So...whats for dinner?
Comments
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I did chorizo, bacon, eggs and hash browns tonight.
The meeting went well with the lawyer but the need to step in because mom is needing help....left me kind of sad. I just wish she was still like she was 15-20 years ago. Getting everything straightened out is not going to be cheap, but I've found engaging an attorney is like engaging an engineer...they're worth every penny!
Susan, the companion site for care.com is what I had been looking at. The attorney suggested that same company, as well as one other one. Once the signature stuff is straightened out, I'll call them.
DD turned 18 this past weekend! :-) I have no clue where the time went. I can still remember her laying in the plastic basket on the weight scale in the labor-delivery room, marveling that her cries sounded like a small cat making annoyed meows...torn between looking at our little daughter and my wife. That was an absolutely amazing day that I hope (considering what I was doing today, I'll say hope) I never forget.
Auntie, I've never used a pressure cooker for making broth/stock...I've got a 21 quart pressure canner/cooker that would handle a big turkey, so it's not like I have "the carcass is too big" excuse. I guess I don't mind the letting the bones simmer over night. I do, however, can the broth. DD has found that rice made with broth is much better tasting that rice made with water, so she's been using the dozen jars I had "put up".
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Well I had breakfast for lunch and leftovers for dinner. I bought some stuffed sole for dinner tomorrow. I would have cooked them today but had to eat the leftover stuff. Also bought some fresh polish at Sendicks to see if it's better than the Fox Brother ones. I have some cabbage I might cook with the potatoes to go with that. Or maybe I'll save that for the smoked sausage. LOL I have that frozen.
It was below 0 this morning but is supposed to warm up tomorrow. Our news in WI was focused on the Frost Quake heard in 3 or 4 counties. It's when the ground freezes hard fast and cracks the rocks below the earth. Read earth shaking and loud booms. Scared many people. And I've never even heard of that before. Frost heaves, but not quakes. Learn something new every day.
Oh Chisandy, it only takes about 20 minutes to get to Brown Deer. Sounds like you know Milwaukee. I'm about a half hour north of there. And yes, I'm showing my Midwest accent in using time to delineate the distance. LOL. For that, read 30 miles north of MKE. LOL
Much love to all
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The risotto in the pc was really good. Nice and creamy and easy peasy. I'll probably eat more of it now.
Eric, I'm putting the new machine through its paces to see what works and what doesn't. So far, everything I've tried has worked wonderfully. I love the set it and forget it features. But I especially love the taste of things. It extracts so much flavor. The next test will be something like chili.
I don't know what it is with kids. You blink and they're grown.
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Monica, I have NO idea what the actual distance is as the crow flies between here and various suburbs--I, too, measure distances by time!
luvmygoats, you might not want to read further.
Bob (DH) stayed at the Hilton Garden Inn at Midway last night--the snow on the S. Side was SO bad that not only couldn't he make it home from his office, he couldn't even get down to the Oak Lawn Hilton (he had to read echoes at Christ Hosp. early this a.m.) because Cicero Ave. hadn't been plowed or salted. Streets & San. was well-prepared for Sat.'s slush-storm, but last night caught them by surprise. Because he got an early start this morning, he wanted to go out to dinner tonight--and asked me to get a res. at Girl & the Goat. Best I could do was 9:30. Because I am no longer drinking enough to require an Uber or a cab, I drove. Now, these dishes sound bizarre (well, not the first course or dessert), but they were AWESOME.
We started with wood-roasted oysters in bacon cream. Next was duck tongues (!) with cracklings, tuna poke & arugula. Then roasted pig face (!!) atop veggie hash, topped with a sunny-side up egg. Next, confit of goat belly with lobster, crabmeat, crispy vermicelli, edamame & black beans in a bourbon cream sauce. Dessert was “blood orange surprise:" a frosted half-dome of orange cake infused with blood orange syrup, accompanied by a Greek yogurt mousse studded with chunks of blood orange and candied pistachios. I nursed an Italian brut rose sparkler all evening; Bob had a “Doctor's Choice" (bourbon, vermouth & ginger beer), a Rioja, and finished with an Uruguayan dessert wine (very ruby-port-like but much smoother). Coffee was Dark Matter's “Goat's Head" (they're a local roaster whose espresso beans I sometimes buy).
We were easily the oldest folks in the place--it was full of hipster foodies (as well as probably a lot of bond-traders-by-day who'd changed into comfort clothes after work)--at 10:30 all the young'uns deserted the place, probably to get home in time to make it to their jobs on LaSalle St. at 0-dark-30 tomorrow. The music playing was eclectic rock & melodic hip-hop--but half the songs were older than most of the patrons! We didn't bring home leftovers. But we'll definitely go back. (The secret is to go at off-hours on a weeknight).
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Girl and Goat is Stephanie Izzard's place right? You lucky lady. I bet bad weather helps get in too. LOL
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Yup, Monica--Stephanie Izard is the chef-owner. Had we been unable to get in, we’d have tried its sister place, Little Goat Diner, across the street. Despite it being the coldest night of the year, it was packed and we had to wait 15 min. for our table.
I’ll be in London for 3 days at the end of March (then Lausanne & Paris). While in London, I’d love to try Fergus Henderson’s all-offal restaurant.
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Question for those of you that might be taking Effexor----is there a bad effect wit h it if you have a glass of wine or a mixed drink? It says not to drink, but I plan on taking it in the a.m. (the drug) I swear, after reading up on it, I am tempted to not try it.....ONC gave it to me for depression but because of my aversion to drugs, he is only having me start with the 37.5 mg ONCE a day for depression. Looking on line, it looks like the basic dose for it to help is double that.......
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Tonight we had the pancakes and bacon!
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Red, I take that same dose for hot flashes. It's considered a non therapeutic dose for everything else. I doubt that one glass of wine would hurt you especially if you take the effexor in the morning. At least I've never noticed anything weird with it, but I don't drink much. Be careful not to miss doses or you'll notice it even at that low dose.
Today I was grinding meat for sausage and decided to do an oldie but goodie -- Swedish meatballs with fresh egg noodles and steamed broccoli with lemon butter.
I hear snow melting. Hooray!
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Last night I made some of my Merguez sausage [found another bag in the magic freezer, YAY!] with a tomato sauce, and saffron bulgar. Tonight was fried chicken, vinegar cole slaw and biscuits. I bought a new biscuit cutter, and damn, if those biscuits didn't rise and get fluffy. Way more than usual. Very enjoyable. Oncologist in the AM, then off to pick up C in NH. We might just go out to dinner tomorrow night.
I would love to go to Chef Izzard's restaurants, but have passed on Henderson's in London.
*susan*
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Took the path of least resistance--no, didn’t boil up some pasta or order out for pizza. Chopped up some tricolor peppers and red onion, mixed it with half a can of corned beef hash, fried it and then topped it with a sunny-side up Amish farm egg. Sipping seltzer with a squeeze of lime right now. May go nuts (literally) later and have some almonds and a square of ultra-dark chocolate for dessert. (Maybe a decaf espresso too).
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Dinner was poached wild caught sockeye salmon and some long grain & wild rice. Dessert will be another of those truffles from Harry & David. Yup - I've managed to stay with my plan to limit myself to only one each night.
Monday I went with a friend to Capital Grille. I know it's all over the country, but we wanted to check it out as a lunch venue since it seems most of them aren't open for lunch. They have "winter lunch plates" for $18.00. She had Tenderloin sliders & a field greens salad. I had grilled shrimp w/creamy risotto and clam chowder. HUGE portions. Both meals were good & the bread was excellent. While we probably won't go again anytime soon, it's another venue that my ex-DH will like, so I'll let him take me there. The only problem was I gained 3 lbs. - no kidding - literally. Eeek,
Tomorrow I'm meeting another friend at La Madelaine's. I'll have to decide whether to have the French Onion or the Mushroom soup, and the quiche or salad. Again, wonderful French bread, which I'll probably pig out on and skip the pastries.
All of your meals sound wonderful. Eric - congrats on your DD's birthday. I loved reading your memory of laying her in the scale. Susan - good luck at the oncologist. I'm sending you energy for the rest of your cousin's vacation.
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OK, I have decided to dive in and post my solo cooking......Dinner tonight was 10 jumbo shrimp in a kale salad with tomatoes. Whole grain roll. Desert was 4 dark chocolate covered walnuts.
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Minus, I don't think we have Capital Grill.
Tonight we had leftover chicken. Yesterday I butterflied a whole chicken and cooked it following the recipe for Braised Chicken Thighs with Lemon and Olives from the NYT newsletter. Last night we ate the legs and the breast was left over. Tonight we also had creamed spinach and a salad. The spinach was a microwave in the bag and was quite good. I was surprised.
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We had both children's high school grad dinners at Capital Grille - our son's at the Tyson's location in Virginia, our daughter's at the location here in Tampa. Dinner tonight was stew beef cooked in the oven with tomatoes and onions, corn pudding, and a romaine salad with feta dressing and avocado. I needed something I could set and forget because just before dinner time I had a dozen neighbors in my back yard watching DD do an interactive dog training video for submission for a job. Neighbors were the "audience" and we appreciated their willingness to get involved - we live in a great 'hood!
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gotta make something quick for tonight, have to be somewhere that I really don't want to go to
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We have Capital Grille here but I don’t go--not because of the price but because it’s a Darden Group restaurant (same group as Olive Garden & Red Lobster). Darden is notorious for maltreating its employees (read “Behind the Kitchen Door”) with stingy-to-nonexistent sick leave, tip theft, wage theft, disregard for even tipped-minimum-wage regs, etc. For steak, I either grill my own, go local (neighborhood restaurants or Pete Miller’s in Evanston), Mon Ami Gabi (can get spinach instead of the usual frites), or the Palm, where we rack up points. (Pricey, but I get 3-4 meals out of a steak from there). May try RPM for my birthday (#65) a week from Sat., since we’re Lettuce Entertain You members. Best restaurant in Chicago I’ve tried (not counting Charlie Trotter’s--RIP, Charlie) is Sixteen--but since it’s in the Trump Tower and part of the Trump Hotel, no way I’m ever setting foot in there again. Seven years after eating there I still feel dirty.
After my LE therapy session, I may stop at Davis St. Fishmarket--or see what seafood Whole Paycheck has on sale. (In a tiger-prawn or diver-scallop mood). Unless the weather stays clear, in which case I’ll take out a steak from the freezer and fire up the grill.....because I can. (Wintry mix tomorrow, Chiberia this weekend).
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chisandy - I haven't been to Capital grille for about 10 years - I can't tolerate aged beef - from any restaurant. With the info in your post I would avoid it for both reasons.
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Now me I'd go to both Red Lobster and Olive Garden. Love the food at both of these places. Another place I recommend if you get the chance to go to and if you have one close by is Texas Roadhouse. Their food is to die for, especially the rolls!
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Sounds like all are eating some interesting (ChiSandy!) and hearty meals. Sunshine, your recent meal is right up my alley!
Minus I admire your restraint with the truffles.

Nance, I love the post snow wildlife reports. We've had two recent installments of snow, so I am enjoying the sweet animal tracks in the backyard....have seen no owls, however. I feel badly for the birds who still show up at the birdbaths just to find blocks of ice where they had been frolicking in relatively warm water until two weeks ago with our unseasonably warm weather. I wonder about a heated birdbath....but if it exists, would the little "guys" find themselves with frozen wings after enjoying a bath?
So, we had our small dinner party on Tuesday which just proved to me that I definitely inherited my mother's gene for doing everything the hard way. I ended up making chicken roll ups with a greek style stuffing (layers of spinach, feta, pimento, and black olives); couscous with diced onion, zucchini and yellow peppers; buttery, minted baby carrots, Greek salad, and no faux French bread since I ran out of time. But I guess since we were heavily involved in the Greek theme, there was no necessity to confuse people!
For apps we had assorted cheeses, crudite and hummus, and dates stuffed with blue cheese and pecans. For dessert, I took Nance's suggestion to have gelato (talenti) with my anise and meyer lemon pitzelles, which worked well. It was actually a lovely evening, and our older gentleman friend is such a vibrant and intelligent guy at 87. He has had such interesting life experiences and has so much knowledge to share, along with humility and curiosity about what he can yet learn from others, so it is always great fun to spend time with him. We also admire the fact that he moved into the local retirement facility from the North Shore, so that he could be close to his wife who has late stage Alzheimer's, and is cared for in the Alzheimer's Center there.
Meanwhile our other friend, who was not supposed to be eating red meat, (thus the chicken roll ups) since he is on a fairly restricted diet for weight mgmt during his major knee surgery recovery, managed to have a red meatapalooza last night when a mutual friend of his and DH decided to bring them three kinds of take-out barbecue meats, corn bread, slaw, and bread pudding (!) for a "guys dinner" at our friend's home. Ha! Next time, I'll make what I want! Bring on the Boeuf Bourguignon !
DH has been out the last two nights, so I've been having mini dinners (not necessarily healthy mini) of this and that from dinner party leftovers....unfortunately lots of the leftover cheese and dips, but tonight also a chicken roll up and salad.
I did not know much about Capitol Grill's ownership, but the one time we went to the one near us, with our friend from Paris, we were horrified at what a sports bar tone it had. We weren't expecting sports games on large TV's given the high-priced steak place. And that loud atmosphere made it difficult to have a conversation with our friend. Never went back. Many other individually or family run restaurants that are excellent usually get my business.
My recent obsession about avoiding red meat for our friend has me craving beef braciole!I may make it in the slow cooker one of these fine days. Last year, my neighbor and I made a timpano on the first day we were snowed in last January. Boy was that good! Maybe this year we'll do beef braciole! Or maybe both!

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I will say the Capital Grille I went to was definitely upscale - white table cloths, private booths, white & red wine glasses on the table, silverware that I barely remember from previous "fine" dining, extremely quiet, butter sprinkled w/sea salt, one waiter for every two or three tables, no TV's, maybe 25 tables max. We went there because I'd eaten at Eddie V's a year or two ago and this is supposed to be their "downmarket cousin". Eddie V's was the best seafood I'd had in a long time and they are not open at lunch. That was excellent seafood - and again maybe 20 tables & more upscale than Capital Grille. Qualifier - I know I'm in Texas folks & it ain't Boston or Chicago. But was raised in Northern California & grew up eating really fresh seafood right off the boats. I generally order seafood when I'm on the east or west coast - shrimp in Texas or LA. It I have a steak or prime rib, I don't want it adulterated with spices or rubs if the meat is really good quality. But for steak, my ex-DH's favorite food, he likes to go where he can be waited on like a king. He chooses places like Ruths Chris, Mortons, etc. I was trying to find another option where he can buy my lunch - quiet, good service, decent meat. He will like this. My lunch will be free!!! I won't likely go back on my own.
Today was a huge bowl of Mushroom soup w/french bread. And I brought home an individual Spinach Quiche for tomorrow or Saturday.
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Lacey, we have a heated bird bath. Birds only seem to dunk when the temperature is moderate but they drink often.
No Capital Grilles in St. Louis only Kansas city.
Mini meatloaves tonight from leftover Swedish meatball mix. The recipe would have made a thousand of the suckers, which I didn't need.
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Okay Nance, that's all I needed to hear! I am going to search out a heated birdbath. Any ideas of a good one.....do you like yours? Thank you!
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Simple, easy dinner here.....Baked Sea Bass and broccoli. Chicken salad earlier, with crackers.
Waiting to watch debates. 9:00 here in Florida.....hope I can stay awake!
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Lacey, this is the one I have
http://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B005UJ6NUW/ref=psd_mlt_bc_B005UJ6NUW
I really like it, it's very sturdy and easy to clean. We've had ours for a long time and I see that they've gotten quite expensive. You might check out Petsmart or Petco.
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Today was my first post-Xeloda oncologist appointment. Dana Farber was on its best behavior today. Wait for lab work was moderate. Needle was painless. Oncologist was early [as was I.] She was out of sorts. My RX had not been done properly [and has still not been arranged for delivery.] My online portal was not populating properly. She forgot to add the tumor markers to my blood work. I joined two more studies which requires some extra blood during regular blood draws and some tumor tissue from the existing banked samples. Easy enough, yes?
I decided that dinner needed to be prepared by someone else. Claire went off on her own to visit a Harvard University museum and then to see the Isabelle Stewart Gardner which is open late on Thursdays. So Mr. 02143 and I went to a local chain for some seafood. It was fine. Not spectacular but good enough. We shared a calamari appetizer and then he ordered a White Clam pizza and I got the Lobster pizza without lobster. It was topped with fontina, wild mushrooms, grilled green onions, and [the start of the show] an egg. I was only able to eat a third of this very rich pizza. Someone will have a good lunch tomorrow!
I want braciole now too! I haven't made that in ages! Maybe I should do that this weekend..... great idea!
*susan*
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Me too! I want braciole too!
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OK - I had to look it up but it sounds marvelous for a cold day. I'll enjoy reading all your reviews.
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Susan - sorry for the hassle. What is it about these big specialty places? MD Anderson is the same. Hope the blood work comes out good & your RX get delivered in a timely manner. Glad your cousin found something to do alone today.
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I also had to look up braciole as well. I kind of accidentally made something similar awhile back.
There is a Capitol Grill here in Phoenix. I've had dinner there once. It was OK, but my impression of the patrons was that they were hoping to move from self important to important...but without really succeeding... :-)
Susan, I hope things settle down at DF. Mayo was a little disorganized with my mom when she started going there, but they must have done something to fix it as it suddenly changed to perfectly smooth.
Today I spent a hour with mom's primary care doctor talking about mom. I went in there kind of hungry and left with no appetite.
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