So...whats for dinner?
Comments
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Lucky to be at the lake today Lacey. Rained almost all day after a long night rain. Now it is just steamy and muggy.
Tonight I am on once again employed by New Mom Catering once again. Taking the kids some chicken, mac & cheese, salad, and peas. [Salad for him; peas for him.] Will get a bit of Olivia time which always makes me happy. We will also stay and eat dinner with them.
Gotta catch a nap before I start preparing dinner. Day 6 and it shows.
*susan*
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Wow Nance. I'm not sure how I missed the pie. I'm sorry to hear about your dad's CHF...one more thing.... My dad had CHF and I don't remember it needing a lot of specialized care, so maybe it won't change is living arrangements. There were the daily blood pressure, weight and ankle checks,plus half a dozen (more) pills and yet another doctor to visit each month.
That salad does look good Lacey..
If you haven't noticed, I do love food 'porn'
Everyone here is quite good about helping around the kitchen, so that's nice. Mom used to help too, but now gets a pass.
Susan, are the new parents "hitting their stride"? I see the pictures of Olivia and it takes me back to when DD was that age.
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hmmmm pie! Peach is my favorite but cherry is a close second. Salad looking mighty fine also.
Long weekend with both kids home and fiance lots of summer foods boating concerts pool party opening of a friend's brewery and on and on.......the kids act like tourist trying to fit it all in. I am exhausted but very happy.
Twice someone brought corn on the cob....from the grocery store and obviously imported from the south somewhere and it was surprisingly very good and sweet.
It was so hot on Sat (94degrees) we actually got in the lake! Water temp 58 degrees! Arizona temps Eric! Very unusual here in ny on memorial day. Especially since two weeks ago it was snowing.
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We have a $40 gift certificate to a local restaurant (not my fave, since it’s fairly heavy comfort food, but it’s open late 24/7/365), so I’m waiting for the massive Lake Shore Drive traffic jam Bob’s stuck in to resolve. If by the time he gets home and is too tired to go out, I have a duck breast thawed out in the fridge I can grill, and serve it with either broccolini or brussels sprouts and a nice Pinot Noir.
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For the second day in a row, we had food from a cookout
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We had hamburgers smothered in mushrooms, peppers and a touch of cheese, left over veggie medley and cottage cheese. Along with ice cold, juicy sweet watermelon. Simple but yummy :-)
Yum... Pie and your beautiful salad! Perfect!
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Oh watermelon!!! I haven't indulged yet this year.
Eric - what's your DD doing for the summer? Maybe a last hurrah of free time? Or working before college starts? I love the juxtaposition between the brand new Olivia and Eric's daughter leaving the nest.
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We made it to the Fireside--it was jammed, because there was a huge Memorial Day ceremony across the street in Rosehill Cemetery. They are notorious for huge portions, so I had the Bronzed Shrimp appetizer (had expected prawns in sort of New Orleans “barbecue shrimp” style, but it was smaller shrimp in sort of a very mild Moroccan sauce) and a side Caesar salad, hold the croutons, and they kept forgetting the salad. Bob had the Cajun meatloaf with green beans and mashed potatoes, and ordered soup--which never came. So we were comped a dessert--shared some really good red velvet cake.
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DD has been working at a multi-location family owned restaurant for the past 5 months.
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It's called a clean out the fridge night, so another easy night for m
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I'm loving my Spiralizer. Has anyone tried freezing something like zucchini after ribboning? Even one squash makes a lot for one person and once I get the "machine" going, I'd like to do a bunch at one time.
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Still have two spareribs and a huge smoked chicken thigh left--but I’m gonna have to grill that duck breast before it goes bad. Think I’ll make garlic green beans to go with it.
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Minus,
I don't think that zucchini "pasta" would freeze very well due to its high water content. Perhaps, if you salted and drained for an hour or two after spiralizing, then dried by wringing out in a dishcloth, before freezing, it would be passable. Other option would be to use some of the spirals to make fritters or cakes, cook, and then freeze. To reheat, just pop them into the toaster oven until warmed. Potatoes, sweet potatoes would fare better.
I have no idea why I am now indented. This site has some funny code!
*susan*
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Susan is right, zucchini doesn't freeze that well. At the end of the summer when I have bigger zukes, I usually chop and freeze some for zucchini bread. Even after draining and wringing the life out of them, they tend to be a pile of mush. It's ok for zucchini bread, but not much else.
Eric - normally CHF wouldn't be that big of a deal to manage, except in my dad's case, his pulse has been dropping drastically after exertion (e.g. physical therapy) so the diuretic has to be used judiciously to keep everything from dropping too much. He seems to be very fragile right now and can't walk at all. I haven't been able to get an explanation for that and we can't get into the cardiologist until next week at the earliest. He will not be able to go to supportive living if he can't walk at all so it's kind of a mess.
I made a large batch of chicken stock in the pressure cooker today. Smells wonderful. I was horrified to find that I was all out a couple of days ago so that has now been remedied. Easy meal tonight -- grilled smoked sausage and leftover sides from yesterday's bbq. Including pie!
Today's Wildlife Report - we were very thrilled to see that another pair of orioles were building a nest in a tree right next to the house. Sadly, one of the recent storms broke the branch it was on and it came crashing to the ground. When I picked it up I saw that it had 4 eggs in it. I hope they try again on a sturdier branch! On a happier note the house wrens have nested in the wren house on the porch and have been very busy. The damned squirrels have eaten my parsley plants for the second time and this time got the cilantro too! There has been a doe wandering around the property for the past few days. I'm wondering if she has a fawn in the woods since she never gets too far from them, but so far we haven't spied one. As usual, she's been enjoying the grass under the apple trees (is it sweeter?) as well as the lower branches of the trees. I suspect she's been eating the small apples too, since the trees are loaded this year. Maybe we'll actually get one or two (ha!) A suspiciously large raccoon (preggers no doubt) has been coming daily to eat the bird seed on the ground. It may have to be trapped soon if it decides to expand it's horizons. DH saw the fox yesterday heading toward where we think her den is. It's been a busy week in the Briarpatch* (*the name of our subdivision is Briarwood Estates -- so pretentious. It's always been Briarpatch to me.)
Friday is DS's birthday, so DS, DDIL and the new granddog Olivia are coming on Saturday. I've been busy with menu planning and shopping lists today. I think I've got it all figured out but Friday will be a BUSY day.
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Thanks Susan & Nance for the zucchini truths. I did crookneck yellow squash today & was only able to eat about half with my poached salmon. So instead of paying my bills like I was supposed to be doing, I spent the last two hours looking at spiralized recipes on the web. Oh Yum. Good thing I'd eaten first. I'll use the rest of this batch in an omelette tomorrow, and I just wish I had some spinach on hand too.
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Minus, I always hate to be the bearer of bad news.
Dinner tonight was leftover grilled chicken, more mac/cheese, and a vinegar slaw. Clearly, I am in a rut here. Same foods over and over. I just don't have the energy lately to spend hours designed, shopping for, and making creative dinners. Can't wait for local produce to start coming in. Plates of locally grown vegetables is sounding so very appetizing about now. Tomorrow's dinner will be pretty much the same thing again. I have arranged to have some women come to clean the house. I think to pull off this AirBNB thing, I will need to have some of the spaces cleaned professionally, and it will all be tax-deductible!
*susan*
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I hope the cardiologist can figure out what to do. Watching my dad go through that, even though he was 91, scared me as I could see myself like that.
My dad ended up being unable to walk more than 5-10 feet before, as he put it, "I either sit down or fall down". He HATED it. Up until then his body would do whatever he wanted whenever he wanted and he always felt a bit betrayed by his body. I guess that was the Marine in him.
Tonight I'm cooking a chicken out on the grill. It's summer here and I grill a lot. It's supposed to be around 115Fby this weekend and I grill not because I want to, but because I don't want to burden the air conditioner with the oven. The chicken is almost done and it's almost time to put some "whatever I have" vegetables in a pan on the grill.
I'm kind of in a cooking rut, too, Susan. Sharon does her "Jenny Craig" and as often as not, DD is working, so I'm cooking for one. Combine that with getting home late in the evening and it's hard to not "just hit the fast food place".
I just got all the paperwork from the lawyer, so all I need to do is to sign a few more papers in front of a Notary and start taking the documents with me so I can start signing for my mom. Progressive cognitive deterioration consistent with advanced dementia. My supermom is...not so super any longer. Now, she's "just" mom.... ;-( ;-(
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Eric - I'm saddened to hear that your Mom's memory has continued to decline. You are a wonderful son for taking care of everything. I sure do understand cooking for one - AND especially not turning on the oven to heat up the house, although we haven't hit 100 yet. Luckily I like leftovers so I'll cook my protein in large batches & freeze it already cooked in portions for one - pork loin, chicken breasts, meatballs. All I have to do is defrost and add sauce or a final sear.
Nance - sorry to hear about you Dad's additional troubles.
Susan - don't worry about a meal rut. You deserve some time w/o worrying about inventive dinners while the chemo works it's miraculous but nasty wonders. As a matter of fact, you've made me hungry for mac & cheese.
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Eric,
That is hard isn't it? Your Mom is, and was, a wonderful woman. She produced a strong and inventive son who knows how to take care of the people in his life that matter to him. If it helps, think of this paperwork as a way of doing one more important thing for her. She no longer will have to worry that her finances are being taken care of by someone that she trusts.
Sorry about your rut. If you were closer, we could trade nights for cooking and share our dinners.
*susan*
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Eric, so sorry you have to watch both your parents in decline. Mine died 20 yrs apart--Dad suddenly at 72 of a massive MI, Mom at almost 86 after a 4-year bout with CHF and COPD (and probably lung cancer--she knew about a 6cm nodule but refused a biopsy), Dad had such deep depression that it was misdiagnosed for awhile as Alzheimer’s. Mom was reasonably mobile (Rollator walker) and fully cognizant to the end. (She died suddenly at home one morning, a month after being discharged from hospice for not dying within 6 months--the night before she died she called to for help with a NYTimes crossword clue). I was living in Chicago both times--Dad died when my folks were still in Brooklyn, Mom 13 years after moving to FL. (I had visited her a week earlier).
It’s warm here but not really hot--we’re in a storm cycle for the next few days. I grill outside whenever I can--haven’t used my oven, except to bake a low-carb pizza--in a couple of years! I do everything on the stove, with a reversible flattop grill.
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Mom didn't want to go out this year, so I placed the roses in her stead.
Living to 91, his is more Veteran's Day, rather than Memorial Day..but I doubt anyone will be too upset with my going out in May. :-)
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dinner is going to be another clean out the fridge night here
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Last evening we stopped at Trader's on our way home, and picked up the prepared Greek style chicken with orzo meal that DH likes. I made a big salad with my new favorite horseradish vinaigrette dressing. Some sour dough bread from Trader's...meh. But I was happy not to have to prepare a whole meal. I seem to be in a similar mode of less than enthusiastic meal planning/prepping lately. Guess it's good that grilling season is upon us.
Nance, I am so sorry for such a sad health turn for you father. Hugs to you both as you cope with this next challenge
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To night we are having pork loin, truck stop tators and a small salad. Truck stop tators are left over cooked potatoes that I cut into small cubes, sauté them in butter and paprika, sometimes I add a little green onion.
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Tonight I’m gonna grill that duck breast indoors or out, even if I have to defrost it in the microwave. I’m thinking either asparagus, brussels sprouts or broccolini--though last night’s garlic green beans were perfect with the leftover BBQ.
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I also did chicken on the grill.....usually just do chicken breast but I was craving a good crispy skin on thigh,so did a bunch of both and will use all week. Trying to plan stuffed peppers for tomorrow,we will see what happens.
Taking my dad for his oncology appt tomorrow. Mom says he is in too much pain to drive (his ribcage and back) got to find some source of relief for him somehow. He is too stubborn to let us help with his lawn and driving. Got to find out where we go from here as he still doesn't tolerate the meds and has stopped taking them. I may just make him a big casserole of Mac n cheese..his favorite.
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Feeling much sympathy for Eric, Nance, and Carrie as they support elderly parents. My mother is still in the rehab program at a nursing home and seems content with her life there. I talk to her every day. Eventually she will use up all her allotted rehab days.
The weather here in northern MN has been rainy and cool. Yesterday I made a "campground" chili with a lb. of ground beef, canned kidney beans, navy beans and black beans, can of Rotel tomatoes, some tomato sauce and tomato paste, and powdered seasonings. I poured the pot of chili into a slow cooker and placed the cooker out on the deck near an outlet. The result was tasty chili shared with neighbors along with a romaine salad. I grated some good cheddar and chopped some onion for chili toppings.
Tonight we had hot dogs with the chili spooned on top.
Our adult beverage was old fashioneds made with bourbon, a winter drink in LA!
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Hauled a load of potting mix (6-25 qt. bags), planters & stakes home from the garden center. I was starving. Almost went through the drive-through at Panda Express, but thought “naaah...let me get that grill going while it’s still light out and not raining.” Got the grill lit, the duck breast thawed and seasoned with kosher salt & a few grinds of black pepper (scored the skin too). Washed, trimmed and nuked some Brussels sprouts for 30 sec. While the duck was on the grill, I sauteed the sprouts in olive oil, then finished them with a few drops of supermarket balsamic and a dash of truffle salt. Brought the duck breast back inside and tented it in foil for a few minutes. But when I took its temp, it was only 135F, which is not hot enough for poultry. So I poured its juices into the pan and seared it till it hit 165F; while it rested, I deglazed the pan with blueberry balsamic vinegar and made a reduction, which I poured over the slices. Sat out on the deck under the stars (and incoming planes in the O’Hare flight path) and ate it (perfectly mid-rare) along with a glass of Handley 2012 Pinot Noir. Afterward, I sopped up the sauce with a small piece of low-carb bread and kicked back out there with a decaf cappuccino.
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Tonight I rode my bike 22 miles in 61 minutes. And I'm not hungry.....
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Wow Eric, awesome!
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