of bulk to be finding bowls and pans for.
Worth it, though. I would recommend it for any party you might be attending this season. It would also be very handy to make and put in little bags for any larger groups of people you might need gifts for, like neighbors or co-workers.
That's all my notes for today. Have a lovely day.
* It doesn't go far with my family, that is. A single recipe would have been adequate for my party contribution, but there was no way I was getting out of the house without leaving some of this for my family to eat while I was gone. They can eat a lot of popcorn. Especially popcorn liberally drizzled with maple syrup and butter.
Sunday, December 8, 2024
Snapshots: Christmas Decorations, Etc.
Friday, December 6, 2024
Friday Food: Chutney!
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!
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
Awe-Inspiring Abundance
It's good for me to sometimes leave my very limited remote bubble here and enter the outside world, if only to realize how odd my life is in the grander American scheme. This was really highlighted by my trip to a grocery store in suburban Albuquerque last Friday.
I went to Albuquerque to pick up the traveling kid from the airport. Because his flight was coming in on the later side and we had to drive so far back home, I did not want to stop on the way home at the grocery store. We wouldn't have gotten home until 11 p.m. So instead I went to the store before picking him up.
The grocery store I went to was just a Smith's, but it was in what is quite clearly a major area of commerce for the Albuquerque suburbs. In fact, I entered the heart of American consumerism. My exit off the freeway brought me to a road lined with every store and restaurant I've heard of or read about, but never actually shop at. Like Chick-fil-A. And Target.
I realize these are not uncommon for most of you. But they are for me.
Thankfully, this was a big road with good traffic flow, so although it was busy (keep in mind, this was Black Friday), I made it to the grocery store without too much delay.
And there I was taken aback by the experience of sheer opulence that is American grocery shopping.
This store was as big as the entire Walmart I typically shop at, except instead of half the store being things like storage containers and camping equipment, it was all just . . . food. There was SO MUCH. So many options, so many displays, so many perishable things that I never see.
They had a fancy cheese section! And a seafood counter! I mean, I couldn't buy anything from it because whatever I bought was going to be a sitting in a cooler for six hours and that seemed like a bad idea for fish, but still. It was there. I do not ever shop anywhere that has a seafood counter.
In the end, I didn't buy too much. A few of the fancy cheeses and some multi-color "snacking tomatoes" were about the extent of the indulgence for me, but it was fun to visit the Other America for a little while before returning to my little bubble.
Sunday, December 1, 2024
Snapshots: Thanksgiving and Beyond
And she got up and secretly made this Thanksgiving banner first thing. She has a passion for decor.
Friday, November 29, 2024
Friday Food: Starting with Sandwiches
Friday
Short version: Chicken salad sandwiches, corn chips, pickles, cookies
Long version: A. went to the basketball player's game in the afternoon. They started the long drive home around 5:30 p.m. I knew the basketball player would be hungry and not want to wait until they got home at 7 p.m., so I used the rest of the previous night's rotisserie chicken to make chicken salad. I sent one sandwich, along with a banana and some chocolate chip cookies, in the truck with A.
I had enough chicken salad to make sandwiches for the two children at home with me. They had the store-brand Fritos with those, plus some cucumber pickles. I had a salad.
Saturday
Short version: Sloppy joes, more corn chips, raw kohlrabi
Long version: The basketball player had another game this day--it was a tournament--and the team had cheeseburgers and french fries afterwards.
That had been my plan for dinner, since I had baked bread this day and made some buns. However, to avoid repetition, I used the buns and ground beef to make sloppy joes instead. This also has the effect of stretching the meat, as less meat is needed for sloppy joes than for hamburger patties.
I didn't make the oven fries I was planning on, either. I could claim it's because I didn't want to repeat the after-game french fries, but really, I just didn't feel like it. Store-brand chips it is!
Sunday
Short version: Pork chunks in milk gravy, pinto beans and rice, carrots and sauerkraut, ice cream and cookies
Long version: I really do not much enjoy store-bought pork, and yet, here we are. Another pork loin, cut into chunks, seared, and then I made the gravy for it with milk, cornstarch, and some thyme and garlic powder.
I took out a quart of pinto beans cooked with ham to serve along with the leftover rice, since there wasn't an overabundance of the pork.
Incidentally, my family always puts butter and just a few drops of balsamic vinegar on top of beans. This is what my growing-up family always did with our New Year's Day black-eyed peas when I was growing up, and it's just as good with other beans. It makes a sort of sauce for them.
I used some of the blanched and frozen carrots for a vegetable, sauteed with some of the sauerkraut from the refrigerator and cooked diced onions from the freezer.
I had enough cookies and cream ice cream for everyone to have some. They doubled down on the cookies by eating it with a chocolate chip cookie from the cookie jar.
Monday
Short version: Sausage and beans, leftover rice, cornbread, kohlrabi appetizer
Long version: I wanted to finish up the giant kohlrabi my sister brought us, so I cut up the rest of it and handed out slices to everyone while I was cooking dinner. This was their vegetable for dinner. Even if it wasn't on their plates, it counts.
I had quite a bit of the pinto beans and ham left, but not quite enough to make a full meal for everyone, so I also cooked one package of smoked beef sausage.
There wasn't quite enough rice left, either, which is why I made the cornbread.
I had a salad with the last of the sloppy joe meat in it. It also had some of the still-ripening tomatoes from the box on the floor and pickled beets. It always makes me happy to eat something from the garden, especially when the garden itself is actually done.
Tuesday
Short version: Lamb chops, boiled potatoes
Long version: We had two ram lambs this year that we kept to put in the freezer when it got cold enough to butcher. The time has come, and we butchered one the lambs this day. A. cut most of it into chops and steaks with his reciprocating saw, and I left some of them out of the freezer for dinner this night.
The basketball player had a home game at 5 p.m., and the younger two children wanted to go with me to it. This is why I made a pot of boiled potatoes--with just butter, salt, and pepper--before we left. So when we got home at 6:30 p.m., all I had to do was re-heat the potatoes and fry the lamb chops.
No vegetable. I meant to throw some pickles on the plates, but it ended up being so chaotic, I just forgot. One child was not feeling well and wanted to take a bath. I was so hungry by the time we got home that I just heated up a bowl of the sausage and vegetable soup I had made earlier in the day and ate that while I was cooking the lamb chops. So by the time I actually got food on plates for the three who were actually sitting down to eat, the pickles were forgotten.
Oh well. Everyone survived. And the lamb chops were very well received.
Wednesday
Short version: Chili, cheese quesadillas, carrot sticks, ice cream
Long version: I was doing some Thanksgiving prep this day--pumpkin pie, cranberry sauce, extra bread for stuffing--so I made the chili in the morning just so I wouldn't have to make anything later when I was tired.
I had thought all summer that I had one parsnip that had actually germinated and was growing really well. My plan was to harvest it, along with the one carrot in the garden (I have difficulties with root vegetables), and roast it for Thanksgiving dinner.
Imagine my surprise when I dug up the parsnip and it was . . .
Thursday, November 28, 2024
Always Thankful
I used to always post a photo of my children on Thanksgiving Day, because they are always what I'm most thankful for.
I don't post photos of them anymore, or even write about them directly. That is because most of them asked me not to. But that doesn't mean I'm not thankful for them. I am. Always. I just have to post different photos now.