Accidents, Laziness, Healthy Eating, and Garage Sales

painting1Saturday night as I was frying something, grease splattered and hit me in the face. I have several burns on my face and arm now. It still smarts!

I did what I could, cooling the burns right away then dabbing the welts with burn ointment. The older I get the more I realize every scar is a testament to me surviving another accident. Ha! I’m a mess.

I’ve been thinking of my health (and Greg’s health) a lot lately. My chronic nerve pain is back due to my own laziness. I simply don’t stretch enough or as deeply as when I attended yoga faithfully. Why is it something has to smack me before I’m willing to fix the problem?

I spent years trying to find a treatment for this chronic pain. I finally found the answer in yoga and as soon as I stopped going, I went back to my old ways. There’s always a good reason. Too busy. Too tired. Too absorbed in something else. It takes serious pain to knock the sense back in.

Last week, Greg and I watched Hungry For Change. It’s free to watch if you have Amazon Prime. The beginning was a little tedious because they kept repeating sound bites but it got better as it went along. What I took away from it was that the way to healthier eating is to eat whole foods.

Processed foods are the killers and we’re surrounded by them in things we simply take for granted. Although we eat more whole foods now that I cook from scratch, we could do better. That’s one reason I decided to include more fish in my weekly menus.

We had talked about getting a juicer but I’m at a loss on which is the right one to buy. The good ones are kind of expensive, and I’m still not sure if I’ll be good about juicing.

Yes, I’ll admit, juicing is way healthier and a more concentrated form of nutrients, but will I like it? Other than V-8 juice and fruit juice, I’ve never really juiced. It sounds like it will be a lot of trial and error until I find the right combination of veggies and fruits that I’ll like. (I’m sure Greg will be easier to please than me.)

Can anyone shed their experience? Have you ever juiced? Can you recommend a dependable juicer? I kind of like the Breville JE98XL juicer. It seems to have some excellent reviews anyway.

I’ve heard  a lot about the Magic Bullet NutriBullet. It’s cheaper, but it has a much smaller motor so I worry about how long it would last.

From the research I’ve done, you want something with a powerful motor that will masticate the fruits and vegetables slower so it can juice more thoroughly.

I keep hoping I’d find one at a garage sale, but nothing yet. Despite being an avid garage saler, it seems remarkable I’ve yet to find one.

Speaking of garage sales, I hit upon a good one for artwork. They’re reproductions, but I found three oil paintings with great ornate frames. I’m still looking for more landscapes, but those are usually priced dear. Good paintings are few and far between.

painting-trio

I’ve had the good fortune to decorate nearly my whole house with garage sale finds. I’m willing to bet I haven’t even spent $100 on all the art in my house. Off the top of my head that’s for a dozen paintings that are hanging right now, four I’ve grown tired of, and another dozen pieces of sculpture and ceramics.

I’m patient when it comes to decorating. I only buy stuff I truly love–and then only if it’s cheap. I’ve only ever spent serious money on two dog figurines, but they were exceptional.

Thoughts on juicers or healthier eating? Do you ever go to garage sales? What kind of stuff do you look for?

Homestead and Blog Updatery

7-month-old

On the Homestead: We sold our two bachelor bucks last week. They went pretty fast, but people hammer you for the first few hours after the ad comes out, asking the very same questions I already answered inside the ad.

We had intended on holding back “Freezer Meat” for the freezer, but Greg might go deer hunting this year and I want to make sure there’s enough room in the freezer. With my luck, he’ll change his mind at the last minute. At least I’ll have clean freezers.

A few of my neighbors are deer hunters. I hope they nab the gang of thugs that have been eating my garden.

 

prison-veggies

 

I’ve resorted to barricading each individual raised bed. The lettuces and chards are prisoners in their own garden.

The deer leave the tomatoes and peppers alone, but greens are like cocaine to them. This is my third time replanting. The fencing seems to be working so I hope that will be the end of their rampage. It’s expensive and inconvenient to put up individual fenced beds, but I think a big fence all around the garden would be an eyesore.

My chickens have all but stopped laying. I get a few eggs a week, barely enough for all the baking I foresee next month. I’ve been coveting what few eggs I get.

Ironically, I should be drowning in eggs next summer. I’ve got a lot of future layers waiting in the wings (pun intended).

The Blog: Starting this week, I’m going to take one day a week and do a gift guide by interests. I’ll tag those posts “Gift Guides” so you can see them all in one group.

I’d like to think I’m pretty good at choosing gifts so I hope I can give you some ideas to kick start your Christmas shopping. The nice thing about gift guides is that they’re like fuel. If the item you see isn’t exactly what you want, it might be the catalyst to finding the right gift.

I’ve already started my shopping because, well, I have a border collie mentality. I never do tomorrow what I can get done yesterday. 🙂 That and I hate trying to figure out what to buy at the last minute.

Speaking of blogging, there has been a tremendous jump in visits for a couple of my posts. My post about Dog Alley at Canton Trade Days was (the last time I checked) at the top of Google’s search page under Dog Alley. I’ve never been at the top of any search. I actually thought it was a mistake!

If you have a blog, do you know which post brings you the most visitors?

Has the weather cooled down for you yet? Or warmed up if you’re down under? It’s still pretty hot but they say we might get some relief later in the week.

 

This Week’s Menu, October 9, 2016

Modern studio background, sepia look

Menu for the week of October 9, 2016

Sunday
Breakfast: Bacon and eggs
Lunch: Chili
Dinner: Grilled chicken

Monday
Breakfast: Toasted bagels
Lunch: Kielbasa sandwiches
Dinner: Roast beef and baked potatoes (anniversary dinner)

Tuesday
Breakfast: Leftover steak and eggs
Lunch: Leftover chicken
Dinner: Anniversary dinner at our favorite seafood restaurant!

Wednesday:
Breakfast: French toast
Lunch: Sausage on a bun
Dinner: Leftovers from restaurant meal. We never finish everything so I expect we’ll have enough for a second meal.

Thursday
Breakfast: Oatmeal
Lunch: FAIR food!
Dinner:  Potluck from whatever is leftover in the fridge. I doubt we’ll want to eat much after the fair.

Friday
Breakfast: Bagels
Lunch: Chicken salad sandwiches
Dinner: Beef short ribs

Saturday
Breakfast: Breakfast out since we’ll be hitting garage sales this week
Lunch: Leftover short rib sandwiches
Dinner: Spaghetti with homemade sauce

 

This is a special week! Monday is our 41st wedding anniversary. Thursday, if the weather is good, we’ll be going to the State Fair of Texas.

About Monday and why we’re staying home on our anniversary: Did you know that Sunday and Monday are the worst days to have seafood out? I heard this once and looked it up. Apparently, the last fish delivery for the week at most restaurants is Friday. Unless it makes a brisk business everyday, you run the risk of not getting the freshest fish until after the Monday deliveries.

Since we spend big $$$ on birthdays and anniversaries we want the best, so we’ll eat at home on Monday and celebrate at a restaurant on Tuesday.

Thursday, weather permitting, we’ll go to the fair. I try not to eat a lot of fair foods because that stuff is a heart attack on a stick, but one day of living dangerously shouldn’t hurt.

Do you have a yearly fair where you live? Do you ever go? Do you indulge in ‘fair food’?

In Monday’s post I plan to pick on Greg but I’m also running an informal poll about husbands in general.

Dehydrating Food 101

 

You don’t have to grow your own food to dehydrate fruits and vegetables. I had a dehydrator for years before I started using it regularly. Part of me couldn’t believe that such a small amount of heat could make food edible let alone more delicious than before.

It’s true! Drying foods concentrates the flavors.

jerky

This is beef jerky halfway through the drying process.

My first foray into dehydrating was making beef jerky. But I’ve since dried tomatoes, okra, beans, peas, strawberries, and squash.

There are few rules to dehydrating.

• Always slice your meat, vegetables, or fruits the same thickness. If some are thinner than others place those on the top trays so they don’t dry out too quickly.

• For best results, freeze your meat until it’s firm (but not frozen through). It will make it so much easier to slice.

• Wash fruits and vegetables, then pat dry.

• Never let your food touch each other. You want air to circulate freely on all sides.

• You can make fruit leathers if you blend fruit into a puree then pour (carefully) into liners on the dehydrator trays.

• Check for doneness. They should be flexible but not rock hard. You can dry them until hard if you plan to pulverize them.  Many people do this for onions and garlic, but also for tomatoes and celery. Heck, I’ve seen people dehydrate tomato skins alone and turn them into tomato powder.

***

For meat, you can add a dry rub from any number of prepared mixes from the store. I’m a purist. I prefer salt and pepper.

For veggies like green beans, I coat them in a little olive oil and toss with fresh ground salt. They are DELICIOUS! Greg and I polished off an entire batch in one sitting. (That ended up being our dinner.) They’re great snacks when you want something other than potato chips or popcorn.

I don’t season tomatoes at all. I dehydrate until semi soft and put them in the freezer. When I make soup, stew, pasta or pizza sauce, the dried tomatoes go in the pot and I let them reconstitute there. It will take your meal to an entirely new level of flavor. Every year I dehydrate tomatoes rather than can them now. They are that good!

Dehydrators come in all shapes and sizes. Some are very fancy, others are nothing more than a light bulb at the base of the machine.

If you have a big garden or a big family, go with a larger dehydrator, otherwise you’ll have that machine running for days at a time. This is the Excalibur 2900ECB. Within my circle of gardeners and cooks, this brand is the hand’s down favorite.

The one on the right is the same brand but about $50 more. It also has a 10 year warranty compared to the one above with a 5 year warranty. You can click on the pictures to take you to the Amazon page.

The dehydrator I currently have is pretty old. It doesn’t have the nicer trays or higher wattage of these newer models. When it finally dies on me I’ll probably opt for the Excalibur since all my gardening friends speak so highly about it.

If you don’t need something this big, try the Nesco Snackmaster. It’s just the right size for people who won’t do a ton of drying but still wants to do jerky or fruit leathers.

If you have teenagers, jerky and dried treats are way healthier for them. Better for junk-food eating husbands too. 😉

Oven drying: You can dry food in your oven but between you and me, it’s kind of a pain. Not only do you waste a lot more money on energy usage but it pretty much monopolizes your oven until the drying is done. I don’t recommend it unless you have no other choice.

Outdoor drying: There is one other option for you heartier, back-to-the-land folks, and that’s solar drying. If you live in a climate like mine where it’s hot and has relatively low humidity, you can dry your food outdoors. The reason I’ve never done it is because you have to make sure no insects can get inside your drying trays. I’m real touchy about this which is why I prefer to stick to the machine.

green-beans-ready-for-drying

Oiled and salted. Ready for drying.

green-beans-dried

Same green beans, dried and ready for snacking.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Have you ever tried making jerky or dried fruits or vegetables? I always say I’m going to dehydrate snow peas, but somehow I never have enough left over. 🙂  The green beans were the real surprise though. "=D They were absolutely delicious. Greg wanted more but I only planted a few token green bean plants. Next year, I’m doing a big bed of them.

 

 

This Week’s Menu, September 18, 2016

Modern studio background, sepia look

Menu for the week of September 18, 2016

Sunday
Breakfast: Pancakes
Lunch: Veggie platter with pimento cheese spread
Dinner: Burgers

Monday
Breakfast: Leftover pancakes
Lunch: Corndogs
Dinner: Enchilada supper (Freezer meal. All I have to do is pop it in the oven.)

Tuesday
Breakfast: Bagels with cream cheese
Lunch: Burritos
Dinner: Sausage and peppers sandwiches (Another freezer meal.)

Wednesday:
Breakfast: Toast
Lunch: Egg rolls
Dinner: Lasagna (Premade freezer meal)

Thursday
Breakfast: Orange Danish
Lunch: skip
Dinner:  Pizza (Frozen, not homemade this time.)

Friday
Breakfast: English muffins
Lunch: skip
Dinner: Chicken take out

Saturday
Breakfast: Kolaches
Lunch: Cold sandwiches
Dinner: Chinese take out

 

This week features an atypical menu. My new cabinets have arrived, and we’ll be kicked out of the kitchen starting Monday. I’m told they’ll need at least 5-7 days to get the job done. Our stove will be out of commission, and of course, I still don’t have a microwave, so I’m left to make what meals I can with my toaster oven.

Dinners won’t be too bad. I have a lot of frozen meals already made up. All I have to do is stick them in the oven. But side dishes will be a bit trickier.  Breakfasts will be mostly toast or breakfast sandwiches I can cook in the toaster oven.

I’ll have a makeshift kitchen in my studio since I already have a sink there, but I’ll have no access to my real kitchen for a whole week. With a work crew in my house it also means someone needs to stay at home at all times. I might send Greg out for burgers or chicken if things get too chaotic.

It’ll be like home camping, but with more inconvenience. 🙂 I’ll have a better idea of how long I’ll be without my kitchen once the work crew gets here. Things would be a lot easier if I had a microwave or even a hot plate, but we’ll make do.

***

Red Snapper Ponchartrain
I made this dish last Sunday. I wish I had taken a picture of the finished meal but it was so labor intensive, all we wanted to do was eat! But I can report that this fish was absolutely scrumptious. The fish was flake-tender and the light and flavorful sauce was the perfect complement. You just wanted to savor every bite.

It was a lot of work because I had to make a shrimp stock to make the Madeira sauce for the fish, but you couldn’t ask for a more elegant and sublime meal. At one point I think I was using five of the six burners on the stove!

Fortunately, we didn’t use up all the sauce for the fish. I froze what was left over so we can have it again at some later date.

If you ever want to try a really delicious and fancy fish dinner, I highly recommend this recipe.

 

Stretching a Meal

A pint of example is worth a gallon of advice.

One of my sisters once asked me for advice on how I save money on groceries. We compared notes, and she knocked down every one of my ideas. She wasn’t being mean or belligerent. It was more about staying inside the box. There was comfort in what she knew her family (and dog) would eat. She prized convenience more than affordability.

For example she paid an exorbitant amount of money on ‘special’ dog food. The prices she quoted me were obscene. I countered with my own recipe for homemade dog food, but she felt it was too much work.

At the prices she paid, I’d make the time to make dog food. LOL! I’m serious. That was highway robbery.

The same goes for organic products. If you’re struggling to make ends meet, something has to give.  No one is going to die if you switch to less expensive commercial foods. It doesn’t have to be forever. You can always add one organic product back on the menu when times are less lean.

I have the advantage that I grow some of my food, so I know that not only is it organic, but safe. (That’s not always the same thing.)

Since I started menu planning (menus post on Sundays) my food bill has dropped dramatically. I’m making better choices, and I’ve learned to stretch a meal.

A regular rib eye steak can serve two meals, dinner and breakfast. Chicken can last at least three meals or more. Greg gets tired of it the second time around so I’ll freeze a part of it to make a quick chicken salad with the leftovers.

Because my grocery bill has gone down, I don’t feel guilty splurging on shrimp and expensive fish.

Legumes, quinoa, and rice are excellent fillers for lean wallets, and beans and quinoa are a great source of protein too.

Have you ever tried quinoa or barley? They are surprisingly good and filling. Not what I expected at all. And these are ancient grains which means the government has not tampered with them as yet.

Do you need more cheap protein sources? Try eggs, peanut butter, tuna, salmon, and Greek yogurt.

I don’t like peanut butter, but I’ll eat tuna or salmon any day of the week. Avocados are another staple in our house. When Greg wants a peanut butter sandwich, I make myself an avocado sandwich. That’s marital bliss.

There are ways to making things work without spending a fortune. I always recommend that people do a test and save every grocery receipt for a month to see where their money goes. I do it for myself even today because it’s good to have a frame of reference.

Sometimes you don’t realize how far you’ve strayed from the path until you see the numbers in front of you. Other times we prefer to stick to what’s familiar instead of trying to find recipes that use less expensive ingredients.

The other side of the coin is not to beat yourself up if you buy a few convenience foods now and again. We buy those big egg rolls from Costco. Greg makes fantastic homemade egg rolls, but it’s something we have to plan ahead. The ready-made ones are quick and cost effective when you consider the time it takes to make them from scratch.

Do you know what you spend on groceries every month? What’s your favorite way to stretch a meal?

 

Totally Bad, but oh so Good! Caramel Nirvana

 

If you’re on a diet, can’t eat sugar, or hate any kind of happiness, turn away now.

Fair warning. I’m serious. This is evil stuff.

I mean it! This is so delicious, it’s sinful.

Okay. That should’ve scared off all the weenies.

Years ago, before the age of microwaves, my mother used to boil a can of sweetened condensed milk in a big pot of water. You had to let it boil for a couple of hours. (To little children, it felt like DAYS!) Afterward, you couldn’t open the can for many more hours until it had cooled off.

Once cooled, she’d punch a hole in the can with one of those old fashioned can openers that looked like it could take out an eye. With the first tiny hole, a mini lava of caramel spewed from the opening. Our mouths would water and we’d gather like urchins around the most decadent candy the world of man had ever created.

We called it leche quemada. Greg calls it Cow. Don’t ask me why. (It’s an in-family joke.)

Since the Stone Age of my childhood, I’d seen many other ways of cooking it either on a stove top or a slow cooker. But the easiest and quickest way of cooking this is in the microwave.

All hail the MICROWAVE.

Cook time: 2 minutes 30 seconds

cow1,Take a can of sweetened condensed milk. Any brand will do.

Open the can.

Pour the contents into a tall, preferably glcow2ass bowl.

You are allowed to lick off the leftover milk inside the can. When you finish, toss the used spoon in the sink and get a new one.

Okay, now to work.

• Center the bowl of sweetened condensed milk in the microwave. Hopefully you have one with a turntable. Microwave for 1 minute, 10 seconds. Keep watching it to make sure it doesn’t breach the top of the bowl.

The milk will be hot but still liquid. Stir once.

• Microwave for another 1 minute, 20 seconds.

cow, cooked

Notice the froth on the side of the bowl. It falls quickly back to normal.

• This time you must watch it CAREFULLY. The milk will froth and rise. (This is why it’s better to have a clear bowl.)

• Every time the milk rises to the top, stop the microwave. Stir the bowl once. Let it sit for two seconds then restart the machine.

• As the milk gets hotter you will have to stop the microwave every 8-10 seconds, stir once, then restart again.

• After cooking for 2 minutes and 30 seconds, the milk will feel firmer and saucy.

• Let it cool in the fridge. As it cools, it will firm up into a spreadable caramel.

If you didn’t wait until it cooled, thleche quemadae tip of your tongue is burnt right now. (If this is you, remind me not to leave you alone with matches or scissors.)

You can spread the leche quemada on bread or lace it over ice cream, but I eat a couple of naked spoonfuls and fall into a happy sugar coma.

Yes. It’s terribly bad for you. It’s nothing but sugar and milk.

You’re welcome.

 

cow, spoon1

Yes, it’s that good!

Note: If you like a firmer texture like my mom did, you can cook it another minute longer. It’ll have the consistency of soft fudge.

 

 

How to Make Homemade Salsa

 

 

Tomatoes are a staple at our house. I dehydrate some tomatoes for use in pizzas and tomato sauce, but I use them au naturale for salsa.

It’s very easy to make salsa and I’ll show you the way my mom and dad taught me.

 

 

 

You’ll need fresh tomatoes, jalapenos, cilantro, garlic, onion and salt. Gather your ingredients and have them ready for processing so you can dive into your salsa while it’s still nice and warm.

Step 1: Coarsely chop up a medium onion, a handful of cilantro and 3 bulbs of garlic. I like mine garlicky, but you can skip this if you don’t like garlic.

Step 2: Boil your water

Step 3: make an X on each tomato

Step 4: Drop the tomatoes into the boiling water until the skin starts to come off. It won’t take long. You can roast the tomatoes too if you prefer.

.Step 5: Roast your peppers by blistering the skin of the pepper on an open flame. This is very fast and easy.

Step 6: Get your tomatoes out of hot water and carefully pull off the skin.

Step 7: Do the same with the peppers. I like to scrape the blistered skin off with a sharp knife.

Step 7.5: ALWAYS wear rubber gloves. There’s nothing worse than accidentally touching your eye after you’ve been seeding peppers.

.

Step 8: Add as many (or as few) pepper seeds as you can handle.  Jalapeno is traditional in American recipes, but I think serrano peppers are tastier.  It’s also a bit hotter.

Step 9: Toss a handful of each ingredient into your blender or food processor. I like mine kind of chunky, but blend it to the consistency you prefer. Salt to taste.

Step 10: Keep repeating until you’ve finished using up all your ingredients.

 

 

 

Ta Da! Salsa.

Have some chips nearby. Salsa is best while it’s still warm.

 

 

 

 

Some people like lime juice in their salsa, but that reminds me too much of store-bought salsa. You can always add the lime if you prefer it that way, but try it naked first. (the salsa, not you.)

Have you ever made your own salsa? Do you like it spicy or mild?

 

Note: Long time readers might remember this post from many years ago on my old blog. You’re not going crazy. I’m just recycling. 🙂

 

How to Pick a Good Watermelon

We thump the watermelon first, but looking for the buttery yellow underside is a better indicator for ripeness.

There’s a prevailing old wives’ tale that finding ‘bee stings’ will insure a sweet melon. Bee stings are the long thin rows of brown spots. It look like something stung the watermelon in a long straight row.

While bees/wasps do look for sweet things, they’re not going to use their stingers to extract the sugar–not that it could penetrate the rind anyway.

That aside, I can anecdotally attest that melons with a row of ‘bee stings’ have in fact been sweeter for us. Is the old wives’ tale true? Who knows? But I’m going to keep picking melons with the telltale brown sting marks.

Have you heard of picking watermelons via the bee sting test? What do you do to see if a melon is ripe?

Is there anyone out there who doesn’t like watermelon? If so, what planet are you from? 🙂

 

Try an Ethnic Grocery Store

My friend, Mel has been bugging me to check out a giant Korean grocery store that she frequents. It’s an hour’s drive from me but one day we decided to make a day of it and see what all the fuss was about.

I am no great chef, but I love Asian-inspired food. Occasionally, I get adventurous and try a few recipes. The thing about Asian food though is you really need the special ingredients like fish and oyster sauces, Jasmine and sushi rices, and the wonderful exotic veggies to get the flavor right.

We were totally hooked once we entered the store. It’s called H Mart (who knows why), but it’s got everything you need and all the stuff you didn’t know you needed. They had fresh and dried fish, squid, octopi, and all manner of seafood I never knew existed. There were also some unappetizing items like pork blood and giant live clams that looked like something Godzilla coughed up.

The exotic fruits and vegetables were my favorites. Luckily, they were giving away samples. I tried a small melon with flesh as sweet as an apple but soft as a peach. I forgot the name but I took one home along with the biggest grapes I’ve ever seen.

hmart

We bought some hot mustard powder for the next time we have egg rolls, a chili garlic paste that looked promising, and adzuki and mung beans which I hope I can sprout.

It’s a shame H Mart is so far, but at least now I know where to go when I’m hunting for exotic spices, mushrooms, or fish.

A lot of people don’t realize this, but ethnic grocery stores tend to have cheaper prices than the same items bought in a non-ethnic store. The only bad thing about H Mart is that nearly everything was in Korean, though sometimes it had a few words of English so you knew what you were buying.

It was great fun just to stroll the aisles. I know we’ll be going back.

We got hungry while we were there so we tried out their restaurant. Wow! Aside from the fact that it was complicated to actually get your food–everything was delicious.  You ordered from one location but to get your food you had to find it from among several kitchens. (Sorry I didn’t snap a picture, but all thoughts of photography fled when we saw our food.)

Do you like Asian food? What’s your favorite dish? Mongolian beef is the current reigning favorite.

Have you ever tried an ethnic grocery store?

 

Meal Planning Without The Drama

 

chef w menu1I put off meal planning for a long, long time. Looking back, I could kick myself. Not only have I saved money by meal planning but our squabbles over what to eat disappeared almost overnight.

I know now what kept me from actually setting this up was the preliminary work involved, but it turned out it wasn’t as tedious as I expected.

First steps:

• Make a list of all your favorite meals. Include restaurant meals. Yes. Include them. You’ll see why.

• Get input from the family by asking them to give you a list of their favorite meals.

• Sort the list of meals by Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner.

Now that you have your list sorted by meals there are secondary things to take into account. This is why I only plan meals a week ahead of time. Your mileage may vary if you’re more organized.

Once a week I look at what’s on sale, what’s in my freezer, what’s in my pantry, and what’s ready to pick in the garden. I take into account what activities we have planned for that week. I also look at the weather forecast for the week.

If I know we’ll be busy, I plan for quick meals, maybe even pre-made freezer meals so all I have to do is toss it in the oven.

If the weather is sunny and warm, there might be more sandwiches and salads. If it’s cool or rainy, I’ll plan for more soups and casseroles–comfort food.

What makes meal planning tricky is not the work involved, but the strategy. Like a military campaign, you’re looking at supplies, morale, weather, and events. But once you have a master list of favorite foods, you can place them in here and there, slipping in a few  vegetarian meals, and one special restaurant style meal on occasion.

Speaking of restaurant meals…

One of the drawbacks about eating at home is that you eat at home. 🙂 What makes restaurant dining special? It’s usually a meal you wouldn’t make at home. It is for us anyway. I found that if I included a meal I wouldn’t typically make at home, it becomes extra special.

For instance, we love Mongolian Beef. It took several tries before I found a recipe that was similar to what we had at the restaurant. Greg comes running to the table when it’s on the menu. By the way, this is the recipe I use for Mongolian Beef. It is heavenly!

It’s all about mixing and matching between easy, healthy, favorite, and special. If I can include at least one of each every week, I get no complaints. Not that I accept complaints. The cook always has the final word. 🙂

Do you decide what’s on the menu or is it a free for all at your house?

 

This Week’s Menu, April 17, 2016

Modern studio background, sepia look

Menu for the week of April 17, 2016

Sunday
Breakfast: Pancakes
Lunch:  Salad and leftovers from last week
Dinner:  Mongolian Beef

Monday
Breakfast:  Leftover pancakes
Lunch:  Lunch out (a friend invited us for a visit)
Dinner: Pork fajitas with guacamole and pico de gallo (I’m pressure cooking a pork shoulder. This is the first use of that meat.)

Tuesday
Breakfast:  Bacon and eggs
Lunch:  Pulled pork gyro with homemade tzatziki sauce (I’m using this recipe.)
Dinner: Meatloaf

Wednesday
Breakfast: Cheese quesadillas
Lunch: BBQ pork sandwiches (3rd use of pork shoulder.)
Dinner: Shrimp with spinach and orzo

Thursday
Breakfast: Asparagus omelet
Lunch: Tuna fish sandwiches
Dinner: Meatloaf leftovers

Friday
Breakfast:  Eggs with the (next to) last of the pulled pork
Lunch:  Salad
Dinner:  Potluck soup from the garden. (I have lots of greens and asparagus that can go into soup. Any pork leftover can go in too.)

Saturday
Breakfast:  Breakfast out (We almost always have breakfast out if we’re hunting garage sales.)
Lunch:  Potluck soup leftovers
Dinner: Pizza

This week we’ll start eating more from the garden. Spinach, Swiss chard, snow peas, carrots, and asparagus are coming in fast and heavy so I want to incorporate them in all our meals. The asparagus bed produces enough spears for an entire meal a day. I freeze them immediately if I don’t plan to use them that day. Asparagus can go limp quickly if it’s not chilled or standing in ice water.

Do you like asparagus? Is there any vegetable you won’t eat? I try beets from time to time but I haven’t liked them yet. I’m not fond of sweet potatoes either. Greg loves sweet potatoes though so I grow them for him and the dogs.

Vietnamese Spring Rolls for a Light Lunch or Appetizer

 

Betty had asked how I make spring rolls so I thought I’d take a photo opp to show you how I make mine.

We love spring rolls because there are no hard and fast rules on what to stuff in the wrapper. You do need the rice skin wrapper. I’m not a purist on this so I buy the wrappers pre-made. Almost any grocery store with an ethnic food aisle will carry them.

There are two things to remember before you start.

• Have your fillings already cooked, cut to size, and cooled.

• Have your dipping sauces already made.

The process goes so fast you won’t have time to do these things later.

Fillings: You can do almost anything, just make sure it’s prepped ahead of time.

Choose your protein
• Shrimp
• Pork
• Chicken
• Tofu

Choose your veggies
• Lettuce
• Cabbage
• Spinach
• Julienne carrots
• Snow peas
• Green onions
• Julienne cucumber
• Avocado

Choose your aromatics
• Mint
• Cilantro
• Thai basil

Choose your starch
• Sticky white rice
• Rice Vermicelli
• Soba noodles

I like mine with rice vermicelli, cilantro, shrimp, lettuce, green onions, cucumber, and avocado.

Line up your fillings in order. In a large bowl of warm water, dunk your wrapper, flipping it to either side. It only takes a couple of seconds. Don’t let it linger too long in water or you’ll end up with a gooey mess.

It should still be firm enough to handle when you lay it out flat. It’ll continue to soften so work quickly, layering your ingredients. I start with the lettuce or spinach as a base, then the vermicelli, the other veggies, then top it with shrimp.

Fold it into a burrito shape. The wrapper, still moist will glue to itself.

That’s it. Eat and enjoy with hoisin sauce, plum sauce, or a fish sauce mixture that I personally love. For detailed instructions on the sauces, I follow this recipe.

Mine are never as pretty as the ones done by professional cooks, but they’re just as tasty. Just remember to have everything prepped before you start building your rolls.

When I made these last, I had run out of cilantro and my avocado wasn’t soft enough yet. I really missed them, so I made up for it with extra shrimp. 😀 Just pick the ingredients you love best already sliced and diced and ready to roll.

Have you ever tried Vietnamese spring rolls?