So...whats for dinner?

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  • wallycat
    wallycat Member Posts: 3,227
    edited September 2022

    Tonight will be lamb chops, boiled potatoes and a salad. Made it to Sequim for odds/ends and costco's lamb looked really good. And not that anyone has missed it but OY on the price hikes.


  • cyathea
    cyathea Member Posts: 338
    edited September 2022

    I was too tired to cook, so I pan fried some salmon and put it on a bed of leftover quinoa from last night. Since there wasn’t very much quinoa, I pulled some corn out of the freezer. Frozen corn never tastes very good, but it was edible with a little salt and butter. We’re still savoring the heirloom tomatoes. I added a drizzle of pomegranate molasses,and they were divine.

    Mae, hope your knee isn’t hurting too much. If it’s not one thing, it’s another!

    Sandy, that parking is outrageous! My parking story of the day is that I started the morning early to get to a GI doctor appointment. I got to the hospital 10 minutes early and was feeling good about being on time. When I got out of the car, I suddenly realized that I went to the wrong hospital!!! What to do….go into the hospital where the pay station was (and be even more late for my appointment) or just go to the exit and hope the machine worked? I opted to just go to the exit and was surprised when the gate lifted and there was NO charge! How often does that happen?

    I felt awful about being late. I hate being late, and this was the first time I had seen this doc. I’m usually fairly competent, and I’m not sure why my brain wasn’t working this morning. Tomorrow I see my MO at the first hospital, so maybe that’s why, but it’s still somewhat shameful and very annoying, but at least I won’t make that mistake again. 😉

  • ChiSandy
    ChiSandy Member Posts: 12,133
    edited September 2022

    Cyathea, doesn't it always seem to go that we have so many different providers to see that sometimes we mix up the appointments? I have some at Evanston Hospital and some at Skokie; and sometimes for the latter I forget to make the turn to go northwest and instead keep heading north...or vice versa.

    For brunch I made keto French toast, using 0-net-carb bread instead of the high-fiber low-carb (allegedly) I'd been buying. That loaf was about to get moldy so I tossed it. For dinner, I heated one of Bob's empanadas (he had one overnight, along with all of our sliced cheddar) and made him a grilled provolone, tomato & bacon sandwich on sourdough. I had "zoodles" (yellow & zucchini) pomodoro with grated Parm-Regg and fresh basil. Sadly, his reason for wanting to stay home didn't pan out: the Sky were eliminated from the WNBA playoffs.

  • MinusTwo
    MinusTwo Member Posts: 16,634
    edited September 2022

    Mae - so sorry about you knee. It would be useful it the hot tub were already up & running. Sigh

    (editted for grammar)

  • carolehalston
    carolehalston Member Posts: 6,887
    edited September 2022

    It was so nice to have dh cook dinner last night on the grill. Big slices of eggplant, zucchini and small carrots. Hamburger patties were the meat. The grilled veggies are so sweet.

    Neighbor Mary is cooking a turkey dinner for tonight and we will join her on her deck.

  • wallycat
    wallycat Member Posts: 3,227
    edited September 2022

    Leftover lamb chops with broiled zucchini and I'm cooking up a pot of Hidatsa red heirloom beans (Rancho Gordo..and ouch have they raised their prices).

  • MinusTwo
    MinusTwo Member Posts: 16,634
    edited September 2022

    Tiny new potatoes with butter & Herbes de Provence seasoning. Served with asparagus steamed in butter & EVOO with garlic.

    Prepped for tomorrow. Sauteed onion & garlic & zucchini slices. Added Rao's marinara. Tomorrow I'll saute a cod 'steak', then put together & let it simmer per Lacey's wonderfully easy recipe. Serving over pasta.

    Special K - 9/16 would Mary See's168th birthday. Specials starting tomorrow for a week to celebrate the 100+ years they have been making candy. Drool.

  • cyathea
    cyathea Member Posts: 338
    edited September 2022

    minustwo, have you ever had See”s salted caramel chocolates? They are very good!

    Dinner was just me since DH went to the baseball game with friends. Simple red leaf lettuce and tomato salad with a serving of Capello’s spinach and cheese ravioli with marinara. (The ravioli with just the cheese filling was better.)

  • MinusTwo
    MinusTwo Member Posts: 16,634
    edited September 2022

    Cyathea - I grew up in Northern CA and Sees was always a special treat. I know I've tried them all at one time. My favorite remains butterscotch squares. Along with 6 or 8 others. Special K was in Southern CA for a long time and I know she loves them too - & so the post.

  • ChiSandy
    ChiSandy Member Posts: 12,133
    edited September 2022

    After we moved from Seattle to Chicago, every time we'd visit the West Coast friends would ask us to bring back chocolate See's lollipops.

    Brunch was a 2-egg omelet with baby Swiss, chopped prosciutto and diced veg: red and poblano peppers, red onion, mushrooms & tomato.

    Dinner at Regalia tonight--shared tuna carpaccio (swallowed a bit of jalapeño and had a coughing fit); we each had veal scallopine pepe verde (green peppercorns in a veal demi-glace reduction on sauteed spinach). Dessert at home was a fresh fig, a square of 77% chocolate, and mixed nuts.

    Still wearing my size 1 Chico's long-sleeve tee, though it fails to hide my "spare tire." Too stubborn (and cheap) to buy some size 2s.

  • eric95us
    eric95us Member Posts: 2,845
    edited September 2022

    Tomorrow we'll be leaving for a driving trip to Traverse City to help DD and beau load up a rental truck, get the truck to Detroit and then help them unload.

    It's a "speed run" to Traverse City, a few days with DD and beau, and a slightly more leisurely trip home.

    We didn't want to put Frankie (dog) into a kennel, nor have him fly, so we are driving. We also decided that since we have a short time window, it would be easier to take the car instead of the truck/camper. DD is excited to see Frankie, so it all works out.

  • wallycat
    wallycat Member Posts: 3,227
    edited September 2022

    I'm going to make refried beans from my bean leftovers and make nachos tonight.

  • ChiSandy
    ChiSandy Member Posts: 12,133
    edited September 2022

    We had planned to go out or order in, but by sunset it was still nice outside--so I defrosted and grilled a grass-fed ribeye (10 oz. was more than enough to share). Put together some Jason's Cauli "Mac" & Cheese (tarted up with a fresh grating of nutmeg, plus a little black truffle oil & white truffle salt). Salad was tomatoes & basil over arugula (no need for a Caprese as the cauliflower had cheese). We started with golden whitefish roe & crème frâiche on blini for Bob and cucumber slices for me.

    I was up much of the night and not really hungry for brunch; turned down Bob's offer to bring me back quiche & salad. Went for my updated Moderna booster, and when I got back at 3:15 I had my first (and only) coffee of the day, followed by egg-in-the-hole on keto bread, with the "hole" cutouts toasted as faux biscuits for a sausage-patty at 4:45.

    Even if it's storming tomorrow evening we'll go out for something ethnic or order it in (tandoori chicken & palak paneer, plus samosas for Bob, is always a safe bet--I like to order out for Indian food because I always leave those places reeking of garlic & cumin, and have to shower before I can even stand to hit the pillow). There's a new Cambodian place on the Evanston side of Howard St. about a mile or so north. Either that, or Peckish Pig for "American tapas." Bummed out that the Eritrean restaurant in Rogers Park closed before we could try it.

  • carolehalston
    carolehalston Member Posts: 6,887
    edited September 2022

    Last night turned out to be a fun search for dinner. We met Carl and Dorothy, who have a summer home on Long Lake, at the Dorset Liquor Store to ride with them to the Red Barn Liquor store which has an attached bar and restaurant. When we arrived, we learned the restaurant was reserved for a wedding reception.

    So we retraced our route on Highway 34 to the village of Nevis. The Iron Horse, which is very popular, looked quite busy from the appearance of the outdoor seating on the front deck. But Carl lucked upon a parking place close enough to give him a short walk. He's in his early 90's. Inside we lucked upon an open table against one wall.

    I was tempted to order the walleye sandwich but the Iron Horse is noted for its smoked brisket. So I had a Reuben with brisket. It was delicious. DH had one of their mac and cheese special dishes and enjoyed it. The conversation was nonstop as we always enjoy the company of this couple, whom we met at couples golf about five years ago. We no longer participate in that golf group and neither do they since Carl no longer plays golf.

    It is 45 degrees outside this morning but the sun is out and it should be warming up.

    Dinner will probably feature chicken.

  • ChiSandy
    ChiSandy Member Posts: 12,133
    edited September 2022

    Brunch today was a keto toaster-waffle (made Bob a full can of split pea/ham soup and toasted a couple slabs of sourdough). Not much of an appetite--due both to a doozy of an immune reaction to yesterday's bivalent booster and worry over my flooded (sewer-backup) basement. Whole neighborhood is experiencing this thanks to 2-4" of rain falling w/in a couple of hours early this morning. HK and I will try to attack it tomorrow with bleach, mops & buckets. So bad that it unmoored the two litter boxes. Can't even reach the brand-new Litter Genie (the current one, recently emptied, fell over). So will make do with my deep-fry "spider" and my stash of produce bags. (The upside to being a pack rat).

    Dinner will likely be fridge-and-pantry-foraging, as I'm sure Whole Foods is flooded (our temple and the place we usually order brunch from are both closed due to flooding). The temple is right on the lake (literally--there is a short seawall between the lake and low-lying parking lot) so every time it storms and especially with high waves, its first floor gets swamped. This is one of those times I'm glad that we live 8 steps up from street level. I don't know how the family who lived here before us coped: with 6 kids they turned every possible space into a bedroom. When we moved in, we had to rip up the basement carpeting twice before giving in and painting the bare concrete floor and installing a check-valve & sump pump. They didn't even have a standpipe. The owner was the chairman of the English dept. at Loyola--he & his oldest sons watched a few episodes of This Old House and Hometime and figured they could DIY everything. 35 years later, we're still fixing their mistakes.

    Words to live by: Never give a PhD access to hand tools.

  • MinusTwo
    MinusTwo Member Posts: 16,634
    edited September 2022

    Today's meal was a modified Lacey special - sauteed onion, zucchini, garlic & a cod 'steak' with Rao's then on top to simmer. Served over pasta. I only added half the veggies & Raos to the cod - thinking I would eat later with meatballs - but it was still WAY too much. It will be interesting to see how the Rao's & veggie mix freezes.

    Carole - love your temperatures. Only 93 today with 74 last night.

    Eric - hope you have a safe trip & a fun time visiting with your DH and beau (love the word beau)

    Missing so many people who used to be regulars!!!!

  • wallycat
    wallycat Member Posts: 3,227
    edited September 2022

    Fake caprese tonight. Canned san marzano's that were nasty...hope it was a bad can because no way is it worth triple the price, fresh moz and and added sliced avocado.

    We have been indoors for 2 days because of air quality. Seattle did hit 92 yesterday so they have broken their record. We only hit 72 yesterday and today but no way to leave windows open with the air. Should be OK tomorrow. It is cutting into my fishing!!


  • wallycat
    wallycat Member Posts: 3,227
    edited September 2022

    I'm making zucchini sabzi (basically an Indian stirfry/curry). Our garden is going nuts with the zucchini. Serving with Naan bread.

    Clean air slowly coming in.

  • ChiSandy
    ChiSandy Member Posts: 12,133
    edited September 2022

    I can't imagine a Caprese with either San Marzanos or canned tomatoes, much less canned San Marzanos. They're strictly for cooking (though some use fresh plum/pear tomatoes as slicers for sandwiches because they're firmer even though they ripen earlier and are usually cheaper than the round ones).

    Had the plumber over today. Turns out the basement muck was not raw sewage but rather silt. Soil, car exhaust soot, street dust and the like washed down the storm drains along with the torrential rainwater, especially the stuff that ponded up because of the backflow valves installed in the curb drains to avoid overtaxing the sewer system and prevent the water from entering basements. Didn't work, because 4-5" of rain in 3 hrs. was too much for the system to handle. That's 2.5 gal. of water per sq. foot. Our sump pump worked but turns out our check valve bit the dust years ago--we just never noticed. Estimate for an outdoor-installed pump/one-way valve flood control system that'd prevent a rerun of yesterday? About $16K. Ouch. But considering how much the house is worth, saying no is a false economy. Should have done it years ago, the last time the basement flooded.

    Whole Foods was open yesterday, so Bob walked over and picked up a couple of their deli-dept. "entree+2 sides" dishes. Baked salmon, green beans & Brussels sprouts--and I could finish barely half (was still feeling crummy from Sat.'s booster, but. I'm fine today). Brunch was a toasted cheese & tomato sandwich on keto white bread. Dinner will be last night's leftovers.


  • wallycat
    wallycat Member Posts: 3,227
    edited September 2022

    Sandy, sorry to hear of your basement ills. I miss having a basement.

    I agree, not ideal to use canned for caprese but didn't want to venture into the bad air to shop for bad tomatoes, LOL.


  • cyathea
    cyathea Member Posts: 338
    edited September 2022

    Dinner was mushroom ravioli with kale, walnuts, and a cream sauce. (DH had marinara sauce since he is on Coumadin and has to watch his Vitamin K intake.)

    Sandy, I hope you have some help with cleaning the basement from the flooding. So sorry you’re dealing with the mess

  • SpecialK
    SpecialK Member Posts: 16,486
    edited September 2022

    cyathea - we live fairly near the onramps for the highway and the vast majority of places we go require taking the south ramp. My DH goes to work that way, downtown is that way, as we are in a northern suburb. There are a few things that require taking the north ramp - I can't tell you how many times both he and I have gone on autopilot and just taken the south ramp when we meant to go north! Every time I do it, I ask myself why? Lol! Habit is a strong director of actions!

    minus - I ordered See's online for the first time last holiday season so am now on the email list. I got the one about the big birthday! I have to restrain myself every time I see an email - it is like Pavlov's dog! I'm like yay See's! Wait, no, can't have See's! Haha!

    eric - have a safe drive and move - I am sure you will be so happy to see DD (and beau) and for them to see you both - and the pupper!

    chisandy - sorry about your basement, ugh! Did you get the new Moderna boost? I went ahead and got the previous Pfizer in July, but will get the new one prob in Nov. DH had a bad case of Covid in mid-May and he just got a boost a couple of weeks ago to supplement any immunity conferred by being sick since we are about to travel and they have also lifted the mask requirement for him at work (again) just recently. This is the first time he has had any side effect from any of the vaccinations or previous boosts, I am hoping that is a good sign. He got sick in May from exposure to a co-worker who did not mask despite his whole family being positive, who then tested positive, then DH did. Everyone had mild cases except for DH! He had to cancel his trip to CO with DD (who hasn't seen her brother since 2019) so he is doubly excited to go on Sat.

    wally - my dad had an organic garden in our backyard when I was growing up, and he grew lots of things, including zucchini. It was famine, then feast as they all became available at once. He was like the zucchini fairy, leaving them on neighbor front porches, taking them to church, etc. He decided to let one go and see how big it grew - it was huge! I don't think they ate that one, just took photos with it! My mom got creative with zucchini recipes - I think I mentioned one here once - zucchini, tomatoes, and onion layered and baked with basil and oregano and mozzarella. I also like zucchini bread or muffins with lemon and have incorporated it into chocolate cake as well.

  • carolehalston
    carolehalston Member Posts: 6,887
    edited September 2022

    I saw people at the farmers market carrying huge zucchini. I assumed they would be used to make zucchini bread. I like yellow summer squash but am not a big zucchini fan, though I do occasionally cook it. It's available in the supermarket year round.

    Dinner last night was a huge salad on dinner plates, topped with strips of chicken breast fillets I had pounded, breaded and pan fried.

    One of our neighbors brought a homemade apple caramel pie to happy hour. DH took a slice to enjoy for dessert but I passed. The tight fit of my jeans is a clear signal that I must cut back on food choices and portions.

  • wallycat
    wallycat Member Posts: 3,227
    edited September 2022

    DH had his two yucky annual scans (crossing fingers) so I made some quick nachos and a small salad.

  • illimae
    illimae Member Posts: 5,710
    edited September 2022

    Speaking of zucchini, our friend gave us a huge one from his garden, not sure what to do with it yet. Tonight we had salads.

    image

  • MinusTwo
    MinusTwo Member Posts: 16,634
    edited September 2022

    I often just saute zucchini with onions & tomatoes - rather than Special's baked dish. Last week I added Rao's marinara to sauteed zucchini & onion to and served it over cod on a bed of pasta. Froze the remaining zucchini & Rao's mix (minus the fish & the pasta) but I have no idea how it will be after freezing.

    Mae - that's a serious zucchini. I've never made zucchini boats, but seems to me someone here did. I can't remember what was in the filling.

    Wally - fingers crossed for your DH's scans. Let us know.

    Carole - I never cooked zucchini either for most of my life. Only yellow summer squash. Now I reach for it fairly often.

    Oh Special - of course you can have Sees.... But it's really still to hot to ship where we both live. I have a friend going to Santa Cruz tomorrow & she has promised to bring me back 2 butterscotch squares.

    Eric - hope your journey & subseauent moving services turn out fun.

  • ChiSandy
    ChiSandy Member Posts: 12,133
    edited September 2022

    I saute sliced zucchini with olice oil & herbes de Provence; grill planks of it; spiralize it to make "zoodles;" make thin slices lengthwise as "lasagna;" ratatouille ("E.Z.-POT," the order of adding to the pan: eggplant, zuccini, pepper, onion, tomato); and hack it up (along with yellow squash, bell peppers, mushrooms, onions, tomato and sausage crumbles) to make breakfast hash, with an egg on top. Don't even miss the potatoes (though I do adore corned beef hash).

    Special, think of it this way: bad shot reaction=strong immune response. I got my Moderna bi-valent booster on Sat.aft. , and ached all over for almost 36 hrs. No real fever, though, and I was fine by yesterday morning, Bob gets his Pfizer tomorrow morning, and I told him to plan to take it easy for at least a day. If he doesn't feel like going out to dinner, I'll order out for BBQ. (Grilled wurst & tomatoes tonight...because we could). Or might defrost cod and nuke it in parchment with veg & herbs.

    My HK cleaned the basement yesterday and moved stuff from cardboard boxes into plastic storage tubs (discarded what was ruined) today. I'm picking up some more storage tubs from Container Store tomorrow. What we basically need doing is playing heavy-duty real-life Tetris: stacking dry boxes atop each other and salvaging what we need to salvage from flood-damaged boxes, transferring it into plastic containers, and discarding what can't be saved &/or what we'd not used in >10 yrs and wouldn't use again. All the instrument cases were high up off the floor.


  • carolehalston
    carolehalston Member Posts: 6,887
    edited September 2022

    Zucchini was among the grilled veggies last night. Also eggplant, onion, and yellow bell pepper. The meat component of the meal was a thick ribeye. DH was the cook. I enjoyed not cooking as well as the meal. Slices of steak were left over but no veggies.

  • illimae
    illimae Member Posts: 5,710
    edited September 2022

    Minus, I’ve made zucchini boats several times and did so a couple months ago with others from the friends harvest. DH also made cheese stuffed zucchini balls last week, which were delicious. This one is so big, we could use it in multiple ways. No plan for tonight yet.

  • eric95us
    eric95us Member Posts: 2,845
    edited September 2022

    We'll be in Traverse City in a couple of hours.

    It's been a quick trip.


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