So...whats for dinner?
Comments
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Moon...glad to see you at the table.
Susan- love the windows, hate Benedryl-completely understand what you are saying abt your reaction. My MO reduced the dose by 1/2 and that helped a lot though still was super sleepy and knocked out...hoping you awaken fever-free and feeling OK!
Made an egg salad for the week and had it with these really thin pita chips for supper..light and good. Trying to decide abt trying the Keto diet...anyone tried it?
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I was thinking about you today as I was working. That is a nice view, but like you said, it really doesn't matter.
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Hers my DGD1. Oh. And my DH.
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And DGD2. They grow so fast.
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Moon- precious little peeps!
Nance- love the haircut and new specs!
Eric- you are right- while the view is nice- Benny causes it not to really matter. Hate that! Hate hate, too...but sometimes you just HAVE to hate stuff! Especially when dealing with all that is BC.
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Long, long drive home from the eye doctor today—here in Chicago there are no alternate routes. Took surface streets to avoid the construction bottlenecks on I-55 & Lake Shore Drive, only to encounter freight trains, Cubs traffic and panhandlers working the intersections and causing huge backups. Between my eyes still being dilated (and the sunglasses being no match for bright sunshine) and my sciatica acting up from all that sitting in traffic, I knew I wasn’t going out for dinner—much less shopping. I defrosted a grass-fed NY strip steak and grilled it along with some spring bulb onions and asparagus, and dined alfresco on my deck…because I could. Tomorrow another “pneumonia front” comes through (last evening it was 42, today it was in the upper 70s, by this time tomorrow night it’ll be back down into the low 50s or even mid-40s with rain & possibly thunderstorms), so it was my last chance to grill for at least the next week. Ate all but one onion, about 1/3 of the steak and half the asparagus, and refrigerated the rest for Gordy.
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Last night was sautéed slices of chicken breast with a hot sweet sauce tossed with soba noodles. Dh made a salad of packaged greens with kale, avocado, and blue cheese. He was too lavish with the blue cheese but it sure tasted good. The soba noodle bowl was delicious. I love those buckwheat noodles.
The sauce is brown sugar, fish sauce, rice vinegar, soy sauce, dark sesame oil and sambal oelek. Very tasty.
Dinner has not been planned. Maybe a burger with home-made wheat buns from the freezer.
Anxiously awaiting a report from Susan
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Salad, chicken and a side dish
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Fever broke before getting to the magic number. Don't feel skittish today which is great. Just very dried out from the Taxol/Benadryl combo.
*susan*
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Great pictures, Moon!
I'm glad for your lack of 'roid jitters, Susan.
...Preparing for the most holy of corporate rituals...the meeting....Back to work for me.
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Hello to All
Dinner tonight will be pan seared thin chops. I soak them in buttermilk, chopped garlic and hot sauce. Then roll them in bread crumbs. Yellow rice and Brussel sprouts.
carole I will be copying your recipe for a weekend dinner. I have everything on hand for the sauce.
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Susan - Glad you're not jittery. Will they reduce the Benadryl a bit? When I have to take it, I always request a children's dose but that still totally knocks me out for at least 24 hours.
Off to MDAnderson to see my LE/PT. She is so great. I think she's agreed to keep me on for a few 'tune up' sessions twice a year, but my RO who wrote the orders is now a regional director and probably not seeing patients anymore. Wearing sleeves in the Houston summers is just awful so I try to avoid flares.
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Minus, my taxol experience will be different than yours since I am receiving a palliative dose, not a curative one. So, the good news about that, once you stop choking on the word palliative is, they will reduce the Benadryl by half next week. If there is no allergic response, they will drop it completely the following week! Then, I will be able to drive myself. I won't sleep through the whole thing and can enjoy the view.
I had a two hour nap, since my 9 hours of sleep last night wasn't enough. ;-) Being lazy tonight, grilled lamb chops, a Russet potato either baked or made into a Rostis, and some little green peas.
*susan*
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Probably either pan sear some Arctic Char fillets and make a tricolor piperade on the side,or nuke them in parchment with peppers, herbs & scallions.
Despite it getting icky and cold again, gotta go out and pick up my BP med, and the case of wine I ordered at the last tasting (missed last week's Spain winemaker dinner because of my trip); also am out of all non-flavored olive oil and need to pick up some other staples (well, in my family they're staples). Will stop by the gym to reschedule the rest of April & Msy with my trainer or his substitute
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Dinner will be beef burgers. Side will be fresh beets in vinegar. Beets and onions for dh
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Dinner was grilled grass fed beef burger and broccoli salad.
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Lunch was three spiralized, steamed zucchini. Late dinner will be bagged salad mix with the addition of avocados, English cucumbers, celery, hard boiled eggs, radishes, carrots and a scoop of leftover tuna. Or maybe just the eggs & some crudities to dip in my ranch mix. I went to hear author Greg Illes speak at one of the indie book stores. If you ever have a chance to hear him, he's worth skipping dinner entirely.
Susan - yes I did know your taxol was a different regime. But I'm glad they'll try to reduce & then maybe eliminate the Benadryl. Luckily I only had to take it the very first infusion. I hear ya about driving and not nodding through several days.
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Minus, I am thrilled that I can possibly eliminate these pre-meds! I do understand that I must have the pepsid, but the others are optional if I decide they are optional. Nurse Kristina is thrilled that I am directing the elimination of the meds. She is always shocked that other patients don't voice an opinion. They expect her to decide what pre-meds they will get. But of course, it doesn't work that way! I have been assigned the right nurse for me.
Tonight's guests are from Oklahoma. They are here for a concert and then will head to the Cape to visit his sister. They are so enthusiastic! So mid-west! They are so energetic I wasn't able to tell them that tomorrow is my shaving day. This is going to be a bit awkward, isn't it?
*susan*
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Oh, Susan,,,so glad you are directing your care as you can....and, so sorry about the hair. Hair is just such a big thing. People who can control their hair will never understand it. Those of us who have been there do. Take good care of yourself and enjoy what you can- especially that precious little one, Olivia.
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leftovers
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I took pizza crust dough ( wheat, homemade) out of the freezer last night. So dinner will be pizza and romaine salad with additions.
I'm happy that I went back to WW and even my evil scale acknowledges a downward trend in my weight. It's the sense of control that feels good. And I continue to enjoy food
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Carole - I agree. As long as I make two Silver Sneakers classes a week I can almost maintain. It appears maybe I can actually loose a pound if I add a couple of 30 minutes sessions on the treadmill. Of course that will probably only work if I don't eat bread (sigh). I've seen this weight loss twice now since I started classes again, but it bounces right back up if I go out to eat.
Going to class this morning, then out for Japanese Bento Box lunch with my SIL. It will be an excellent meal with no bread. OK - you caught me. Yes there will be tempura shrimp & fried rice. Anyway late lunch after 1pm, so no dinner needed. Maybe this week's two pound loss will stay off.
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susan - sorry the shaving day has come, but I am sure your guests will be as amazed as we all are at your resilience and stamina, and they will be humbled that you are hosting them while going through this. Sending you positive energy.
Last night we attended a black tie gala for the 30th Anniversary of Special operations Command, DH in a tux and I got dressed up in a gown. Chef Robert Irvine from the Food Network Channel worked cooperatively with the SOCOM chefs on the dinner and also attended- there were more than 500 people there - but it was a collection of odd food choices, IMHO. A combo of butter lettuce and un-stemmed cress, with yellow beet as the salad. I was fine with all but the un-stemmed cress because it meant that you were wrestling the stems into your mouth, or having to take a knife to the salad in order to eat it. The stems felt weird in my mouth. The entrée was "airline" chicken stuffed with braised short rib. It was kind of weird - beef inside chicken? The dessert was a tiny cheesecake with Chantilly cream and raspberries at each place setting but it was already on the table when we sat so the crust was a bit soggy and had to be cut with a knife to eat. Graham cracker crust would have been better, and I ended up just eating the filling. It was fun to be dressed up, but it was an early evening because it was a weeknight and everyone there had to work this morning.
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SpecialK, banquets can be so frustrating because of the volume and timing of the courses. I’m surprised that the last hospital banquet I attended managed to get the filet mignon medium-rare-to-medium and the airline chicken breast still juicy, considering how many were in attendance—especially at a country club not known for its food. Last week, our farewell dinner at the Inner Temple of London’s Inns of Court, for half as many people, also featured airline chicken, but it was pretty dry. But the appetizer—tuna carpaccio with micro-greens and avocado—was excellent, and the dessert (fresh strawberry ice cream on a kiwi slice with strawberries and blackberries) was also pretty good (though the fresh fruit plate the diabetic guests got would have been better).
Last night I’d planned to cook the arctic char fillets I’d defrosted, but Bob wanted to go out to Cellars for prix fixe night and to pick up the wines we’d ordered at the last tasting. We started with grilled asparagus over field greens, garnished with avocado, cherry tomato and pimento. My entree was grilled salmon over julienne veggies (peppers, zucchini, and sweet potato) and Bob’s was grilled hanger steak with chorizo hash and green beans. Dessert was blackberry flan. Tonight will likely be…leftovers! (Tossed the fish fillets, as they were freezer-burned anyway due to being a year old).
Susan, so glad you get to call the shots on the aux. meds for your chemo. Sorry about having to go through hair loss again—maybe a chef’s cap or bandana would unnerve your guests less, but I suspect you’d feel more awkward than they. Amazed at your stamina and resolve!
Minus, I have yet to attend a Silver Sneakers class—I am not a morning person, and they’re held at 11 am (when I’m just starting brunch). AquaFit is even earlier—9:15, at a gym 3 miles away so I’d have to drive there. I need to re-start my personal training sessions now that I’m home from London and my trainer is probably sufficiently recovered from his meniscectomy to supervise me. I need the discipline of supervision, and that accountability; otherwise, I let things slide. Not to mention I fell off the low-carb wagon due to travel and Passover (ironically, though bread was forbidden, matzo—at least a small piece—was mandatory and those kosher-for-Passover chocolates & macaroons were too tempting; the sugar-free ones are awful). No excuse now.
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Tonight's dinner was Pork Medallions in Mushroom Marsala Sauce, buttermilk mashed potatoes [as suggested], and a winter leaf salad with a mustard vinaigrette. Though the cooking instructions were not well done, in the end, the recipe was pretty delicious. I didn't have heavy cream so I substituted creme fraiche. I also increased the amount of mushrooms. Made half the recipe. Mr. SMT must have been hungry since he ate two medallions, while I ate 1/2. There is enough pork and potato leftover for Olivia tomorrow.
http://www.finecooking.com/recipes/pork-medallions...
Hair is gone. Well, there is still some fuzz..... Though I am not crazy about posting pictures here, why not?
Now I will keep a lint roller nearby. My current guests bought the "fundraiser for Dana Farber" story. Wonder how Long I can use that one?
*susan*
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Susan, no need to fudge the reason for the buzz cut. (Our dentist’s receptionist, after a bout with breast cancer, found she looked pretty good with a buzz cut and it was easy to maintain, so that’s how she’s worn her hair for 20 years). You are beautiful (gorgeous eyes!), have a nicely proportioned head, and those frames look terrific on you. Now for some striking earrings...
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Oh, Susan, losing hair makes us so vulnerable, I think. At least that is how I felt. Am so sorry you are having to do it again, (it is completely stupid but Sandy is right- your eyes, frames and head shape really are great....you look so cute....so, are you thinking wig(s)? They are hot and cumbersome...my experience. Did you wear them before? Thinking of you as I know losing your hair one time is the pits...again, well....completely stinks!
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No wigs. I tried that last time and it just didn't work for me. Olivia loves loves loves earrings, but doesn't understand that you can't pull them, so I might not bother to re-condition my "holes" to accept them once again. Loosing hair in and of itself doesn't bother me. It is other people's reactions that give me pause. I don't need pity from strangers.
*susan*
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As long as your spirit shines through, you will inspire admiration, not pity. Unleash your inner badass. You earned that right.
Dinner tonight was an insalata Caprese (store-bought tomato & basil, no seedlings out there yet—will plant the container garden next week) with orange olive oil, aged balsamico tradizionale and sea salt. Then reheated salmon and grilled asparagus, and sauteed some fresh sugar snap peas with garlic & ginger. Had my no-nos earlier (I was weak: had some Passover marshmallow twists, a jelly ring and chocolate-covered mini-matzo earlier) so I will have a clementine or two for dessert. Had a couple of oz. of 2012 Maryhill (WA) Grenache with the salmon.
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Looks good on you Susan. The worst part of losing my hair was finding out what an ugly head I have!
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