So...whats for dinner?
Comments
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My retirement day is today. This is will be the last day I make the 3 hour round trip drive to and from work.
I'll miss the people and (most of) the work. I won't miss the drive at all! :-)
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Eric-- best wishes in your retirement!!!
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Eric - yay! You will miss both for a bit (work and people) but it's amazing how fast you adjust and treasure the fact that your time is now your own. I know you will have plenty to keep you busy. Enjoy!
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Eric - hope you're going to do something to celebrate. It will be fun to see what all you'll be getting up to with the 'free' time.
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I drove this 1950 CJ-3A Jeep to work on the first day I worked for the company that became part of Verizon...November 11, 1991. I decided to drive it on my last day.
I got laid off from the electric company in May, 1988 and I bought this the day after I got laid off, which was well before I received the severance check.
I started a new job two days after I bought the Jeep.
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Eric, congrats on your new life as a gentleman of leisure!
Cherry, we are very fortunate to have several excellent Persian restaurants within a few miles of us (we order out from one of them). My favorite dish is fessenjahn (they do the pomegranate sauce over Cornish hen, quail and the falafel-like croquettes). There doesn't seem to be anything in that herb blend that would be contraindicated for a chemo patient (nor for anyone with ER+ bc).
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eric, this car is stinking cute, congratulations on your retirement
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Chi Sandy, I have no doubts there are much more Iranians in the US than in Sweden and being in Chicago I am sure your choice of Persian restaurants is actually way better than ours. Fessenjun is a bit heavy for me but I do like it too, my daughter orders it frequently. My absolute favorite is gheimeh bademdjan, a stew with eggplants, and even if the portions are usually giagantic I will still go on and order kashkeh bademdjan while waiting for the main course. It i another eggplant dish that is served with bread, it is a spread with goat yoghurt, walnuts, fried onions and dried mynthe, delicious. I am always having a doggy bag with me when I am going home. Cherry
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We can usually get four or five dinners out of one takeout meal from Reza's!
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My sentiment exactly! I have a friend who likes Persian food, when they come with her order she asks for a doggy bag at once and puts half of the portion into it for her son, she says there is no way a normal adult can eat it all up, just look at the size of their plates
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It's Southwest night - a Trader Joe's tamale (pork for DH, chicken for me), a chicken verde burrito and some seasoned pinto beans that I just made in the pressure cooker. The chicken burrito filling is another Serous Eats pressure cooker recipe that I made previously and froze.
Afternoon snack was a sweet tango apple and a miniature milky way that was all soft and gooey from being in my apron pocket all afternoon. Good stuff!
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I have found gumbo file online) and annatto seeds and achiote paste, so waiting for my delivery now, excited
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Lost the 2 lbs. I gained in Vegas, but hesitate to blow it. Might order out for chicken shwarma and chopped salad.
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Ham hock & navy beans simmering on the stove. This batch will have more veggies than beans since I only had 1/2 a package of beans once I got started. My mother only used onion & celery & beans & hocks. I added carrots since they needed to be used. Sure smells good.
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Congrats to Houston!
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Yup! We were rooting for them not just because of Harvey and that they'd never won a Series before, but because Gordy's girlfriend is from there (and her family still lives there). But it turns out that she wasn't all that excited because she isn't much of a sports fan. Wow--Gordy must have fallen hard for her, because he falls asleep to the soothing sounds of ESPN and runs a fantasy basketball league; and her taste in pop music is much softer than his.
Bob & I were watching from our neighborhood Italian restaurant, where we met for dinner (and so I could bring him his phone, which he'd inadvertently left at home this morning). Dinner was mesclun salad with old-school red wine vinegar & olive oil; then rolatine di melanzane--thin slices of eggplant rolled around ricotta, Parm. Regg., basil & garlic, then lightly breaded and baked in marinara sauce, topped with mozzarella. Three rolls per portion, and I couldn't even finish one! Bob's entree was rigatoni alla Barese (the owner is from Bari): with sausage, arugula, pine nuts and tomatoes. Gordy will eat well for several days (of course, when we returned we smelled the telltale scent of freshly reheated pizza).
I might use some of that marinara, add a little za'atar, break an egg over it and make shakshuka for breakfast.
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Hi all - have been on vacation and not logging on, but see that I have missed a bunch! Had a lot of good food while traveling, every meal was excellent, except for one that was just OK - a brunch of Huevos Rancheros. Standouts were a breakfast that included apple crisp at a farm in Highlands, NC, a sushi mash-up that had tempura lobster with tiny slices of filet in Charleston, SC at a brewery, and a ginger pumpkin soup! Yay!
eric - congrats on the retirement, and great symmetry on the first/last day Jeep driving!
I'm not even going to try to catch up on the posts, just going from here, lol!
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Special - welcome back. Did you stay on the East Coast? I know you have a friend in No Cal.
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The sushi dinner we had at Katsuya in the SLS Las Vegas was the best we've ever had--and we've been to one Nobu and two Morimoto restaurants. Don't remember if I mentioned it earlier, but the wasabi was the real thing: freshly grated wasabi root. (Almost every sushi bar other than the most pricey serve the ubiquitous reconstituted horseradish/mustard/green food coloring powder--though some that serve a predominantly Japanese clientele sometimes have some real wasabi available on request, at a premium). If you don't know whether you've ever had real wasabi, then you almost certainly haven't. You'd know it the moment you tasted it.
I had read about it in an article in an in-flight magazine: the root grows only in constantly running fresh water (in Japan, a brook; but Stateside, in secret and heavily-guarded indoor farms in Oregon not unlike those used for marijuana cultivation). The roots are extremely expensive (on a par with truffles) and like Jamaican Blue Mt. coffee beans, 90% of the crop goes to wealthy concerns in Japan. Hence the secrecy: poaching is always a danger, and the indoor farms are usually guarded by, uh, "unfriendly" dogs.
Not long after reading the article, one night I was at a sushi bar in the Park Hyatt high above Water Tower sq. in Chicago. I saw the wasabi was a much brighter green and almost translucent, with a slightly coarse texture like grated horseradish. Took a tiny taste and....yeeee-OW! Hurt so good, as the song goes. It's extremely hot, but not like long-lasting burning chili-pepper heat of Mexican or Indian cuisine--it's more of a WHAM! to the sinuses for a few seconds and then it's gone.
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Congrats Eric!
Thanks Auntienance, would you believe that Houston's biggest school district is closing tomorrow, so kids can go to the parade, lol
I made a flatbread alfredo pizza tonight with spinach, red onion, garlic, mozzarella, ricotta and a side salad. It was so good, I only had 1/4 left when I thought to post it.
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well, I had hoped to report that dinner tonight was Dodger Dogs but Houston won the WS so dinner was orange chicken and rice.
To those of you from Houston, I want to congratulate your team on winning the World Series. I sure enjoy 6 of the 7 games
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Thanks Dodgersgirl, I grew up in Huntington Beach so my loyalty was questioned during this series but truth be told I only care about hockey and for me no one beats the Ducks! I did attend the 2nd to last game Gretzky played for the Kings though, that was really something
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Illimae-- hockey is my 2nd love. I grew up in LA county and was a Kings fan long before Anaheim had ducks!! But love the Ducks now. I saw the Great One play once. What talent.
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My deepest regret is that I never got to see a game at Ebbets Field before my beloved "Bums" left for L.A.. My uncle eventually ran a drycleaning business across the street from the co-op building that replaced it.
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minus - yes, stayed east coast. We will go to Napa next year, in the fall, when they have had a chance to re-group and we can contribute to the tourism resurgence! We did enjoy some northern Cali wines as an homage though on this trip. I had planned to go to Sacramento in Sept. but my friend there is getting ready to retire early next year, so she suggested waiting until then (prob. March) so we could have a leisurely visit and she wouldn't have to rush back to work.
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DD bleeds blue. To see what would happen, Sharon sent DD a text message, "I missed the game. Who won?" DD replied with an obscene "emoticon". :-) Sharon laughed.
Chi, I like hot food. I've joked about combining Wasabi with Habanero peppers.
Sharon was surprised with dinner tonight. I shopped, mostly, from the magic freezer and made yet another chicken recipe. It's chicken cooked in/with caramelized shallots, red wine vinegar, orange juice, a bit of sugar to reduce the "sour" a bit, mustard and golden raisins.
I wasn't sure what else to do for dinner, so I cooked up some brown rice and served the chicken on that...and made a salad.
I don't need to cook enough to last for a week anymore, so the biggest thing for me is to figure out how much is enough for one meal. The recipe I used said "serves 4 to 6", but should have said "more than sufficient to serve 4 to 6 teenagers after a hard sports team practice". I cut the recipe to 1/3 of what was listed and there are still left overs.
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Happy retirement, Eric! There's nothing wrong with having leftovers after you're retired.
Welcome back, SpecialK.
I woke up feeling very empty and weighed. The numbers were disappointing so I moved the scale around until I got better numbers.
Dinner last night was overcooked but I was hungry. I cooked a package of 5 boneless skinless chicken thighs using a recipe for braised chicken with lemon and olives. It included fresh rosemary, crushed fennel seeds and pepper flakes. I omitted the olives but added a can of quartered artichoke hearts. The side was lightly glazed carrots. We cleaned out both skillets.
Tonight's dinner will feature a pork tenderloin.
My mother is on the decline. She has lacked her spark this week and there are signs that her two incurable ailments (heart failure and deficient kidneys) are getting worse. There has been mention of having to use a lift to get her into bed and I know she finds that depressing. She is almost 95 and has had a good summer. Still it makes me sad to see her losing her grip on life. I know you understand, Eric, having recently lost your mother.
No golf today. I have a list of chores to do.
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carole - I understand your sadness at your mom's decline. My MIL was diagnosed with MDS a few months ago and has now become fully leukemic. So bizarre, as this is what my FIL passed away from a year ago, after a 6 month acute phase. I have spent the last two days cooking, portioning, and freezing food for my DH to take to SC on Sat. to feed my MIL and himself. He is going for a week to spell his sisters in care of my MIL. Hospice was started last weekend, and she is almost completely lacking mobility, and needs someone there 24/7 at home. She has a daily RN check for meds and vitals, and an aide comes daily for bathing. She can transfer from bed to wheelchair to recliner - only with a lot of help - it takes both SIL's - and one is a nurse, so very experienced. DH will be able to do it by himself. My mom used a hydraulic Hoyer lift for the last three years of her life due to a progressive degenerative neuromuscular disease. She was 100% mentally but 0% physically. She too was taken out by CHF and renal failure - treating one exacerbated the other and she finally reached the Catch-22.
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Oh Carole, I'm so sorry about your mom. No matter how old they are, it's hard to see them slipping away from you. They've had to use a lift for my dad off and on since he's been in the nursing home. Right now, he's doing pretty well with less help, but it seems to change quickly.
Special, I was beginning to wonder what had happened to you. Welcome back, but I'm sorry about your MIL. So soon after your FIL is sad.
Today is French onion soup gratinee. Caramelized the onions in the oven, finished on the stove top and the house smells deliciously like onions.
Tomorrow will be a thanksgiving preview with turkey and dressing, cranberry sauce, etc. Unlike the real deal, I'm using convenience foods such as boxed stuffing, cranberry sauce and mini pumpkin pies from the bakery, but I will make my own gravy. A turkey breast is dry brining as we speak. I hope the onion aroma is gone by the time the turkey smells take over.
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I'm just jumping in here, so forgive me if someone else has said this - but get an electric pressure cooker!! I got an instant pot this summer (and no this is not paid advertising lol) - and it has changed my life!! I have been so brain foggy, whether it be from being in menopause, the tamoxifen or my Hashimoto's thyroid issues, and if I turn my back on the stove, it's burned to the point of smoke alarms going off. We've had perfect dinners with this pot - no burning and they're delicious!! So easy too. I figure, time is too precious, and this gadget spares my time, and makes incredible meals besides. There's a fb forum I got on - they're full of recipes and tips. It's seriously one of the best investments I've made
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