So...whats for dinner?
Comments
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Was there a football game? I was throwing popcorn at season 6 of Downton Abbey. I hadn't noticed....
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The Cards-Carolina game was not fun to watch. I'm not a football fan, so I had fun watching DD and Sharon grumble at the TV.
Paxton, I'm glad you found something agreeable with the TC stomach.
That sounds like an amazing evening Chi.
I didn't get the cornbread done today, but I did make twice baked potatoes. Is that close? :-)
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Susan, your ryes are gorgeous!
Auntienance, ditto with your English muffin loaf. I I can see where that would make an excellent bread for French toast. I assume there's lots of nooks to sop up the egg mixture. Yum!
Carole, your salad sounds amazing!
Tonight is leftover chicken Parmesan, and I'll make saffron risotto. I plan on making arancini with the left over risotto tomorrow
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Yesterday was a (nobody listen) TV dinner night. I do like Night Hawk's - they are edible. Just could not make myself cook anything. Not much reason for leftovers - DH is doing an overnight inventory tonight. Says might get off at 3am tomorrow, but has to be there until it's done. I have an eggplant parm TV dinner for me. Tomorrow will be tacos - I have 2 spare pkgs of shells left from cabin trip in October that need to get used up. DH will like that - both the taco part and the use up part.
I'm having bread envy. Susan - I'll take the not so pretty loaf - I'm sure it tastes excellent. And Nancy English Muffin Bread - yum.
No take home box from Mexican Food Saturday night. I ate it all except for some of the white rice. I had Enchiladas del Mar - seafood enchiladas. There were 3 of us on my end who chose that. Couple of fajitas, some ceviche, some reg. Mex dinners. I think there were 14 of us. I splurged and had dessert during dinner - a pina colada. I usually get flan but skipped that indulgence.
It is a beautiful day here - 64 and blue skies.
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I love rye bread - love it, love it, love it! Can you tell I love it? Those are so pretty! I want one! I have only ever had an English muffin, but not the bread - does it taste the same and have the same density? I regularly baked bread in college because it was cheaper, but I should get back into it again. You ladies are bread baking champs - the photos are awesome!
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So glad we're still talking about rye. I agree w/Special - my very favorite. I'll be having sliced roast beef on pumpernickel shortly. Hard to make a decision between beef, tuna or fried eggs - all so good on pumpernickel. Have to eat up the loaf before it molds (yup, Houston humidity). Maybe a green salad later.
Last night was macaroni & butter and a big bowl of zucchini. Dessert was the last of a Jello pudding 4 pack that was "orange julius" flavor. Anyone else remember those great drinks at fairs & carnivals?"During the 1950s and 1960s, Orange Julius was sold at a variety of outlets, including state and county fairs and freestanding Orange Julius stands. The original stand also provided medicinal tonics and Bible tracts. The Orange Julius was named the official drink of the 1964 New York World's Fair.[5]"
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luvmygoats: (whispers) I won't tell anyone about the TV dinners. Don't worry.
MinusTwo: mustard with the roast beef on pumpernickel?
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love what are Nighthawks? Sounds like my kind of food I can get fresh rye bread here at the bakery because I could never make it so what is the best cheese to put on it?sharp cheddar?
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My rye breakfast includes one thin slice of rye bread, toasted, and one wedge of La Vache Qui Rie original cheese with 16 ounces of water. I tried "real" cheese, several varieties, but my stomach simply can not handle an intensely flavored cheese while I am swallowing chemo at the same time. My preference would be a nice Gruyere, or even a blander Emmentaler. The goal is to keep this stuff in my stomach, so my stomach gets to make these decisions.
I wanted a supper with variety and didn't have the energy to create a gazillion components, so we had take out from one of our local schwarma spots. We split a kofta plate which had three koftas, a few grilled vegetables, rice and a huge cucumber salad, a small lentil soup, a side of tabouleh [not for you Lacey, all parsley], hummus, garlic sauce, and it came with pita, tahini sauce and a hot sauce. There is enough left for one more serving. Amazing really. Based on the number of packets of utensils they gave is. the schwarma folks thought this was a meal for one! The meal satisfied my need for a variety of textures and flavors. Since I was able to do 10 hrs of billable work today, I don't feel badly about spending $20 on dinner!
Oh... I cut into the freshly made rye bread so I could wrap and freeze, and the crumb is just about perfect! I will start using one of the small boules tomorrow. Flavor is the final test.
*susan*
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I love Munster cheese grilled on rye
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Bedo - Not your kind of dinner. Salisbury steak/mashed potatoes. Heavy meat - almost cowboy stuff. A better step up from Swansons. I used to take a Marie Callenders every night when I was doing hospital nursing.
Eggplant parm in oven. Smells good. Eggplant parm and a hockey game. Great together. DH has decided he will not eat eggplant. Shame I like it. He unpacked the groceries yesterday so he knows I bought a cauliflower head. Hmm - wonder what he thought of that.
Minus - I have not seen the Orange Julius refridge jello. DH asked why we had so many jello packages around, I told him they were left over from all that tooth stuff that seems to have resolved itself. Funny I was just looking at a can of mandarin oranges and thought "jello".
Susan - so glad you found a wonderful dinner. I love La Vache Qui Rit cheese. Can you tell I googled it haha? The best stuff smeared on crackers.
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I love Orange (and Pineapple) Julius! It was a big part of my adolescence. During my Brooklyn College years it was our first stop at Kings Plaza Mall (Baskin-Robbins the last--remember when a 1-scooper was 39 cents)?
Very little Chinese food remains from last night (just some of the plain rice--meh). Ordered out tonight from Jimmy’s NY Pizza Cafe near Lincoln Sq. (will put some fresh basil on their plain tomato-cheese pizza and turn it into a Margherita w/o paying Margherita prices). Not cheap, but more NYC than even the Garibaldi’s I had last time I was in L.I. Pizzaiolo/owner is Korean and trained at DiFara’s in Brooklyn. His wife is from Rome and is the cashier. Talk about melting pots!
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I skipped lunch today at work so I left a few minutes early....105 minutes from work to home...sigh....no wrecks or other unusual circumstances...just a long way on crowded roads.
Sharon has her Jenny Craig food (she's lost 7 or 8 pounds so far) and DD had eaten already, so I "nuked" a couple of potatoes. A tiny bit of real butter and some of the Artisan brand Alder smoked salt, a cup of coffee and I'm good. So, Luv, don't worry about the TV dinner. :-)
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Queen - yup, Dijon mustard w/thin sliced, rare roast beef.
Eric - I often have a baked potato for dinner, except I use a lot of butter. Horrible drive. Although we're both accustomed to driving in the West, I know that can be a lot of miles. Are you staying in the greater Phoenix area?
The first time my son went East, he met me in Boston and we drove down to NYC to stay w/friends in the village. He kept saying - Mom, Mom, Mom, we just passed another state line. From Houston going North or West it's more than a full day's drive to get out Texas.
Susan - 10 hours!! Way to go. Glad your system seems to be allowing you to work this round.
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yummy stuff everyone! The breads looked so good.
I just had my leftover pork tenderloin. I kept it in the pan sauce of red current jelly and balsamic and heated it up for a couple min. Baked a potato. That was supper. I Froze the rest for a stirfry in the future. Even reheated it was tender.
I hope everyone is ok on the East Coast. Got clobbered over there! We haven't had a lot yet. Just what we had couple of weeks ago. . Dodged a big one this time. There was a pic of the airport in NY. You could only see the tail of the planes over the snow. That's a lot of snow. Yuck.
Much love.
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I checked my smoked salt and it is applewood. I will try the alder based on all your recommendations.
SK, the emuffin bread has a little more spongy texture but does have lots of nooks and crannies. It toasts beautifully and tastes very similar.
Tonight will be the hamburgers on homemade buns. DH will want oven fries but I want a baked potato. The last batch of buns I made using the milk bread recipe. Not terribly happy with them. Next batch will be brioche buns. The burgers are large so there may not be room for a salad.
Went to see dad yesterday. He's not doing very well. He was very puny and tired and had fallen during the night. I was aware of this because I got a call from the lifeline people at 3:46 a.m.! Fortunately he didn't hurt himself but just kind of sat down hard onto the floor. The paramedics came and put him back in bed and he was alright. He was understandably tired the next day. He has a doctor's appointment today. I'm a bit worried about him. I think his 90 years has caught up with him.
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auntienance, I'm so sorry about your dad. That must've been very scary for him and for you. Thank God he didn't hurt himself. My dad is 87, and I stay with him during the winter in Ohio. It is very difficult to watch a parent get older and vulnerable.
I made arancini this morning with the left over risotto, and gave the majority to my cousin and his family. My dad woke up with a cold, so I'm going to make matzoh ball soup with chicken, noodles and veggies. He doesn't have an appetite, so hopefully I can get him to drink a couple of Ensures
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I love arancini... it is particularly good when the risotto had asparagus or mushrooms. I like to stuff them with just a bit of cheese and roll in semolina before frying. I don't recall ever giving them away!
We are having a heat wave. It is 47º right now! So we are dry-brining a chicken and Mr. 02143 will grill it with our Inner Beauty Sauce as a mop. Spicy and delicious. Sides will be a baked potato and a green salad. Going simple tonight.
*susan*
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Nance, I'm glad your dad didn't injure himself with the fall. How far away is he? In driving time.
DH is going to a woodworkers' guild meeting tonight so he will eat his warmed over leftovers from Sunday dinner for his night meal. Rice and gravy and roast pork. I'll make him a salad if he wants one. I will probably eat the small container of leftover chicken salad from last night and maybe some warmed up turnip greens.
The chicken salad was kind of a waldorf salad with chicken. Diced roasted chicken, apple, celery and walnuts, raisins and small cubes of cheddar. Dressing was small amt. of mayo and sour cream. Foundation for the salad was romaine and avocado slices. White balsamic sprinkled on mine, brown balsamic on dh's.
I cooked a huge pot of turnip greens on Friday. A big bundle of the greens lured me right in. $2.50 and very fresh. I had a bowl for lunch today with hot pepper vinegar and they are good. Greens call for corn bread but I shall ignore the call.
Bedo, is your vacuuming robot a rumba? I talked to a woman recently who got a rumba for Christmas and she loves it. I'm thinking about getting one for a birthday present for myself in March. Or asking for it. Same thing. I think my floors would be much cleaner than they are now. I love the idea of the little disk returning to its charging station!
ChiSandy, I was liking you until you mentioned having a housekeeper. Now that liking is turning to jealousy! Bob sounds like a keeper.
Susan, I'm relieved that so far you have an interest in eating. I've never particularly liked rye bread but have only eaten it on sandwiches in restaurants. Like reuben sandwiches. Your home-made rye is probably very good. I doubt I had eaten rye bread at all until I ate a reuben sandwich and that was probably in my 30's. Background figures into our tastes. When I was a child, my mother made white flour yeast bread and biscuits and cornbread. Bought white bread, the kind you can squish into a ball, was a treat and much preferred over the home-made bread. Now it's the home-made bread that's a treat.
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Auntie and Hsant that is scary to watch your parents get older. I am still happy that your Parents lived to that age and I hope that I do and am still able to live alone. I hope your dad get's better Auntie
Carol, mine is a Neato pet and allergy, about $350 but I don't know how I lived without it,old cabin two cats,wood fireplace allergies . Whatever you purchase get it through Hammacher Schlemmer as they have a lifetime guarantee and all of the vacuums have some glitches. I like mine better than the Rumba because it does not get stuck vacuuming in one spot and seems smarter, but I am not an expert
For dinner tums and prilosec! Don't know what's going on. I did make some chicken soup for cold and ate it, maybe not being used to it.
I am still obsessed with Shaw's frozen cherries, put them in water, or wait till they thaw a bit and eat them down. Yum
Feeling a little better now, craving sardines on Melba toast.
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Carole, I am the only person in the house who likes Rye Bread. Making Rye Bread feels a bit selfish, to be honest, since no one else will ever eat it. I take over the kitchen; flour is everywhere; the brotforms sit out drying and taking up valuable counter space. I grew up in NYCity eating food from Jewish delis. My mother, the quintessential WASP was amazed by the food in NY after a lifetime of living in Boston [18 yrs, haha!] with bland Yankee food. My first solid food was liverwurst for goodness sakes. When we moved back to Boston I was devastated to not find pastrami on rye with mustard and all my other favorite foods. It might be a "what you grew up eating" thing? I have not been adding caraway seeds since I am considering these breads to be a breakfast bread. [My mother did not allow any of the squishy white breads in our house. We had to go to a friend's house to enjoy the making of white bread balls.]
My Costco does not have frozen cherries, but Shaw's does? I don't recall seeing them there. I do buy frozen wild blueberries there. I will look more carefully next time I have to head there. It is a store that I rarely enter.
The chicken was a bit undercooked tonight. Quite disappointing. He threw it back on the grill, but I didn't get quite enough to eat. I got too hungry before dinner and was overwhelmed by nausea. Clearly, I need to have some strategies in place for another high quality snack if this happens again. The green salad turned into a tomato, red onion, goat cheese salad dressed with Greek red wine vinegar and olive oil, placed on top of a bed of lettuce. We purchased a boneless chicken breast at the store today and put it in the kids' fridge. Guess what they are eating for dinner? Score one for the parental units!
*susan*
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Bedo, I'll look into the Neato. This is a new subject for me. The Rumba model I was looking at costs about the same.
It's odd being here at home alone at night. I spent some time reading about artificial sweeteners. It seems that they have been receiving a lot of criticism and blame for all sorts of bad SEs. Any thoughts or biases or whatever? Years ago WW was against sweeteners because they supposedly kept you hooked on sweets. Now the sweeteners are being accused of confusing "good" bacteria in the gut and messing up metabolism.
Sigh....
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Nance and hsant, I do hope that your fathers feel better. Always scary to get the middle of the night calls.
I never really embraced rye bread growing up. I think it was my dislike of caraway seeds, which I think ruin Irish soda bread, too. My father was a New Yorker and loved rye bread...as does DH who loves all things NY deli. You may recall that he sent Katz's salamis to all of our relatives a few Christmases ago.
Carole, I've pretty much avoided artificial sweeteners in the past few years, switching to stevia, which I am hoping is not so unhealthful as those chemicals are reported to be. I wish I could tolerate drinking coffee unsweetened, but I find the bitter taste intolerable. I am also finding that I am developing more of a sweet tooth as I get older....not a good thing! Oh...I must check out turnip greens.
Today I had lunch with one of my favorite former co-workers. We both had BLTs and I made it weird by having it on raisin bread ( purely because the server offered that as one of the bread options, and I thought why not experiment?!). Well, it was okay, but I will probably not mix my sweet with savory in that way again. I do adore raisin bread....and apparently so does one of the cooks at the restaurant who saw this odd creation and decided he wanted one too. LOL
Tonight DH was in Cambridge so I didn't cook....and even worse, I ate three large squares of peanut crunch. Never had a bite of anything dinner-like. See, Minus, you often do much better than I at self dinner prep
Susan, I think I recently saw a recipe for tabbouleh that used something different than parsley. I was excited since my next door neighbor is a great middle eastern cook and I always miss being able to dig into the colorful tabbouleh she makes. I must search out that recipe.
Tomorrow nite I am on my own for dinner again, so will try to actually have dinner!
Thursday we are heading out to Stockbridge again for a few days for DH's board meetings so we will eat very well and enjoy the beauty of the home we stay in with the amazing art collection it holds, and its pastoral surroundings. Even in the bleak winter it is beautiful.
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I sometimes feel embarrassed to mention I have a housekeeper, but she comes in M-F and works half-days. She started out as Gordy's nanny when I had postpartum depression and continued when I went back to work. She's more like the household manager--she keeps us organized and knows where everything is. At this point, she and her husband (they're also Bob's patients) are as close to family as we have here in Chicago. I still do the cooking & shopping. It's not as if I have a live-in maid 7 days a week, nor do we have tons of money to throw around nor consider her salary a trifling expense, but I still know I have it much better than most.
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Thank you friends for the dad wishes. It's nice to have a group of folks who understand.
Sandy, don't be embarrassed, if I could justify it to myself, I'd have a housekeeper in a minute! It would have been especially helpful when I was working. I thought when I retired, my house would become spotless. Ha! I have come to realize that I am an unenthusiastic housekeeper, no matter what. The only spotless things are the kitchen work surfaces. (I'm afraid the floor usually has flour on it lol) Fortunately, DBIL and DSIL are coming Friday for the weekend so (as usual) I am motivated to clean. It's a good thing that they visit regularly.
Because someone mentioned chicken parm, that's what we're having for dinner. I'll make some fresh angel hair as a side and a salad.
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Husband out of town for the night sooo, I scrubbed the kitchen to a brilliant shine and refused to cook myself dinner so I could just sit back and enjoy its beauty for a whole 12 hrs. I had a bowl of ice cream for dinner.
tonight he is back so I will do a meatloaf with mashed taters and a vege of some sort. the grocery store did not have the meatloaf meat mix so I will dig into the freezer and get creative.
Chi I always am intriqued by your wine pairings with your dinners. Do You ever see Fingerlakes wines in your stores? I get so frustrated when I am in NC and cant find a good Fingerlakes wine...everything is California wine and they are not know for their reislings (my favorite) Looks like we will hoard and pack a LOT of wine when we leave this area for good.
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I use sweet leaf organic stevia packets in place of sugar. Stevia is not an artificial sweetener. It'sderived from the Stevia plant.
Tonight is leftover matzoh ball chicken noodle soup and I will also make mashed potatoes for my dad. It's about all he can tolerate with his cold.
For myself, I picked up some gorgeous scallops. Three of them are the orange females. Rarely do I see even one orange scallop, and to find three...well, couldn't pass that up. I will sear them in a combo of olive oil and butter, and steam some asparagus as my side.
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hsant, I have eaten scallops most of my life and never knew the orange ones were females. So why are there so few of them?? Are the white ones also female? Is the orange one like the "queen bee"? Pardon the dumb questions....;)
My only worry about stevia (I buy mine at Trader's in a small bottle...tres cher!) is how pure it will be over time as it becomes more popular and in demand.
Many years ago when I returned to work full time, after ten years of part-time private practice, I tried to continue to "do it all"...the kids' and DH's needs, food, full time job with a commute and lots of reports to write late into the night.....and house cleaning with no support....even tho DH and the kids did keep themselves organized and always took are of their own laundry.
It was hard and I was tired....like most moms (or dads) who keep such schedules.When one of my neighbors saw that I chose to stay home from a family ski trip to NH one weekend so that I could clean the house, she told me about her wonderful house cleaner and strongly suggested that I scoop the very next opening that she had. I did, and it changed my life during that period. Talk about lighten the load! She came every two weeks, which was plenty for us. Over the years we got to know her whole family as she later had children born, and I was happy to help her navigate the "special needs" waters with her for them. So she really became like family. Now with just the two of us, we have her come sporadically. The best thing (besides my enjoying talking with her about her oldest child's college search!) about keeping her service is that we need to clear clutter (!) before she comes so she can clean. We are both pretty compulsive about cleaning the kitchen......no flour on our kitchen floor, but so much paper.....and book/mag piles....definitely not as appetizing!

Enjoy your visit, Nance!
I may have to head to a Shaw's also to look for their frozen cherries. Our local grocer just carries a frozen bag of mixed berries and cherries. Not as exciting.....
DH just left for the gym....I think it would do me good to get there.
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lacey - your post prompted me to look up Stevia farming - very interesting! Grown in sunny wet climates - sounds like Florida! I should start a Stevia farm for the ladies of the So What's for Dinner thread! You need less of it due to its inherent sweetness and it uses far less water and land than farming for sugar (beet and cane) does!
Tonight I am browning some chicken/spinach sausages and red peppers, adding Mia's tomato and basil sauce and serving over angel hair, with an iceberg wedge with blue cheese and crumbled bacon, and a lot of black pepper. Having some pretty intense back pain so going the easy route - even the bacon is cooked and crumbled from the broken freezer debacle - just have to take it out of the new freezer and gently nuke it. Just ironed a shirt for DH for tomorrow and then had to lay down for a minute! Not having fun....
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Lacey, very good questions regarding scallops, which I couldn't answer before I did a quick search on google. The orange tinted ones are the egg bearing scallops. The orange tint comes from the color that's in mature eggs. I assume there are white female scallops (just makes sense), but the orange ones are super sweet. I couldn't find an answer to why you don't see very many orange ones at your average grocery store/fish market.
Stevia has been popular for around five years or so. I highly recommend the Sweet Leaf brand, because it is organic, aka no GMOs.
I'm exhausted reading about how you managed your home, family and career. Wow! You really deserve your house keeper.
Special K, I love chicken sausages. I hope you get some relief from your back pain soon. Back problems Can be excruciatingly painful.
Carberry, I'm jealous of your sparkling kitchen. I need to do a serious deep clean ASAP. It's not dirty, but it needs some extra loving care. Fresh clean kitchens and bathrooms are one of my favorites, along with crisp, clean sheets. Yum....meatloaf. What do you out in yours?I typically make mine with ground turkey, and use quick cooking oats as a binder instead of bread crumbs.
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