Friday, January 2, 2026

Friday Food: More Celebrating

Friday 

Short version: Tuna melt sandwiches, green salad with vinaigrette

Long version: There were only three of us home for dinner this night, as A. was hunting with the younger two boys. For the kids at home, I made tuna melts. I had a salad, and I made them eat some, too. We had been sorely lacking in vegetables in recent days.

I sent leftover ham and scalloped potatoes with A. for their campfire meal.

Saturday

Short version: Ham and rice skillet, vanilla ice cream with chocolate/peanut butter fudge sauce

Long version: This is what I chose for my birthday meal. I had leftover rice and ham, so all I needed to do was heat those in a skillet with butter, already-cooked onion, frozen peas, and shredded carrots.

I actually love this kind of food. I also added the rest of the Christmas mushrooms to my bowl.


Yum.

I didn't want to have any kind of baked dessert for my birthday. We only had vanilla ice cream, which is not my favorite. That's why I made chocolate fudge sauce with peanut butter for it. I made this by following my old recipe for chocolate fudge sauce (corn syrup replaced with honey) to which I added a couple of spoonfuls of peanut butter.

The addition of the peanut butter made it more solid when it got cold, but it also made it more delicious. To me, anyway. And it was my birthday, after all.

Sunday

Short version: Hamburger patties, leftover scalloped potatoes, pickled radishes, dark chocolate

Long version: I had been relying heavily on Christmas leftovers, so I thought it was time for something besides ham. I took out ground beef unsure what I would do with it. In the end, I just made hamburger patties for the three of us at home. 

Instead of bread or buns, I heated up some of the leftover scalloped potatoes, so . . . still Christmas leftovers, actually.

The dark chocolate was one of my birthday gifts from my parents. I had a smooth bar, and one with cocao nibs. We did a taste test of both. The children preferred the smooth dark chocolate.

Monday

Short version: Green chile hamburger stew, cornbread

Long version: The hunters arrived home this day (no elk, unfortunately, though lots of stories). I made hamburger stew with the rest of the ground beef, along with potatoes, carrots, and green beans. I thought everyone could use some vegetables.

I asked A. if he would rather have cornbread or biscuits. He chose the cornbread, because they had been eating a lot of wheat bread while they were camping.

Tuesday

Short version: Rooster in tomato sauce, pasta, carrots, frozen peas, rice pudding

Long version: I took one of the roosters we butchered out of the freezer. I knew I would be gone in the afternoon, so I cooked it in the morning. All I did with it was brown it on the stove, then put it in a deep casserole dish with pureed tomatoes, sliced onion, garlic, and Italian spices. That cooked slowly in the oven with the baked rice pudding until it was done. I also cooked some carrots in there with the rooster.


Rice pudding and rooster.

At dinnertime, I just heated the chicken up and then used most of the tomato sauce the chicken had been cooking in for the pasta, along with cream and butter.

Wednesday

Short version: Daddy burgers, French fries, carrot sticks

Long version: A. came home from hunting with pre-made hamburger patties, bacon, American cheese, and butter bread he had bought to make his usual burgers. They came home before they could use those things, though, so he cooked them this night.

He also made the French fries. He actually pre-cooked them in lard before finishing them in the oven while the burgers cooked.

I added the carrot sticks. Because I'm a mom, and someone has to think about vegetables.

Thursday

Short version: Pork, black-eyed peas, rice, collard greens, pecan pie

Long version: Happy New Year! Of course we must ensure our health, wealth, happiness, peace, and joy with our traditional meal. Every year.

My children have added the peace and joy to the first three. The rice is for peace, and the pecan pie is for joy. Makes sense to me.

The greens this year came from the collard greens that will not die:


We have had a remarkably warm winter. Certainly nothing to discourage famously hearty collard greens.

Refrigerator check:

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

11 comments:

Anonymous said...

Plaidkaren

Plaidkaren said...

I Hit publish too soon!! How is your leg these days? Hope its better.

Kristin @ Going Country said...

Much better, thanks for asking! I'm still trying to figure out what is causing the underlying tension that led to the pinched nerve or whatever, and resolve it, but the bad pain is gone.

mbmom11 said...

Fri- taco bar with ground beef, vegetarian chorizo crumbles, assorted cheeses, black beans, rice, lettuce. Pineapple and Apple slices.
Sat- there was enough roast beef left for a meal, so that, mashed potatoes, leftover vegetables, rolls.
Sun-husband ate taco leftovers, kids had scrambled eggs and more buns.fruit.
Mon- pasta, sausage, broccoli, garlic bread.
Tues- rotisserie chicken, rice, buns, vegetables, apple slices. Picky eater had a chicken patty.
Wed- vegetables fried rice with leftover rice, leftover chicken, something else?
Thurs- tired of cooking, I asked husband for ideas, and he said pasta. So pasta , Italian sausage, broccoli, and not very good garlic bread. ( overpriced! So flat). I shouldnt have been surprised the man lived off of pasta and grilled cheese in grad school..
And I still am baking a lot a desserts, and the neighbors dropped of some cookies. Let alone the Xmas candy still floating around. I feel very housewife-y baking and doing sashes constantly, but I'm ready for the kids to go back to school next week. Enjoy the weekend!

mbmom11 said...

Doing dishes! Not sashes. Definitely ready for a routine!

Anonymous said...

I just took out bags of frozen tomatoes from the freezer that we grew. These were the green ones we brought in to ripen and they ripened at unequal rates, meaning they needed to be cut apart to save the good parts. I thought to simmer these in the oven with garlic and some additional canned tomatoes for a pasta sauce! Sounds like Kristin, right? Thanks always for the inspiration!

Kristin @ Going Country said...

You are most welcome. Good work saving your homegrown tomatoes. After all that work growing them, there is for sure a good incentive to make sure none are wasted.

Kristin @ Going Country said...

I'm ready for the kids to go back to school, too. They are not. :-)

Anonymous said...

Sick all week with a rough cold, soup on repeat. First split pea, then a fish chowder. More chowder tonight. Tea, lemon, and honey everlasting. Mil

Tu mere said...

Would have been happy to share your skillet meal. Who doesn’t like rice and ham mixed together with other good stuff. Yummy. The ice cream topping as well. That’s what birthday food is all about. You!

Kit said...

Friday-spaghetti and meatballs, salad, pumpkin pie
Saturday-cheese omelet, toast, peas
Sunday-chicken, mashed potatoes, broccoli
Monday-stirfried chicken and frozen vegetables, baked potatoes
Tuesday-enchiladas, broccoli
Wednesday-leftovers
Thursday-kielbasa and sauerkraut (Polish good luck meal), baked potatoes, still some Christmas cookies