So...whats for dinner?
Comments
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Moon - I sure can't judge. I use the real butter with my StoveTop stuffing & have a hard time not scarfing it all up. When I want to go upscale I use Pepperidge Farm Herb Stuffing. I even add celery & onion & more sage. I do remember tearing up bread crumbs from the time I was probably 6 years old and making the "real" stuffing. I do live in the South, but since i was raised in CA we didn't have cornbread dressing. Mother always asked everyone who was away from home to eat in addition to the large extended family, and usually cooked a 25 lb turkey. But for one person, such a production seems excessive.
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I tried this recipe tonight, and I think this is a keeper. I made a half recipe. The hardest part was getting the cast iron pan to the right temp.... hotter than I expected.
http://www.seriouseats.com/recipes/2011/04/extra-f...
*susan*
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susan - that looks so fun but I can see why it took some time. I'm definitely trying this - thanks!
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Making preserved lemons and pickled beets today and enjoying a day of sunshine.
Tonight is "Not Texas" chili with black beans. DH's request, of course. I got some hot chili powder at my favorite spice shop and am anxious to try it.
Lacey, I hope today finds you feeling better.
Susan, thanks for the scallion pancake recipe. I'll have to try this one.
Hope everyone has a lovely weekend.
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Lacey, hoping you're already feeling better...
A chicken is thawing out and I'm going to be looking through some of the less used cookbooks from the collection for some ideas...in other words, the family is going to be a part of a "lab experiment" tonight. :-)
The other thing I am going to do is to run some sweet potatoes through the french fry cutter and bake them like cookies.
As for other stuff, I've got some more bread rising (sourdough, of course) and I'm going to be on a car oil changing marathon today...typical American...seven cars and three licensed drivers... :-) One of the cars also needs shock absorbers, so I'll be doing that today too. I figure it'll be about 3 hours to get it all done. With three oil drain pans...just line them up and do them three at a time.
And tomorrow..........I'm taking a knife sharpening class. I can kind of keep the knives sharp, but the new ones that I bought in May deserve more than "kinda sharp".
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Well, I went online to find us someone to make our dinner, serve us on real plates, and then do the dishes, and gosh.... there isn't a table to be had before 8:30. Our "cheapo" standbys are Mexican and Chinese places, which I have made for us in the past two days. As much as I didn't want to make dinner tonight, I will make a soup from the lovely roasted chicken stock I made yesterday.
Today is a heavy kitchen day. Time to process all the green tomatoes into a relish, and I have all those chicken parts for soup stock. We ended up with 12lbs of green tomatoes. That is a lot of slicing..... I need some motown or something lively to keep me going.
*susan*
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You need to get Edward Scissorhands in there to help with the tomato work......
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Susan, too bad a mandoline doesn't work so well on tomatoes.
Ok Kitchen Divas (including you Eric), I need your advice. Here is a picture of my core cooking pans.

This is by no means everything (don't judge) as I have left out the specialty pans -- 4 sizes of cast iron skillets, 3 stock pots, 3 sizes of dutch ovens, a windsor pan and a wok. (There are probably others I missed lol) Believe it or not, I use them all. But I am considering adding a 3 qt. saucier. If you're not familiar, it looks like this:
http://www.williams-sonoma.com/products/all-clad-d...
My question is do any of you have one and is it worth adding to my arsenal? They vary in price from very expensive (all clad) to not so much (caphalon). The caphalon has a cheesy handle and with my crappy hands I'm not sure that's a good idea. Anyway, I appreciate your advice/input.
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The all-clad is a very nice saucier to be sure! I have a 1 quart which is a bit too small for my burners. The center of gravity is wrong, and it falls over. But, I still use it and just know I have to be careful about placement. Personally, I think you would love it. And I would splurge on the all-clad if you can afford it. One never regrets buying good pans. For some reason, I have never cared for the feel of the Calphalon.
*susan*
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Thanks for all the well wishes...taking it easy on the tum today, and hopefully I'll be back to normal quickly. I'm thinking that I may have poisoned myself with eating some almond butter I brought home from the NH house that DDIL had used for the kids in the summer. Who knows what was lingering in that opened jar.....
Moon, no judgement from this end either!

Susan, love the sound of those scallion pancakes....enjoyed DD's pic on Facebook. Sorry you can't get a good reservation for tonight. We had the same problem with TK for last night (DS2 called earlier in the week), but he decided he'd used his business connection with them to get one...which he rarely does. That's why I waited so long to bag out. Next time we will have to plan well in advance, since I would not want him to do that again.
Nance....love your arsenal of pan! I like the one you are considering....maybe you can ask for it as a combo gift from family members (like all those folks for whom you cook marvelous meals), so you can get the All Clad one? Are you going for the largest size. It reminds me of the pan our Italian chef used to mix the pasta in....yes, he insisted you should mix the pasta and sauce in the pan before serving!
Okay, DH took off (at my insistence) for the UMASS game where DD2 and his alum friends are tailgaiting (he is obviously starving!), so after I do my treadmill, I promise I will get on my computer and do a bit of Tuscany food posting.....
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Making burgers and fries (baked, not deep fried) for dinner!
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I agree about splurging on good pans, but there are some middle alternatives such as this one:
http://www.webstaurantstore.com/vollrath-77792-tri...
In fact, I only have one All Clad pan, which I love, but most of my stainless pans are Tramontina tri-plys, and I have been very very happy with them. Lacey, I'm looking at the 3 qt. I think the 4 qt would be way more than I need.
As I was looking through my pictures I came across this and don't think I showed you all my completed baking center (if I did, my apologies):

I love it so much I can't stay away from it. Bad for the waistline :-(
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Lacey, hope you feel better soon. My favorite way to eat Pumpkin or Butternut squash Ravioli is just drenched in in a browned butter with some fresh sage..... Sinfully good.Debating on either making some Sloppy Joe's or getting Chinese carryout. Looks like a rain storm (again) is moving in, so if I can get to the store for some Ridged Potato chips to go with my sloppy joe, I may be in business. I was doing so good last week on Weight watchers, but only dropped a pound. Oodles of activity points and barely touched my bonus points.....Pretty disgusted by the scale. Now I have rebelled ever since weigh in on Wednesday, partly because I felt like it, and then partly because my dad was having health issues and then my best buddy landed in the hospital overnight with an unknown cardiac issue, so it was Fast food/pizza at night cause I didn't get much breakfast or lunch......I just hate when that happens. I wanted to be even more skinny by my Onc appointment Nov. 24th....
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Red, the ravioli sounds delish.
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Nancy, love your baking center!!! Yes, I would be a serial user of that too!
So off I went to my treadmill, and proceeded to drop my iPad on the cement cellar floor. Oy! Am hoping that duct tape will secure the splintered corner of glass until DH does the same to his and we bite the bullet for new ones. No All Clad pot for me......
I have in the past made the mistake of getting a too big pot, then hardly use it. So I agree to go with the three quart if you think that will work. Need to look at the link to see the other one.
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Nance - your baking center is gorgeous. How fun to have a dedicated area. It really turned out well. Thanks for sharing.
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I found a leek! So tonight's dinner was leek and potato soup with some sausage. As much as I would have enjoyed someone else doing the cooking, this was a really satisfying meal.
I have recently purchased a replacement blade for my x-slicer and it made short work of the tomatoes and onions for the relish. The mixture started as 7 quarts and it is now down to 6. Tomorrow I will cook it with the vinegar and brown sugar for a few hours and then do some canning. The Asian chicken stock is done, all strained. The Western stock is still simmering away. Won't be ready to strain until about 10pm. Will be another late night.
I love the baking station! I don't bake enough to allocate that much space. Well, I don't know that I have enough room to allocate any room to anything! I am forever re-setting up areas to accommodate that day's tasks.
With such a big cooking day, I am behind on the coding. So off I go.
*susan*
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When I bought the hot chili powder at my spice shop I also got some smoky chili powder. I used half and half in the chili. Wow, good stuff! The smoky flavor really came through. I'll be using more of this stuff. Chili powder sometimes tastes "dusty" to me, but this has none of that.
My next spice frolic is going to be with harissa.
Susan, you must have had a lot of raw (chicken) material for all that stock.
Lacey, ouch on the ipad, Yike!
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Minus, how was the new cafe?
Monica, DH loves stovetop. I'm not much of a stuffing person so it's easy to make him happy with a box lol!
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The new restaurant was excellent. Basically Mediterranean food - definite Persian leanings. Everything on the menu was way too much food - especially for lunch. I ended up w/a mushroom swiss burger on a cross between Ciabatta & flatabread w/special spices added to the meat and fresh fruit on the side. Excellent but too big to finish. My SIL had a beef tenderloin salad and it would have served 3 people. We'll have to figure out how to be more hungry - New Zealand lamb chops, Cornish Hens, mango stuffed chicken, Kufta kabobs, Shish Tawook, amazing appetizers, and on & on.
Then we went to a Mercury Baroque concert. A little Handel, a little Vivaldi, a little Telemann and a lovely Geminiani to wrap it up. The last was new to me. Apparently 30 years younger than Corelli. I SO love this small group. I'm never sure if the conductor is going to dance or cry or both as he leads, but I love to watch him & all the other players who are on the same fresh page w/period instruments.
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Minus, what a lovely afternoon! And while it sounded like (maybe) too much food....how delicious!
Okay, the iPad has some special thin duct tape holding it together, and so far I will manage. Now I will get to the computer.....
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My complaint with Stovetop is the sodium. Even the reduced sodium is salty. I think if you added an equal amount of bread cubes and increased the liquid, there would be plenty of salt and herbs for flavoring.
Tonight's dinner was a perfectly cooked ribeye and a perfectly baked russet potato. An abundance of perfection! And so simple and satisfying. DH and I shared the steak and one potato so there's a leftover potato for home-fries.
I also cooked a lb of pinto beans that had soaked overnight and made a pot of chili for noon dinner tomorrow at my mother's house. I used ground chuck. Two lbs. cost $10. But there's no inflation, we're told. I did find the wieners on sale and the buns.
Lacey, I would have had to study that menu at TK for a couple of hours! Hope you're feeling good by now.
The scallion pancakes look like little pizzas. Very appetizing in the photo.
I ordered some plastic freezer containers tonight from Amazon. Some in 8 oz. capacity and some in 16 oz. When they arrive, I'll be ready to make chicken stock. In the past I've frozen my stock in larger containers and not wanted to thaw it when I needed a smaller amount.
I also ordered some saffron. I've never cooked with it before because I thought it was too pricey.
Nance, I'm glad you mentioned the preserved lemons. That's on my to-do list
A few herbs survived the summer in the pots on the patio. One leggy basil, oregano, mint, one chive plant and a sage plant. The rosemary shrub that has survived 8 to 10 years nearly expired but it has some green tendrils. I pruned it and am hoping it revives.
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Oh...dinner...so DH got home from the football game around 7pm and I thought he might have had his fill of food, but as Mercury Retrograde would have it, the fellow alum of DS2 who was bringing the grill, showed up later than was workable (they have a baby!), so DS2s turkey tips never got grilled, and DH subsisted on dip and chips and the store bought macaroon cookies he brought. So he was hungry...and willing to pick up take out from our favorite local Greek place. I love restaurant consistency, and this place has it!
We had two separate kebab dishes...a shrimp one, and a combo chicken and lamb one (much better value). Both come with Greek salad and two vegetable sides...we always order a double portion of winter squash...delish. I was actually pretty hungry after yesterday, so it tasted extra good...and hopefully all will be fine.

Off to the computer....seriously!
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The iPad's injuries are very sad... very sad indeed.
Yes. We had a lot of chicken parts.... my poultry store sells bags of backs and necks. But Mr. 02143 went this week and they had WINGS!!! He didn't reduce the number of backs and necks, but did buy bags of the wings. We have 5 litres of Western stock and 3 of the Asian. Soup will be enjoyed! Can't let it languish in the freezer since the lamb will arrive any day now.
*susan*
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I've never had much need for a saucier. So far I've always been able to manage with a sauce pan and a smaller than normal whisk to reach into the corner of the pan. For what it's worth, my sauce pans (have 3 or 4 different sizes) are midway between "junk" and "do I really want to pay that much". The have the stainless, aluminum, stainless sandwich only on the bottom and plain stainless steel on the sides. Using it on my electric stove I've never noticed any "it got overdone" on the sides. I bought them more because of the *EXCELLENT* handle than anything else.
I love the baking center. What material is the work area? If I ever get a house where I'm either remodeling it, or getting one "built from scratch", I'd have a nice baking area as I love to do all sorts of baking....and I'd probably weight 300 pounds.
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Eric -- it's granite. I also have a marble pastry slab.
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... continued on Oct 18th
So here I am finally…have this little problem with my
computer..... when I finally pay attention to it, it does this passive aggressive
thing with needing to update all sorts of stuff so I have to wait a very long
time to use it. DH always reminds me to keep it updated, but after all I am not
a techie and have a special relationship with my poor injured iPad, so tend to
ignore the big guy.
But actually I do love having a real keyboard to work
with…readers beware!So my last installment did not include a funny
happening at our Rome hotel. When we arrived there I was incredibly parched and
the kind lady at the desk offered to get me some water. She kept asking me “gas”? “Gas”? “Gas”? I had no idea what she was talking about, then, but in our house now, we consistently use that term when
offering each other either flat tap water or seltzer. Very funny happening! Once
again, I should have looked at the tourist books!So, Monday was the day for our cooking course…
We travelled down the hill, made our way by highway to an area on Lucca's outskirts, (as you will see later, we should have dropped pieces of bread:). Here is what we made:
Chef Monti was an affable and talented guy who ran a
good class. Anyone who gets DH cooking happily and confidently gets lots of
credit!DH starting to cook his fresh cherry tomato sauce
DH helping me by stripping some herbs for my sauce
Mixing bruschetta ingredients
In the course, we met some lovely young couples, two from
Australia, one from UK, and amazingly, a duo of female friends who live in NJ
and FL, but were raised at Newfound Lake! They both have houses there, near our
lake house. What were the chances of that??!! So hopefully we can rendezvous
next summer and make a great Italian meal. They were taking a week of Chef
Monti’s classes, so they should be quite the Italian cooks by now!After cooking, we enjoyed all of our sauces on pasta and meat creations, and
I thought that the food was some of the best we had during our trip…lots of
pasta…but also, chicken cacciatore and a lemon sauced pork tenderloin. I have to say that my favorite part of the meal (aside from learning about olive oil and pasta flour) was the delectable Tiramisu
we made. I will never be satisfied with a restaurant version again.We left Chef Monti’s feeling like stuffed pigs! Cannot
see how my next door neighbors here ever did a whole week of cooking classes in Umbria.
They said it was almost unbearable. Another note to self…no whole week cooking courses…anywhere!To close out this little missive, I have to let you know
that if you are ever driving in Tuscany (or probably anywhere in Italy) DO NOT
USE Garmin to guide you (even with the European program which we arranged before
we left)!! We were taken over two mountains on the most obscure, almost
non-existent roads to get back to our remote village. Oy! Not sure why we could
not be taken back the way we came on the highway! Have to say it was at once stunningly beautiful,
(observing all the villages in the valleys), and terrifying since I had no idea where
we would end up, and DH got to enjoy the views as I was trying to make sure we
didn’t drive off a cliff...a distinct possibility.The highway was clearly somewhere down below! This was a lower part of the mountain.
Home again, home again jiggity jig! (Pariana)
Amazingly enough we landed in Pescia, two towns away from Pariana, which was a relief since we were trying to get back in time
to meet our friend from Paris who we’d hoped to shepherd up our own treacherous
hill. Well, he didn't show and then we made it back to our villa and he was nowhere to be found, with no cell contact. A few hours later, he slowly drove into the village. It made me almost
believe in divine providence since this man has terrible vision and often enjoys his wine after a flight. He later told us he had no idea how to drive the car he had rented!!!. Lordy! I have never felt so relieved to see someone!Travelogue to be continued another day....
It has been quite the feat to get these photos included...I will not worry about their size. But at least now I know how to do it thanks to in-house tech support!
Tomorrow we are headed to the Head of the Charles (River) Crew
Races with DH’s niece from Cali who now attends college nearby. Her mom is here
from San Diego for Parents’ Weekend so it will be fun to see both of them. We’ll
most likely take them to lunch in Harvard Sq. before her mom leaves. Feeling
good since dinner, so expect my stomach to hold up…:) -
Just lovely Lacey and sounds like so much fun and adventure! And by the way dahling, you look mahvelous!
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granite...thanks....
Lacey...great pictures.....more stories, more pictures...more, more, more.. :-)
Susan, when I have a bunch of stock to store and no freezer space, I drag out the pressure canner and the kerosene stove. Even though it's a bit of a hassle, it beats throwing out the carcass and having to use the chicken flavored salt from the store.
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Good cookware is essential in cooking! I'm glad I have the Emeril cookware, I love it!
Anywho, I'm making chili in the crockpot!
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