So...whats for dinner?

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  • SpecialK
    SpecialK Member Posts: 16,486
    edited December 2016

    red - I could feel you there in the empty house making cookies - I am sure a host of memories. Glad you got some interesting cookies out of the time spent! Hope you are not sliding back into the depths of extended illness. Love tamales - am thinking of getting some from my local good Mexican restaurant for Christmas Eve - $16.95 for a dozen. A couple thoughts on how to use up your excess cream cheese - last year I made a new recipe with those filo cups you can get in the frozen section - it is a jalapeno popper filling - cream cheese, pickled jalapenos that are chopped, cheddar cheese, green onion that is mixed together. Put it in the cups, top with panko and parmesan cheese and bake for about 12-15 mins at 350 F. Alternatively you could just put it in a baking dish and use it as a dip with crackers. It is forgiving enough that if you didn't have jalapenos, you could use drained salsa or green chilies too. Also, if you have tortillas you can mix cream cheese, shredded chicken, green onions, hot sauce and spread it on tortillas and make Buffalo chicken roll ups, chill and then slice into pinwheels.

  • carolehalston
    carolehalston Member Posts: 6,887
    edited December 2016

    DH made a big pot of chicken sausage gumbo on...hm, the days run together. It must have been Thursday or Friday. It came out really good and we've been slurping up rich gumbo over rice. Down to just enough for lunches.

    Tonight is turkey meatballs and cauliflower mash. I mentioned having that another night but we didn't have it. The scales tell me comfort food encourages one to eat big portions.

    Red, cream cheese lasts a long time in the refrigerator, practically forever. Especially the full fat cream cheese.

    Nance, tell me about making dinner rolls, freezing them and then having them on a holiday. I'm thinking I'll make the Pioneer Woman's cloverleaf dinner rolls for Christmas dinner. It would be helpful to make them ahead of time since my family eats holiday meals just past noon.

  • SpecialK
    SpecialK Member Posts: 16,486
    edited December 2016

    Went out to dinner last night for our 33rd anniversary - DH had a steak with baked Gorgonzola, a side of linguine with marinara, a Caesar salad, and a crazy big piece of chocolate cake. We had an inexpensive decent wine, B.R. Cohn Silver label cab, DH two glasses and one for me - but I also had a glass of prosecco. I had a dish called cremosa aragosta - fettucine in a cream sauce with spinach, artichoke, and lobster, a house salad, and a really good limoncello cake with lemon mascarpone frosting. Tonight we will be at the Buccaneer's game, so some average stadium food.

  • eric95us
    eric95us Member Posts: 2,845
    edited December 2016

    Happy 33rd, Special!!!! :-)


  • Valstim52
    Valstim52 Member Posts: 1,324
    edited December 2016

    Happy 33 specialk!!!

    You guys make me hungry. Dinner was pasta with turkey italian sausage and lots of veggies in a garlic oil sauce. Large salad with homemade balsamic dressing. Dessert was pound cake. Milk less.

  • MinusTwo
    MinusTwo Member Posts: 16,634
    edited December 2016

    Val - nice to see you.

    Special - happy 33. The cremosa aragosta sounded intriguing so I attempted to google a recipe. Oh yes there were plenty, but every one in Italian. When i clicked "cremosa in inglese" - still no English. Funny.

    Carole - I agree about the tendency to eat too much when it's 'comfort' food. After a dinner of salad & one large slice of pizza I was content to save the other piece. Not happy mind you, but OK with it. Then at 10:30 after I finished the Christmas cards - when I wasn't even really hungry - I ate that second piece.

    Red - Thanks for posting about making cookies in your Mom's kitchen. It made me stop and think of all the good cooking times & had with my Grandma and my Mother.

    Lacey - I can't remember if I told you thanks for posting about your visit with Susan. i surely miss her on this thread but understand she is swamped.

    Off to an Advent concert by the Bach society with my NIL (I just made this up = niece-law). I'm sorry I don't speak German, but the music with period instruments will be delightful. And afterwards we'll meet my nephew, who is keeping the 15 month old during the concert so his wife can go with me. Dinner at the Raven Grille. Report to follow.

  • auntienance
    auntienance Member Posts: 4,216
    edited December 2016

    Carole, the butter rich rolls seem to freeze best for me. I've tried letting them rise, then freezing, or freezing them raw, then rising and baking as needed, but I have the best result baking the rolls, then freezing them.Warmed in the oven, they taste freshly baked. Plus you don't have to let them rise for hours. But as I said, they need a lot of butter in the dough.

    I'm out of many things, but managed to find a hambone in the freezer so it's ham and beans and cornbread tonight. Short work in the pressure cooker.

  • auntienance
    auntienance Member Posts: 4,216
    edited December 2016

    Oh Red, bittersweet for sure. My mom was not a cook, so I don't have those memories. In fact I don't remember Christmas cookies much at all. My mom did make homemade fudge and my grandmother was famous for her divinity, which she only made at Christmas. Makes my teeth ache to think about it lol!

    I started fruit and nut breads (Harvest loaf from KAF) for the holidays. I'll finish them tomorrow and they'll go in the freezer until needed. Most are gifts.

    I'm also decorating our "Charlie Brown" tree. I don't know if we'll ever get the big one out again. Way too much work and too little enthusiasm. But this one is cheery enough and oh so easy.

  • ChiSandy
    ChiSandy Member Posts: 12,133
    edited December 2016

    Special, happy 33rd!

    I am getting severe cabin fever. Bad enough that I threw my back out last Monday (or more precisely, it went out—I was doing absolutely nothing when I felt that lightning bolt on the right side of my waist between my spine and upper spine, and my muscles immediately went into intractable spasm). Bad enough that the only time I got out of the house was to be driven (a block & a half) to the Immediate Care clinic Tues. afternoon and have used a wheelchair, shopping cart (at CVS to get my Rxs filled) and Rollator ever since. Now we're getting loads of sloppy, wet heavy snow, and even if I could get dressed (beyond changing between my nightie and my sweats) I can't do diddly-squat. I was able to hire a snow guy via my neighborhood blog, but he needs to wait till most of the snow has finished falling (they're predicting 10-11pm). We have about 5" thus far and may get as much as 8". Meanwhile, Bob is stuck down in Oak Lawn, at Christ Hospital. Last night, he feared he'd be unable to get out of our garage this morning, so he stayed at a hotel in Oak Lawn. But because that 'burb's snow removal is worse than Chicago's, he might have to spend tonight sleeping in the on-call room or on the couch in the doctors' lounge at Christ.

    I had to postpone my nail appt (they're getting really raggedy and in no shape to play guitar) to tomorrow—if I get there, it'll have to be by Uber, and just getting down the stairs to the sidewalk will be a chore (and I will need help putting on my boots). And the reason I need to repair my nails is that I'm scheduled to perform on-air Tues. night (with my singing partner coming down from Madison, WI) on WDCB's Holiday Hoot concert—but I will probably be unable to drive the 30 miles (or still be on a muscle relaxer that'd make it too dangerous for me to take the wheel), much less walk from a non-HC space in the parking lot (I haven't had a placard in 18 months) carrying a guitar. Asking my singing partner to pick me up would take him an hour out of his way at either end of the trip. If I have to back out of the radio concert as well, I hope there’s enough room in the Dec. 20 lineup for us—and that I’m in shape to get there. We leave for NYC & DC on the 22nd—though I will definitely use airport wheelchairs, having to use a Rollator for the entire trip will be a bummer (to put it mildly). I can sit and lie down and stand for short periods okay, but walking is rough and getting up from a chair is brutal and bending down past where my knees can do all the work is impossible.

    This morning, I made slow-scrambled eggs (so wet & creamy I needed to eat them with a spoon) and a turkey-sausage-“biscuit” sandwich (cut two circles from a piece of sourdough toast, put a turkey sausage patty in between and nuked it for 30 sec.). Two cups of coffee thus far—and tonight I’ll probably switch to Oolong tea for the last of the Chinese leftovers.

    I have a voice lesson (Skype) in a few minutes. We’ll see if I can sit up straight enough to get through it.

  • auntienance
    auntienance Member Posts: 4,216
    edited December 2016

    Oh Sandy, poor you, that sounds just awful! Have you had this before? I feel so sorry for folks with chronic back issues, they suffer so. My dad had to have a fusion a number of years ago and has suffered to varying degrees since. My only experience thus far, (knocking on every piece of wood in my proximity) has been a bout of sciatic pain, which was bad enough, but at least it was intermittent. I hope you can get some relief soon Sandy.

    SK, congratulations on thirty three years of wedded bliss! Your meal sounds awesome. I'm making a cake for Christmas eve dinner with mascarpone icing. I LOVE that stuff! I love cake, but in this case, the cake is just a medium for the icing. Of course I had to leave town for the mascarpone, as my one and only attempt to make it myself was an abject failure.


  • ChiSandy
    ChiSandy Member Posts: 12,133
    edited December 2016

    Nancy, I’ve gone through this with either my back or neck every 2-3 years or so since my late 20s. Osteoarthritis of the cervical & lumbar spine, and my scoliosis doesn’t help matters any. Always comes on suddenly, but till now it’s been as a result of twisting or stepping off a high curb or bending. This time I didn’t do anything to bring it on. I was on prednisone for laryngitis for 6 days before that so I could perform in the Bar Show, and the doc’s P.A. speculates I might have injured it during the run of the show and it didn’t manifest till the day after my last pill when the prednisone was out of my system.

  • M0mmyof3
    M0mmyof3 Member Posts: 9,696
    edited December 2016

    I made meatloaf. Have enough left for another night

  • eric95us
    eric95us Member Posts: 2,845
    edited December 2016

    The braised beef turned out excellent. I used this recipe. Recipe It was a bit sour, so I added honey to suit my taste buds. I think I added about 3 more tablespoons of honey.

    I let it cook for about 8 hours in the dutch oven in the oven and the meat is tart, but not sour.

    Adding....

    The other thing I did today was to fix the rear brakes on my commute to work car. I didn't feel like doing the work, but it *HAD* to get done, so I got out the air tools and put in my ear plugs (I hate the noise that air tools make). Thirty one minutes from gathering the tools to having everything put away. The car now, as they say, "Stops on a dime and gives 9 cents change".



  • MinusTwo
    MinusTwo Member Posts: 16,634
    edited December 2016

    Eric - I'm not good at revising recipes, but what would you think about switching the balsamic vinegar to red wine?

    Dinner with my nephew was excellent. I had rainbow trout w/French green lentils & sauteed spinach with pecans. Neph had their pot roast. He was licking the bowl. Niece-in-law had blackened salmon pasta. She cleared her plate also. We split a peanut butter mousse pie with oreo crust. Surprisingly addictive. None of us had leftovers to take home. The 15 month old kept very busy with homemade rosemary bread & whole wheat bread and didn't fuss at all while we visited for 1-1/2 hours. They don't usually give the baby sweets but she LOVED the peanut butter pie.

  • ChiSandy
    ChiSandy Member Posts: 12,133
    edited December 2016

    Bob decided to brave the slippery roads and drive home from Oak Lawn through Evergreen Park. He said as soon as he crossed Western Ave. into Chicago, the streets were magically clear. Guess there’s a reason for higher property taxes than in the S. suburbs…..

    Anyway, he stopped off at Calo and brought home fettucine with spinach & prawns. Yum! (There’s enough left over for two more meals). Opened a bottle of Mumm Napa Deveaux Ranch Brut 2007 to celebrate his making it home in the snow, having been able to hire someone who shoveled, and my back slowly getting better.

  • eric95us
    eric95us Member Posts: 2,845
    edited December 2016

    I have a cookbook with lots of "next time, try......" notes penciled in the edges...all having to do with wines, both red and white, as a braising liquid. None of them ever gave the meat a pleasing to us taste. So far, the balsamic vinegar, with enough honey, seems to be the closest to the way I like it.

    Back then the legal age to buy alcoholic beverages was 19. There wasn't much drinking, but there sure was a lot of cooking experiments.


    Snow? That's that white stuff. Right????? Around here 1/16 of an inch of snow would probably shut down the town. Heat...ahh...changing the subject...... :-)

  • april485
    april485 Member Posts: 3,257
    edited December 2016

    This was a storm here in CT last winter. Guess this would shut down AZ for a month Eric! This was my back deck and the furniture had not yet been covered and put away. My grill took a hit too...LOL Since we grill all year when it is not snowing, we never put it away, just cover it.

    image

  • Lacey12
    Lacey12 Member Posts: 2,951
    edited December 2016

    Happy 33rd, Special! Of course here it might be referred to as your "Larry Bird" anniversary. LOL

    Chi, I'm sorry to learn of your back issue....sounds awful. While my sciatica is a bit better, the constant coughing led to a back strain last Saturday that has continued, but regular ibuprofen is settling it a bit. When we were getting ready to go out last Saturday, I could not bend down to fasten the strap on my shoes. Needed DH to come do it for me. Believe me, every time I can put my socks on now, I am extremely thankful!

    Last night we had grilled teriyaki pork tenderloin, ("we" also grill all winter) with steamed brussells sprouts, and a mixed salad with balsamic dressing. We also finished up a bit of crustless kale and peppers quiche that was languishing in the fridge. We shared a red velvet whoopie pie for dessert. I made the mistake of impulsively picking one up last week (at a store's checkout counter) and obviously DH liked it a lot, so he bought one yesterday. Definitely not scales friendly!

    Made two cookie doughs last night.....one for almond flavored candy cane cookies, and walnut chocolate chip dough made with spelt. Hope they are not too healthy tasting for the Cookie tray!

    Very messy snow and rain day here today....but will probably venture out to the gym, and do modified stretching.....maybe zumba if my back is not spasming.

    Minus and Special, both of your dinners out sounded delicious!

    Nance, not sure we will ever go back to a big tree either. We did go a hunting for our Charlie Brown tree Saturday, and as we started our search, a truck pulled up and the workers started unloading a ton of very small trees....what luck! So it is already up (small but much fuller thana CB tree) and decorated since DH loves to do that...or so it seems. I don't question it.....just happy it gets done. I have yet to decorate the wreath we purchased.

  • SpecialK
    SpecialK Member Posts: 16,486
    edited December 2016

    Thanks for the anniversary wishes! Lacey - lol!

    chisandy - eeesh on the sore back - hope it improves quickly! a sore back is tough - can't get into a comfy position, and forget bending over for shoes or the keys you dropped.

    I am a crazy person and have a number of trees - a vintage pink and turquoise one with ornaments that were on my family trees in the 50's and 60's, a nautical one on the lanai woith starfish and sparkly turtles and palm trees, a big traditional one (I mean BIG - 10 feet!) with a lot of glass ornaments, a military/Americana one, and one that has all of the children's homemade ornaments, and ones given to them on top of packages from when they were little.

  • eric95us
    eric95us Member Posts: 2,845
    edited December 2016

    My mom had enough ornaments for a 20 foot tree....

  • SpecialK
    SpecialK Member Posts: 16,486
    edited December 2016

    eric - Lol! Me too - that is why I have so many trees! I have also purchased many as souvenirs when we have traveled. My DH gave me a quiz the other night to see if I could tell him the origin of each one he pointed out - I batted 1000. I apparently can forget important stuff, but remember where the ornaments came from... haha!

  • april485
    april485 Member Posts: 3,257
    edited December 2016

    would love to see photos of that vintage tree. Love them as they were really a part of my childhood. My aunt had a pink one and a blue one and would put them both up in the same large room. My family had the silver foil one for a few years but my dad hated it and we went back to green ones..lol

    I buy a real tree still. I have been doing this since I had my own family almost 40 years now. Here is a photo of my tree. It is 8 feet tall.image

  • auntienance
    auntienance Member Posts: 4,216
    edited December 2016

    We have enough ornaments for a 20 foot tree which is why we haven't gotten it out for a while. For 30 years, we gave each other ornaments at Christmas, plus we have some old glass ones from our own childhoods. They add up. Even after giving DS his and some of ours too, we have what seems like hundreds. It exhausts me just thinking about putting them away.

  • ChiSandy
    ChiSandy Member Posts: 12,133
    edited December 2016

    Devoutly grateful for the “bionic” knees that make it unnecessary to bend over to pick things up. Was able to pull on my UGGs today, to leave the house for my manicure. Pain patches (Flector, aka diclofenac, overnight and Lidoderm during the day) are making a difference, as well as taking Flexeril BID now—splitting the difference between the PA at the “doc-in-a-box” around the corner who prescribed only one, at bedtime only, and Bob, who says he prescribes it Q6H for the first few days. He also says he prefers Baclofen because it is non-sedating. I won’t take a flexeril tomorrow morning, because I’ll be driving first to & from Evanston Hospital for my followup mammo and BS appt., and then to Glen Ellyn for the radio concert. (WDCB 90.9 in the Chi. area, www.wdcb.org worldwide). The show runs from 8-11, and we’re on between 9:18-9:33.

    Leftover fettucine aglio e olio with red pepper flakes, prawns & spinach, plus sparkling pinot meunier for dinner tonight.

  • Redheaded1
    Redheaded1 Member Posts: 1,600
    edited December 2016

    ChiSandy I hope you heal quickly. I have had back spasms, usually after lifting something I shouldn't by myself--they gave me Flexeril as well. And Vicodin. It is certainly a different kind of pain. I woke up and when I opened the door to get the newspaper, the world was WHITE....we were not predicted any snow until later this week. It is pretty when it is undisturbed.

    Love all the Christmas tree stuff- I have not put mine up --worried about what Esmerelda would do to a tree.. I have tons of ornaments as well. We can't seem to have a Church Rummage Sale when I don't find another antique ornament to lug home with me. I could probably do a tree for several themes---Victorian, Russian, Swedish, German, Angels, Cats, Hunting/Fishing, etc. My favorite is the all Cat tree or the all Ethnic Heritage tree.

    Yesterday was not a good day at the nursing home. When I arrived my Dad was in his room, sitting in his wheel chair staring at the calendar on the closet door and having a conversation with no one. I asked him who he was talking to and he said "myself". and I asked him what he was talking about and he was "gong to take his test " and then it was his "test to get his drivers license back"...I should know not to even try to reason with him, but then I got told how I had no Confidence in him, and I wasn't his boss....So I diverted him to his hearing aids and getting them working (changed the batteries) and then he picked up the newspaper, read one story out loud to me, read the headlines on another on the same page, then started to read the same story out loud again...so I redirected him to the new story......More and More when I am there he doesn't want to talk to me about anything---so I just sit with him and hold his arm or his hand.while he decides to read the paper, the Bible, or watch TV. The nurse did say he has fewer crackles in his lungs today and that he still has a few days of antibiotic left. We still have had no birds on the feeder outside his window. He did get a chuckle out of his Christmas gift to me----I found a bracelet made out of the bottom of Winchester shotgun shells- My dad was a big outdoorsman and he just loved that bracelet.....

  • auntienance
    auntienance Member Posts: 4,216
    edited December 2016

    Ah Red, these are not easy times are they? Hugs to you.


  • Redheaded1
    Redheaded1 Member Posts: 1,600
    edited December 2016

    Thanks Nance----today wasn't much better

    Trying to get things done for Christmas gift exchanges and rushing around. Looking for a unique little demitasse cup for a friend who collects them--needed something else to put in her Xmas bag so I hit 4 of the antique shops in town but didn't see anything I liked--although I did buy myself a Infant of Prague flower vase ( I will use it as a pencil cup) an d a pair of Christmas Pillowcases-- I will use them on the bed with my Christmas quilt I made--I ran out of fabric so I couldn't do shams---these will be fine......they were ticketed 4.00 and everything Christmas was 1/2 off so I was happy happy....

    Was going to treat myself to a steak and baked potato for supper but there was literally no parking place at Kroger----so I hit the McDonalds at the far end of the lot......no, it was not as good, but I had no dishes to clean up either.....

  • MinusTwo
    MinusTwo Member Posts: 16,634
    edited December 2016

    Red - We had limited my Dad at age 89 to driving only down to the corner store. Well he made a wrong turn one day, and then another, and then another & he didn't get home. My Mother's care giver called me & I hopped on a plane from Houston to San Francisco. Turns out he sort of knew where he was but couldn't figure out how to get home on all the new freeways. He finally rang a doorbell on a residential street and convinced the lady who answered that he was harmless and to please call his house. The caregiver couldn't leave my Mom so the neighbors went to get him & one drove his car home. After 8 hours of being missing, he was home. When the police came the next day - the officer told me I would need to take away his driver's license. "OH NO", said I. "You have a uniform & a badge & a gun & are the man in authority - I am just a 'girl'. You will have to ask him to surrender his driver's license". Because I knew that in my Dad's generation, that was exactly what I was - just a girl. I don't mean he didn't respect me and allow me to take care of all his finances & everything else - but still, a girl (and a whippersnapper to boot). From that time on, he always had an application that he was filling out to get his driver's license back and he was convinced that the doctor would approve it & then he'd "pass the test". Funny how many applications seemed to get lost by mistake. Needless to say it never happened, but at least he didn't blame ME.

  • Lacey12
    Lacey12 Member Posts: 2,951
    edited December 2016

    Well handled, Minus!

    And Red, my caring thoughts go out to you as you devotedly care for your dad and his frustrations over clipped wings among other things. Poor guy....poor you! And Nance, I know you know what she is going through so well. Hugs to you both.

    Special, so maybe it is a Florida thing to populate each room with a tree! I just learned from DS2' s fiancee's mother that she also decorates every room with a tree. Wow! Quite an effort!

    Today I finally got around to making my kale soip which we had for dinner with a loaf of crusty bread and a leftover wedge of brie. Yum!

    And I am about to bake some chocolate chip spelt cookies.

    Nite all.....

  • MinusTwo
    MinusTwo Member Posts: 16,634
    edited December 2016

    Yes, I completely empathize with Nance & Red. Not to say that taking care of Mothers like Carole and several others are doing is easy. But boy those (stubborn) Dads. Many of the men in that generation don't know anything else but work, and that is also their identity. They HATE being helpless and it seems they fight so hard against learning to throttle back.

    Lacey - if it weren't for the snow, I'd head your way for cookies. I saw Manchester by the Sea this afternoon and the worst part was the snow, & snow, & more snow - continually coming down, shoveling, driving in, walking & slipping, freezing cold. And while I thought the acting was superb, it is about grief and not a happy subject or picture. The friend who went with me thought that the lead never showed any emotion. I don't agree, but he is certainly conflicted. Heavy subject.

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