So...whats for dinner?

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

    Happy hammer, I could eat it either way, but bet the rice is a southern adaptation(for stroganoff) I love rice with any kind of gravy.

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

    LGA...is one of those places that requires lots of patience. How's that for a diplomatic euphemism? :-)

    We had a late lunch yesterday, so dinner was skipped.

    I need to go pick up a heavy duty cleaver that I took to a knife shop to be professionally sharpened. It is about 3 inches wide, almost an inch thick and the edge is just over 12 inches long. If I had to guess, it was made from a heavy truck spring. My parents were in China soon after WW2, and I'm guessing that is where and when the knife was made.

    I made a smaller version in high school from a pickup truck spring. The metal work was done in the metal shop and the wood handles were made in the wood shop. I still use the knife.

    A kid of today wanting to make a knife in high school would probably be expelled from school and brought up on charges...if metal or wood shops still exist.....sigh.....

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

    Last night we finished up the kale soup with a salad and crusty bread with brie cheese. It was a quick dinner as I had just returned from the eye doc (with very blurry vision!) and we needed to get going to the Celtics game, with no idea how bad the traffic would be. Then I drove into Boston with my 'large pupils', and tolerated all the bright car lights. Fortunately, the Garden's lights were not bothersome....and by the time we drove home, my eyes were almost back to normal. Oh, and the Celts pulled off a good win!

    Eye doc story.....we are very fond of our eye doc, a 50ish woman who we have seen for probably 12 years. She had cancer treatment twice in that time, and has sometimes looked frail to me. Last year at this time, she announced that she would be adding another doc to her practice. He'd covered for one of her medical LOAs in the past. She would only be following a small number of patients and doing no more cataract surgeries. I had seen her new partner a couple of years ago for a small vision crisis and he is fine, but we really hoped we could stay with her since she is wonderful and we have a good relationship despite her 'infrequent specialist' role. I also worried that she might be losing her battle with the cancer. So....I prepared myself for the switch to the new doc (a nice man, but much less personable), and while having my vision checked with the staff person, I asked how my 'former' doc was doing. The woman cheerfully said...."Oh she's doing well...you'll see her shortly". Well, sure enough, she came right in and I was so pleased. We had a great visit assessing my timing for cataract surgery, (which I continue to out off as long as possible)and the various options that exist now for intraocular lenses, as well as looking carefully at my overall eye and general health. I should probably mention that my wimpy ness about switching eye docs has to do with my recent experience of losing several excellent providers to "moves" for professional advancement reasons. I will be following my MO to Dana Farber since she gave me that option when she announced her change a few months ago. Sadly my wonderful surgeon has moved on to become head of another system, and RO moved out of state to head up a program... Guess I have had too many really competent women docs who, fortunately for them, have advanced in their fields. But at least I can keep my eye doc for now....and she was looking healthy. Yay for her! Cutting back has probably been helpful for her health.

    Back to food.... Tonight I'm making baked salmon, (which we picked up during our walk this afternoon) accompanied by my typical salad (or maybe caesar), butternut squash, and crusty bread.

    I need to get rid of all the cookies in the house. My sister is quite the baker and we have been gnashing on way too many of hers and mine for the past four days. We sent her home with a lot, but still have too many.

    Then DS1 and DDIL1 sent us an amazing wooden tray of a vast assortment of dried fruits and nuts. Another calorie laden treat! We brought it to every house we visited over the weekend to "share the wealth". :) Actually I'll send a pic of it....

    DH bought us a Roomba for our Christmas present.....got this bee in his bonnet...so now "Rhonda"is roaming around happily collecting dog hair. "She" is kind of like having an electronic pet. He is totally thrilled with her and I think it is a riot! Gotta lift my feet now....

    Battening down the hatches for a nor'easter....some of you may have already had the snow.

    Good soup making weather!


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

    The dried fruit and nut assortment...

    image

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

    Wow Lacey, that's beautiful!

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

    Wow Lacey, that's beautiful! My latest addiction is dried mangoes, that assortment would be dangerous!

  • HappyHammer
    HappyHammer Member Posts: 1,247
    edited December 2016

    Lacey- we are in the same boat- way to many goodies and only 2 of us here.  I have really sworn off sweets since the BC diagnosis.  Hubby doesn't need any of it either but he has tried to do his best to take care of it for me...haha.  Anyway, boxing it up tomorrow and taking it to a local shelter- hoping they can enjoy it!  HOWEVER, your dried fruit and nut tray looks divine!!!!

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

    Nance, funny that you should mention mangoes. When I was first introduced to them many years ago, I was captivated by their luscious texture and wonderful flavor, so I happily ate them...often. Then on a vacation in Mexico I ate one and blew up like a balloon requiring emergency medical support. Seems I surpassed my allergic threshold (rain barrell theory) to that food. I am also allergic to cashews which I later learned are somehow "related" to mangoes. Odd. Fortunately, our dried fruit tray includes very few mangoes. :)

    Our dinner of baked teriyaki salmon, caesar salad, and roasted rounds of butternut squash with a drizzle of maple syrup, and garlic bread, was really tasty. We ate while listening to Rhonda vacuuming most of the rooms downstairs. DH is obsessed with this little robotette! Wondering if you still like yours, Bedo? I can see how useful it would be for cat or shedding dog owners.

    I totally gave in and ate some cookies and fudge after dinner. Chocolate walnut fudge is my guilty pleasure.

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

    lacey - can I mail you my extra walnut fudge? It is just sitting there tempting me too! The recipe I used makes five pounds because I was building holiday plates with a friend, but she didn't take as much fudge as I had hoped she would - so I have way more than our foursome could handle over the holiday! Maybe I should go to the craft store and get some candy boxes and pack it up and give it away... or open a fudge stand on the corner....

  • HappyHammer
    HappyHammer Member Posts: 1,247
    edited December 2016

    Special- My mom would make fudge with walnuts and freeze it.  We still talk about how one of us children would have to go to the basement and get "just 4 pieces"- one for each of us.  Nevermind how many times that might happen in a day, haha. However, the fudge did great in the freezer.  Just an idea.

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

    happy - just 4 pieces - how cute is that? Thanks for the suggestion, I had thought about freezing, and assumed it would do well. But because I am also following the just 4 pieces rule - but they are all for me - I just really need to get it out of my house! I can mail you just 4 pieces too!

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

    Haha, Special.....I neglected to mention that I also have a huge amount of fudge I made....and even halved the recipe this year! So, I will need to decline to accept your kind offer.....but will take up Happy's suggestion and pop the rest of mine in the freezer. Never even thought of that! Thanks for the idea! At least those yummy creamy squares won't be staring at me all day....;).

    I have a feeling, Special, if you were to set up a little "fudge corner stand" it wouldn't last too long! And then, there's always the freezer! :)

    Dinner might be turkey breast cutlets that I found in the freezer....nowthawing in fridge. I say "might" because the package has been in freezer for well over a year and I need to assess its quality. I am the worst freezer user, resulting in wasted food.....so I usually buy fresh meats/fish for immediate prep...which will happen today if the cutlets are "off". Hope not.....

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

    I try to put a date on stuff that I put into the freezer...and try to put the new stuff toward the back of the freezer, so that it gets used up in a reasonable amount of time.

    Even with all that work, I still sometimes find some dinosaur meat in there....


  • HappyHammer
    HappyHammer Member Posts: 1,247
    edited December 2016

    Special, thanks for the offer but trying to resist temptation!  The idea was to keep my mom from eating too much of it- we thought she didn't want us to have it, haha. Of course, when I grew up, knew exactly why she did that.

    Isn't that the truth about the freezer? I date things, try to rotate it, etc, but do find "dinosaurs" as well.

    DS is here watching a bowl game with DH. Have had pork sammies for lunch.  Dinner tonight will be leftover stroganoff and/or leftover spaghetti with meat sauce and a big tossed salad.  Trying to get any leftovers and such out of here before I go low carb next week :)


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

    Lacey--were you at the Knicks/Celtic's game? My Dad and watched it on TV!

    Dinner tonight will be a pot of chili that I just started----We are getting really high winds today and tomorrow and the wind chills to go with them. So, chili sounded like a plan.

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

    Beef stroganoff. I never think of cooking that dish and we enjoy it. Good idea 💡!

    We're having split pea soup cooked with a meaty ham bone. Dh is the chef. I'll make a salad. Cornbread would be good

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

    Carole - yum, I love beef stroganoff and also split pea soup w/ham.

    Most of my dinners this week were leftover variations of the prime rib I cooked on Christmas Eve. Finally finished the last as a roasts beef sandwich on sourdough bread yesterday. Today I went to the only 'new mexico' mexican restaurant in Houston and had a stack of green chili enchiladas w/chicken. And two margaritas. Tomorrow will be salad & bagels w/cream cheese & smoked salmon.

    New Year's Eve, those of my chickenfoot domino group who are in town will start playing at 4pm and quit around 10pm to head for our beds. I am going to make Hawaiian Sweet Roll sliders. If they turn out, I'll post the recipe. Since this is the South, someone will be making a black eyed pea dish for luck - and probably someone will be making something with cabbage for the same.

    Did you all see Mark Bittman's 3 ingredient no knead bread recipe on line? I can hardly wait to try it.

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

    Haha....nothing goes into my freezer without a date.....but seems to be an irrelevant effort. I have a side by side twenty five year old fridge. I cannot "find" much in this tall machine.....I think I would do better visually with one of those bottom drawer freezers. Oh well....

    In fact the turkey cutlets were delicious! I sauteed them, then heated them in oven covered with Rao's sauce (on sale at our local market), a nice fresh mozzarella, and some manchego cheese (using up leftovers from holidays). Made some cappelini to go with the turkey dish. And of course a large garden salad with my fave horseradish dressing. I am with you, Happy, with the need to distance from carbs.

    Beef stroganoff.... always loved it and made it often when we were first married. Not sure why I abandoned it then,...but I know why I do now. Waaaay too second helping satisfying with that creamy texture and noodle carbs.

    Minus , that sounds like a fun New Years Eve!

    Red, The Celts Knicks game...a great game by our standards....was in NYC and we were home in Boston...the game we attended this week was with Memphis here in Boston. Since we have half season tickets, we will probably not be travelling to any out of town games. Some weeks I feel like Lucy on the chocolate candy conveyor belt with so many games we are scheduled to attend! But no real complaints....we love it! Some retired people take cruises....we go to Celtics games.

    They are playing the Cavs right now and doing just fine at the moment, so I will go watch.....

    Update on Rhonda...she is amazingly cleaning every bit of dust that ever existed in the upstairs of our house! Functional and hilarious! We have a robot cleaning pet!! Our pets always created the need for cleaning.




  • HappyHammer
    HappyHammer Member Posts: 1,247
    edited December 2016

    So Lacey...you may need to be on the next robo~vacuum commercials...you are making me want one!  I do not often make beef stroganoff but my mom loves it so decided to do it.  We have it over rice though I know many like it with egg noodles.  Yep, apparently am carb loading to really put my body into the crazy zone when I go back to low card eating next week. Actually am looking forward to the low carbs as I do and feel better then....and, my weight will be better. Need to can the extra lbs since I am ER+.

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

    Me too, Happy....I've gotten relaxed of late, and have to get back on my healthy "program".

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

    (Dang it--my computer ate the beginning of my post--including the show we saw last night, the last two days' meals, etc. But here's The Inn at Little Washington (at the foot of the Blue Ridge Mts.) earlier tonight:

    First amuse-bouche was eaten before I could photograph it: a potato chip stuffed with "pimento cheese" that no Southern mom ever made unless she'd gone to culinary school. (I could taste fresh chive, chèvre, creme fraiche, and cheddar). Amuse-bouche # 2 was red pepper-carrot-vodka soup and a Comte cheese gougere:

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    Amuse-bouche #3, a pork-belly skewer with kimchi on a tamari reduction:

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    Appetizer: "A Tin of Sin;" American farmed osetra caviar on a bed of cucumber gelee and crabmeat salad, accompanied by champagne:

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    Next, lamb carpaccio with "Caesar salad ice cream," microgreens, pureed romaine and "Parmigiano-Reggiano snow," served with a Pinot Noir (aka Spatburgunder) rose from the Baden region of Germany:

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    Next was crispy veal sweetbreads with apricots and country ham, accompanied with an Alsatian vendange tardive Pinot Gris. Alas, I ate it too fast. Oops. Where were my manners? Maybe my sister snapped a pic.

    Next, poached lobster in a yellow-tomato, fennel pollen & saffron broth with garlic custard, with a Russian River area oaked chardonnay:


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    Here's the wine:

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    Pre-dessert intermezzo: "Dreamsicle" with graham cracker crumbs:

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    Dessert: "Seven Deadly Sins," miniatures of their most famous sweets: mint ice cream with chocolate ribbons, chocolate lava cake with a black truffle sugar topping, apple-tartlet, butterscotch ice cream sandwich with warm caramel sauce, limoncello mousse cheesecake with raspberry yogurt, vanilla panna cotta, and "chocolate bomb:" a shell of dark chocolate surrounding dark chocolate mousse. Scattered throughout the plate were grains of dark-chocolate enrobed puffed arborio rice:

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    No dessert wine--I had to drive, and even sharing each glass of the pairings with my sis & niece pushed the limits of what I could safely imbibe. So I had a double espresso (from artisanally roasted beans from the next town over). Just as we were about to leave, we heard a cowbell and a moo (from one of those toys you turn over).....the folks at the next table had ordered the cheese course:


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    Finally, our souvenirs (besides the menus, which I will try to photograph tomorrow at my sis' house before I head home)--candies & cookies in a little box replica of the Inn:

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    Yea, verily, I was weak--ate a lemon snap, shortbread, chocolate cherry & 2 chocolate blueberries (plus doing my nails and drinking some orange herb tea while waiting for all these pics to load). Hope they can manage to make it home unmolested in my carry-on!

    This is only the third time I've ever been here (last time was 22 years ago). Even the priciest place in Paris is cheaper, but boy, was this worth it!

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

    Beautiful food, ChiSandy.

    Lacey, you probably talked me out of the stroganoff! It is one of those second helping foods. Like tuna casserole.

    The split pea soup was very good and there is more to be enjoyed. Dh made cornbread muffins using a box of Jiffy mix. He likes sweet cornbread.

    Your Christmas beef has me desiring beef, Minus. I have leftover linguine that could become pasta pie. But it would be challenging to restrict to small portion. Probably should toss it.

    Dinner is to be decided


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

    No idea about what to do for dinner. Kind of leaning towards pancakes and bacon for dinner

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

    Carole - so glad to have you back at the table more often. Sending wishes that your Mother is comfortable.

    Lacey - I too have had to deal with docs retiring & accepting promotions to other facilities. I've tried very hard to make sure all the new ones are under 50 so they'll still be working up until I don't need them anymore. Funny - I keep seeing my 'old' OB/Gyn at restaurants & concerts around town. Last time she gave me her personal business card & said let's do lunch.

    I LOVE the four piece rule. Unfortunately my downfall is bread and not candy. although I'm doing a very good job of consuming a 10 oz box of See's Peanut Brittle all by myself. Just think of the discipline it required not to buy the 1 lb box - LOL.

    Nance - did you get your Dad moved OK?

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

    Hubby told me pancakes and bacon sounded good to him so that is what I am doing for dinner


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

    Minus, I think DD will have your downfall.

    When I took a couple of loaves of sourdough from the oven, DD was there with a stick of real butter. Sharon and I did get about 1/2 a loaf of bread. :-)



  • HappyHammer
    HappyHammer Member Posts: 1,247
    edited December 2016

    Oh no, my DH is sick- ear and throat crud.  think I'll be making a comforting soup for supper. Trying to figure our what might taste good to him.

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

    We'll have leftover chicken thighs cooked with lemon and olives and winter squash mash flavored with brown sugar and butter. It's one of those round "squatty" squash that I cooked and peeled a couple of days ago. Not sure of the name. I'll also make a romaine salad with additions including avocado.

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

    Chili for supper tonight--made it yesterday and was just getting ready to eat some when m y pal Melodie knocked on the back door and wanted to go eat out---so we went to Fiesta Ranchero (it was 1/2 price margarita night) so since she was driving, I had two frozen strawberry M with a burrito bowl. Can't remember the last time I had two drinks the same night, but boy were they good. I showed her when I got out the car that I could still touch both of my noses without any difficulty.

    Today, I had to do something with the Challah bread I bought Christmas Eve and didn't use. So, I made the French toast in Ina Garten's cookbook---you use whipping cream and orange zest and honey and kosher salt------OMG-----I will eat the rest of this loaf of bread pretty quickly. She also has a French toast bread pudding recipe that you do in the oven, but I did it in the skillet and it was divine.

  • HappyHammer
    HappyHammer Member Posts: 1,247
    edited December 2016

    Made a Greek chicken dish with artichokes and lemon over rice...soothing and delish. Served it with steamed broccoli.

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