Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Hi everyone!


I have not posted in rather a long time – I have, ironically enough, been cooking at home almost exclusively this spring, and really don’t eat out much at all.

I began following the Atkin’s Low Carb way of eating on January 4th, and have so far lost 42.4 pounds. Also, I have discovered that I react very badly to wheat products, as well as some sugar alcohols. I decided to experiment with sugar free cookies this last weekend, and, while one or two are very tasty, I have found that the indigestion caused is really not worth it, and I will be passing the cookies on to my parents. Due to two Sunday dinners in a row being Chinese buffet (high sodium) and the subsequent indigestion, my weight has been fluctuating over a 7 lb range (up one day, down another, up again, down again, etc..) for the last several weeks, so I have been unable to record an official weight. I know that I have lost more inches – I have uncrated most of the size 20 clothes, and the jeans, while a bit tight for comfort just yet, can be buttoned and zipped. So, soon I will reach my current goal of 250 lbs – the weight limit of most commercial ladders and amusement park rides – then my next goal will be to wear the size 20 clothes. Little steps, bit by bit, pound by pound, is what will lead me to my weight loss goal.

One of my more recent experiments has been in the homemade ice-pop realm. It’s been a very warm summer here in Alabama, and so I have been sampling various kinds of low carb frozen treats, and have found that they are far to easy to eat too many – my willpower is sadly non-existent when it comes to ice cream. So, in the interests of saving myself, I purchased an ice-pop frame at Walmart for $3. My first experiment, frozen yogurt pops, came out very tart. Not at all what I had in mind. Next experiment will be lemon popsicles, made with lemon sugar free jello – there are several interesting recipes on the internet for this type of ice pop, so I will be experimenting this afternoon after work.

I have finally had success with stopping the drain pan leak on my refrigerator – I finally resorted to elevating it with 2 2x2 wood rails, and was thus able to easily place a catch tray for the water under the fridge. The kitchen floor has been dry for two days now, and this is a great improvement! I fear that the sporadic nature of the leak has probably water damaged the base of the cabinet near the fridge – the paint is bubbled. I will evaluate the possible damage once it has dried completely.

I purchased an Aerogarden 7 two weeks ago. I planted it last Thursday, May 10th, with a mesclun lettuce mix, and I now have some very attractive seedlings – a few are on the verge of producing a second set of leaves already. I am looking into purchasing a second Aerogarden off of ebay with the idea of growing herbs – we shall see if I manage to win one within my price range.

I have also done research into the necessary materials for constructing a raised-bed garden plot in the back yard – it is currently wasted space which I mow – I can’t just dig up a plot due to the neighbor’s lawn service people who were nice enough to utterly destroy the fig tree I planted last year – so I am looking at a raised cinder-block vegetable plot. Cinder blocks are $1.38 at Lowe’s, and with 16 of them, I can create a 4x4 garden plot with an additional 32 individual holes for herbs or strawberry plants. It will cost me about $40 for the cinder blocks and topsoil fill dirt, with another $20 for soil enrichment and plants. So, for around $60, I can build a cute little garden plot. I am planning to pick up some of the cinder blocks today – I only have an Altima, so I need to figure out how many can be safely transported without damaging my car. I have the next 5 days off, so I should be able to have it constructed and planted by next week. Since I have much better water pressure than my parents, keeping the plot watered should not be difficult – I just need to decide if I want to try seeping hoses or a sprinkler system. Choices choices choices.

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Plan Derailment

So, I left work yesterday with big plans to render down all of the cheap bacon clogging up my freezer, use part of the bacon for pasta, part of it for sandwiches, and to use the bacon fat to confit some lovely pork shoulder I picked up on Tuesday.

Then I got home. Begin plan derailment.

I live in a duplex with a small front lawn. Mowing the lawn is a challenge, as there is no storage space for a lawnmower. I have attempted various solutions to this over the last several years, from hiring a neighbor to mow it, to buying a manual push mower. For the last two years, I have had an agreement with the neighbors in the other half to mow my side when they mow theirs - it takes about 5 min or less to mow the front of my side.

So, when the grass started to get a bit long a week and a half ago, I asked them if they wanted me to mow it. they said no, don't worry about it, we'll mow it before we move.

So, they finished moving out at about 2am on Monday night. They didn't mow the grass before they left.

Ok, no problem. I would go borrow Dad's lawnmower on Saturday, and mow the grass.

Except for the fact that one of my neighbors, who runs a forum that my dad is a member of, was kind enough to post up pictures of all the houses in his little area of the world with overgrown lawns on Tuesday. With commentary and complaints. He claims to have mowed my lawn twice, and complained about it.

I was completely unaware he had ever cut my grass. He did not have my permission to do so, and was certainly never asked to mow the grass. If he mowed my grass, it was of his own free will. He has also never bothered to mention to me that he had issue with my grass being long, and he didn't contact my landlady about it either, to my knowledge.

Well, his post completely PO'ed my father.

So, I get home yesterday to find the grass cut. Ok, I guess that my landlady mowed the grass, or my neighbors weren't completely gone. *shrugs* Then I get to the porch, to find that someone had chained a small lawnmower and a gas can to the porch.

W.T.F.!!

So, I called my landlady to find out what was up with the lawnmower. No answer. Then I called my parents to let them know the thing I ordered was here, and I would bring it over in a bit.

And my mom was surprised that I wasn't calling about the lawnmower. ...... Mystery solved! So I asked her why there was a lawnmower chained to my front porch. Well, as previously mentioned, my dad was majorly PO'ed about the posting on the forum, so he went out Wednesday morning, found a small lawnmower, some chain, and a gas can, came over to my house while I was at work, mowed my half of all the grass, then chained my new lawnmower to the porch, and told my mom to tell me to come get the key from their place.

.........

.....

Ok. This whole situation was news to me, and I still don't get why dad even got involved other than potentially calling me to tell me to cut my grass. Whatever.

This did completely derail my plans of rendering down bacon though. I ended up at my parents house for the evening, and got nothing I had planned done. Joy. so, tonight I get to try to deal with the bacon and the marinade for the pork as well as class and everything else I have to do this evening.

*headdesk**headdesk**headdesk**headdesk*

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Cleaning up!

Well, after house sitting for two weeks, then being home for two weeks, I ended up just a bit behind on the important stuff when you have your own space - cleaning.
I finally bowed to the inevitability over the weekend, when I realized that the cat-confetti that Annabelle had so graciously made (out of some sales flyers, a paystub, and various other pieces of probably-important paper that she had scattered all around my living and dining room two days before I relocated to my parent's house for two weeks) had gotten thick enough that I coudn't tell what was confetti and what was carpet. Yeah - not good. That, and I was out of silverware, as it was all in the sink, with most of my bowls and a large number of plates and coffee mugs. *cringes*

So - I started to clean the mess up. Bits of Saturday and Sunday were spend sweeping up the confetti, sorting through the class papers and junk mail, and getting the living and dining rooms back in reasonable shape. Monday night was dish night.

Dish washing is tricky in my apartment, and I tend to put it off due to the challenges involved - my sink has two spigots, like a laundry sink, with a draining area on the left side instead of a second sink. Washing dishes is a little challenging. My methodology to this point has been the "soap on a sponge and try not to scorch my hands in the hot water" method.
This method sucks. Seriously. Major suckage.

So, I did a little research on dishwashing methods. Amazing how many ways there are to do something that should be simple. The method I decided to try involved using a second container to wash and soak the dishes, piling the cleaned dishes in the sink, then rinsing the cleaned dishes and placing them into the dish rack. I happen to have a large Rubbermaid dishwashing container that I picked up several years ago for soaking my feet when necessary. It doesn't get used much, and in fact, I had to chase out a spider that had set up living quarters.
So, I filled the plastic container with hot, soapy water and dirty dishes, let them soak for a little while, then commenced scrubbing.

It worked like magic. The good kind of magic that turns everything that pisses you off into chocolate.

so, all but the most stubborn dishes are happily cleaned and put away. The really stubborn ones I left to soak overnight in the plastic dishpan set inside the sink. I had planned to finish them up this morning, but the timing didn't work out, so I will finish them up after work before rushing off to class. So nice to have all the dishes clean!

Needless to say, since I was busy with dishes most of the evening, I didn't want to cook anything elaborate. So, I made a hybrid Arroz con Pollo meal, using the methodology from Fabulous One Pot Meals (Scarborough Faire Chicken, if I remember correctly..)

In a casserole dish, layer the following:

1 cup white rice
1 cup water
1 chicken bouillon cube
1-2 frozen chicken breasts (or whatever you have that is chicken)
4 tomatoes cut in wedges
2 bell peppers, cut into pieces
season with salt, pepper, parsley, oregano and a pinch of cumin, or other spices. A few capers would have been good in this.

Bake at 400 for 1-1.5 hours, until the smell makes you salivate.

pull out of the oven, check that the rice is done, then devour.

This came out good, and the leftovers made a nice lunch for today.

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Lazy lately

Well, despite my best intentions, I am just a bit behind on this blog, but today is a good day to start posting again, even though today is not a day I will actually cook anything.
Tuesday and Thursday nights are class nights, which means that dinner is usually some sort of snack while driving from work to class. I am currently working out plans for using my Mr. Bento (he's a bit dusty!!) for lunches again, and working up a sufficient backlog of small frozen packaged leftovers to serve as quick lunches.
I haven't actually cooked much lately, unless toast counts as cooking, but I currently have a ham thawing in my fridge, some roma tomatoes begging to become tasty pasta sauce, and some lovely ripe fresh fruit that I plan to make into fruit salad.
In the summer, my focus is on preparing lunches, so that I don't waste $$$ every month eating out, as well as the gas to actually get to anywhere that sells food. Lately I have been eating a lot of peanut butter and jelly, as well as quick cereals for breakfast, and need to get back on track with a larger variety of food so that I don't get bored. My own cooking is delicious, but it has been a few weeks now since my last quiche, and I really need to learn how to plan out menus for at least two weeks ahead.
So, today I am going out for lunch. Tomorrow, I plan to have steamed vegetables and baked ham, as I can do both of those after class tonight - the ham is precooked, just that it was frozen solid as a whole ham, and so I am thawing it out in order to glaze it, then apportion it into single servings for various purposes, and the vegetables just need to be steamed. I really want to acquire a microwave mini-steamer, so I can flash-steam just a few vegetables for lunch.

Well, one of my new co-workers just completely jammed the photocopier. I'll post again tomorrow.

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Red Lentils with Mixed Whole Grains

Well, as evidenced by today's post, my good intentions in regards to cooking and blogging were gleefully devoured by work and exhaustion. And for the last month, I have been working on my car instead of working on my cooking habits. Having noticed the scale creeping slowly upward, I am once again working on changing my eating habits.
I have done better this year, in that the scale has not crept upward as far as in previous summers - but it still crept upwards about 10 lbs. So, with work starting to tame down a little, I am thinking more toward food and winter eating, which leads to thoughts of preserving and cooking preserved things.
My mom is the queen of the canning kitchen, and makes some of the most delicious things! Not having the necessary equipment at home to can, I have had more interest in dehydrating, as you can store many different types of foods once most of the water is removed, and dehydrated foods are portable with a long shelf life. This was halted by the equipment I had - a Mr. Coffee dehydrator. No temperature setting, and every time we tried to dehydrate something in it, we ended up crisping it.
Last Saturday, I had the fortune of finding a L'Equip 328 Dehydrator for the relative bargain of $71.95, brand new in the box. Monday, we visited Crow Mountain Orchard in Fackler, AL, and I picked up a peck of #2 Gala apples to test the dehydrator with. Tuesday after work was taken up with car work (pinched injector o-ring), and Wednesday was take a co-worker to Boaz after work day. I got the dehydrator unpacked and washed last night, and so tonight will be the first attempt at dehydrating apple slices.
One significant acquisition from last night was a Fagor pressure cooker - 9,5L (10 Quart) size. For $37.99. Yeah, I couldn't say no, not for $97.01 off retail (Amazon.com). And - this is the size you can also use for pressure canning, although I will have to order the canning kit and the steamer basket, as it didn't come with. So, now I get to experiment with both my dehydrator and my pressure cooker. :)
Last night's dinner was an experiment in rice cooker one dish meals. I cooked together 1 cup red lentils and 1 cup mixed whole grains with 1 tablespoon minced garlic, 3 beef bullion cubes, 2 bay leaves and salt and pepper. I added water to the 2 cup porridge line, and cooked on the porridge setting. End result - delicious!! Minimal effort for a tasty healthy meal. I think next time I will try brown rice on the GABA brown setting, and add the lentils later in the cooking time for less mushiness. Good flavor though.

Thursday, July 8, 2010

Tuesday and Wednesday

Tuesday was a fun day for cooking. We were having a pot-luck lunch for the director's birthday on Wednesday, so, after a yummy lunch of leftover ratatouille, I hit the packing house for vegetables on my way home. I picked up 6 lovely eggplant, as I was planning to make Eggplant Caviar for the potluck.

Eggplant caviar calls for:

3 large eggplant, washed
3 tbsp minced garlic
6 tbsp olive oil
juice of 1 lemon
salt and pepper to taste

You bake the eggplant at 350 for 45 minutes, then let cool and peel them. You puree the eggplants, then add in the other ingredients. I refrigerated mine overnight, which blended the flavors quite well, and the final product tasted like garlic hummus, with a slightly different texture. Some of my co workers liked it - of the ones brave enough to try it! The final product is gray, which is not the most appealing color for food. But to quote Lumiere: "Try the gray stuff, it's delicious!"

Dinner was leftovers from the 4th of July. I also made some gluten-free cupcakes for the boss, but I forgot the frosting. :(

I tend to skimp on breakfast - it tends to be something like Special K bars unless I am not working that day, so I am going to skip writing about breakfasts unless they are worth it.

Dinner last night was nachos, with cheese, salsa, leftover roast pork and greek yogurt. Yummy! Lunch today was the leftover Eggplant Parmigana from Saturday. And dinner - I am not sure yet. Something easy, as my back hurts and my cat is angry after the shampoo misadventure of this morning.....

I will also post the recipes for Monday's creations soon.

So, Later Tonight Turned Into Thursday

But I brought the pictures with me!


Here is Dad's oil-less turkey fryer:





















Mom's Stunning Parfait



















The side dishes




















My tasty scones

















And my tasty Parmesan French Toast

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

A Bit of Baking

I ended up having the Greek yogurt with honey and pecans, and a couple of toasted wheat rolls with Garlic and Herbs Laughing Cow, a few slices of Colby Jack, and a few slices of Genoa Salami, for an almost European breakfast (I had a very similar combination for breakfast when I was in Vienna.)
A little after breakfast, I headed over to my parent's house for their 4th of July cookout. The menu consisted of Beef Brisket and Boston Butt cooked slowly in dad's oil-less turkey fryer, with baked beans, fruit salad, french bread, ice cold watermelon and cantaloupe, with a tasty desert of a parfait made with berries, angel food cake, and vanilla yogurt. Needless to say, they sent me home with lots of leftovers!
Monday was a relaxed day. I stayed home, and made a leisurely breakfast of fresh baked scones. I had breakfast late, so I had dinner a little early, and made a recipe from the Epicurious iPhone app for a savory Parmesan french toast topped with mixed baby greens and poached eggs. It would have been better with fresh Parmesan, but I wanted to use things I had on hand, and it was quite yummy with the dried grated cheese.
Today I brought some leftover ratatouille for lunch, and had a few leftover scones for breakfast.
I will post pictures of everything, with recipes, later in the day.

Sunday, July 4, 2010

July 2nd and 3rd

So, Friday evening was ratatouille and Swiss Steak in Pepper Gravy. The ratatouille was not as yummy as the first time - I had forgotten that mom's oven runs about 25 degrees cold, so I had the oven actually set for only 375. As a result, the vegetables were not cooked as much, which, while good, was not mouth-wateringly yummy.

We stashed the leftovers in the fridge, with plans to bake it more the next evening. The swiss steak was delicious as always - mom fries the steak, then adds the gravy (usually McCormick's Brown Gravy, but she only had one packet, so she used one Brown and one Pepper gravy packet) and lets it simmer as long as she wants - the more it simmers, the better it gets!

Saturday morning, I baked some lovely frozen croissants. They didn't rise all the way, however, they were beyond delicious when topped with a little butter. Add in Melita One to One Parisian Blend coffee, and I was a very happy girl.

Since breakfast was late, I skipped lunch, and headed over to my parents house about 1:30pm. They are having a 4th of July party, and it was also my sister's birthday, so we had a phonecall to make (my sis lives in Cali) and some shopping to do. Dad is cooking beef brisket and a boston butt in the oil-less turkey fryer for the 4th, so we hit the sale at Food World to pick up the meat.

After shopping, we watched the movie "It's Complicated". That move is dangerous - the main character owns a bakery, and OMG the food is deadly! One of the foods mentioned in the film was Lavender Honey Ice Cream. The tingling in my tastebuds at the name instantly compelled me to find a recipe!

Having been collecting iPhone cookbooks lately, I went to the Epicurious app and seached for the ice cream recipe. Jackpot!

To make Lavender Honey Ice Cream, you need:

2 cups of heavy cream
1 cup of half-and-half
2/3 cup honey
2 tbsp lavender flowers
2 eggs
a pinch of salt

You mix the cream, half-and-half, honey, and lavender flowers in a pan, and just bring it to a boil. Remove from heat, and let steep 30 min. Strain out the flowers, put it back i the cleaned pan, and warm it up. As it's warming, whisk the eggs and salt in a bowl, then slowly whisk in 1 cup of the cream mixture to temper the eggs. Whisk the egg mixture into the cream, and bring it up to 170 degrees for about 5 minutes, until the mixture clings to the back of the spoon. Remove from the heat, cover, and let cool. Once cool, refrigerate for 3 hours, then freeze it in your ice cream machine.

Mom pulled out some fantastic honey from the pantry - it tasted like the essence of clover flowers in summer - and we have lots of lavender as we planted a Spanish lavender plant there a few years ago. (I have a white lavender plant and a cutting from the Spanish lavender plant growing in my flowerbed at my apartment.) I actually missed a lot of the second half of the movie, as I was busy mixing up the ice cream, however I did manage to watch the scene where they make chocolate croissants from scratch. *drools* One day I will try that!

After the movie, mom and I started on dinner. (Well, she started - I mostly observed, chatted, and took pictures, as well as changing out the burned out lightbulb in the kitchen) I had purchased extra eggplant on Friday to coax mom to make Eggplant Parmigiana, and was very successful!

Mom's Eggplant Parmigiana recipe comes out of the Gourmet Magazine cookbook, with a few alterations. The original recipe call for a freshly-made marinara tomato sauce - mom cans tomato sauce in the summer from the tomatos up on Chandler Mountain, so she uses her own, or a mixture of commercially prepared and her own. Last night was the latter, as she made two casseroles so that we all have leftovers for a meal later in the week.


For Eggplant Parmigiana, you need:


2 medium-large eggplant, sliced in 1/2 inch rounds
2 cups of italian breadcrumbs
1 cup of shredded parmesan
2 cloves garlic, minced
1 tbsp parsley, minced
1 jar of marinara sauce
1 pkg mozzarella, shredded
approx. 1 cup olive oil for frying
pinch of salt
pinch of pepper

Place the eggplant in a bowl and cover with boiling water. Let soak 5 min.
Mix together breadcrumbs, parmesan, garlic, parsley, salt and pepper and set aside. Brown eggplant in hot olive oil. Layer in a casserole dish in the order eggplant then bread crumb mixture then marinara sauce, until ingredients are used up, ending with marinara sauce. Top with mozzarella, then bake at 375 until cheese browns. Serve immediately.

This came out incredible as usual, and dad served up some chianti red as compliment. As we were eating the first dish, the second dish went in the oven with the previous nights ratatouille, to which I added a little more olive oil, as the first time I made it I added a full 1/2 cup to the 1.5 size recipe. Both dishes came out fabulous, and were packed and frozen for late consumption. (I ended up with 1 container of Eggplant Parmigana and 2 containers of ratatouille.)

Later in the evening, we froze the ice cream, which came out creamy and rich and yummy, although it was a bit too sweet. Next time I will try using only 1/2 cup of honey, to see if that tempers the sweetness. I have another recipe for Honey Ice Cream, that I will post when we make it again, which uses less honey but comes out perfect. We paired the ice cream with fresh made cups of Starbucks from mom and dad's Tassimo coffee machine (one of which I will own someday - just not yet. I have a lot of coffee pods for my current inherited Mr. Coffee Home Cafe.)

I haven't had breakfast yet this morning, although I plan to have some of the cantelope in the fridge with some of the Greek yogurt mixed with honey and pecans, as well as the remaining black berries from the Farmer's Market trip on Thursday.

Friday, July 2, 2010

Patty Pan Squash

After escaping work, I stopped by the Attalla Farmer's Market to see what yummy stuff they had that isn't grown up on Chandler Mountain. I picked up two colors of Patty Pan Squash, some onions, some blackberries, and some new red potatoes.

With such a plethora of tasty vegetables for dinner, I had to decide what to cook for dinner. After much debate (about 3 seconds) I decided that fried squash was on the menu for the evening!
My mother has always served Patty Pan Squash as a special summer treat, and I have never tried to cook them myself before, so I tried to remember everything I could about watching her cook them, and then, conveniently enough, she called, so I double-checked my memory.

To fry Patty Pan Squash like my mom does, you wash and then slice the squash into 4-5 thick circles (usually about 1/4 to 1/2 inch thick). Dredge the squash in flour, then carefully place into a frying pan with about 1/4 cup hot oil. Sprinkle salt and pepper on the squash as they are cooking. Cook the squash on each side until well browned and softened. You may need to add more oil - my mom used Corn oil, I didn't have any on hand, so I fried mine in Rice Bran oil.
Note: I never use canola oil, as to me and my immediate relatives canola oil tastes like rancid fish oil. (Eeewwwww! - I made a chocolate cake with it once. :( So disgusting!)

Once the squash is nicely browned on both sides, it is ready to eat, and the hotter it is the better it tastes!

At mom's insistance, I added a piece of herbed cheese and a few slices of salami for protein purposes - but most of dinner was squash!

Breakfast this morning was very rushed - I managed to grab two slices of raisin bread, and made a cup of coffee once I got to work. Lunch was more of the fantastically yummy Ratatouille!

Mom had requested that I pick up some tomatoes for BLTs for her, which since I go over to their house on Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays, so I stopped by the S&S Packing house on my way off the mountain from work. I picked up the requested tomatoes, as well as all of the available ingredients for making the Roasted Vegetable Ratatouille (zucchini, yellow squash, eggplant, green pepper, roma tomatoes).

So, dinner with mom and dad will be ratatoiulle, and whatever else we decide to have that we think will compliment it. More tomorrow!

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Ratatouille

After resorting to Pizza for lunch yesterday, I really wanted something better for dinner. Searching through the various recipe apps in my iPhone for recipes using eggplant (and being annoyed that the Betty Crocker cookbook does not work at the moment) I found a recipe in the Whole Foods Market Recipes app for Roasted Vegetable Ratatouille. This was perfect, as it also used my newly-repaired oven, so I could thoroughly test the repaired Bake element connections.
The recipe is as follows:
(Note: the recipe is not mine, it came from the Whole Foods Market Recipes app for iPhone, which is free to anyone interested. I put it here because it was fantastic, and I don't want to loose the recipe!)
1 lb eggplant, 1/2 inch dice
1/4 tsp salt
1 lb zucchini, 1 inch dice
1 lb yellow squash, 1 inch dice
1/2 lb yellow onion, 1 inch dice
1/2 lb red bell pepper, 1 inch dice
1/4 C extra virgin olive oil
1 lb Roma tomatoes, 1 inch dice
2 tbsp minced garlic
3 tbsp minced oregano
1/4 tsp ground black pepper
3 oz baby nonpareil capers, drained
Preheat oven to 400. Dice eggplant first. Combine with salt, set aside in colander to drain. Prepare remaining ingredients. Combine tomatoes, garlic, oregano and black pepper, set aside. Combine eggplant, zucchini, squash, onion and bell pepper, with olive oil. Place in roasting pan. Bake 45 minutes, stirring once during cooking. Stir in tomato mixture, bake 20 minutes. Stir in capers.

I got a bit over enthusiastic with the vegetables - I had the fresh eggplant, but I had purchased the other vegetables a week or so before, and decided to just use everything up and adjust the recipe accordingly. I am glad I did, as it turned out absolutely delicious! And I mean licking the pan yummy! The recipe calls for fresh garlic and fresh oregano, neither of which I had, so I used olive-oil packed garlic and dried oregano.

I ended up with about 2 pounds of leftovers, and have been told that refrigerating ratatouille overnight only makes it better.

This is a recipe I will definitely be repeating frequently. The ingredients are locally available and fresh at this time of year - I work in the middle of a vegetable producing farm area, and have ready access during the growing season to a decent variety of fresh vegetables at very cheap prices. This recipe uses five vegetables I can buy from the packing house produce stand just down the road from work, probably for less than $5 for a couple of pounds of each, and they have the vegetables all summer. I will be buying a larger jar of capers though - this used up my entire supply! I also plan to try other variations of this dish, in hopes that they are all just as good.

Breakfast this morning was the last of the strawberry yogurt, which I will not be buying any more of, at it was very sweet. I added a slice of bakery raisin bread, and coffee.

Lunch today will be more Ratatouille, as I had quite a bit left over, and it was beyond yummy fresh, and supposed to be even better the next day, so I plan to test this statement thoroughly! :)

Dinner tonight will include whatever I find at the produce stand tonight. Also, the local farmer's market is tonight, and is well worth checking for things the larger growers around work don't produce.

Last night I stopped by the local Aldi store, and picked up two bottles of Liebfraumilch white wine, a bottle of Chardonnay, two wedges of herbed cheese, and two packages of Genoa salami, which is a particular favorite of mine. So, the next few recipes should be fun, as I have plentiful ingredients at the moment!

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Further Preparations

Well, in the interest of being able to bake things in the future, I decided last night to find out what was wrong with the bake element in my oven. It hasn't worked since about November, and I have been unmotivated to fix it, as I have a toaster oven that works great for baking and broiling the smaller things, like frozen pizza.
However, for the larger things, I am going to need a functioning oven. So, with 30 minutes to spare before I had to crate up the furballs for their vet visit, I decided to pull out the burner and troubleshoot.
2 bolts held the burner plate to the back of the oven, so I removed those and pulled out the burner. And immediately found the problem.
One of the wires had broken. So, I pulled it out as far as I could to take a good look at it. It was a little charred around the end, and had broken loose from the crimped end.
At which point I had to stop, to take the kitties to the vet.
When I got back, being fairly good with manipulating metal, I removed the screw holding the end to the element, and cleaned it up. Then I cut the broken wire back to nice clean wire, stripped it, reattached the crimped end as tight as I could pinch it with my pliers, and then reattached the end to the element. Then I reassembled the oven, plugged the stove back in, and turned on the oven.
And the element heated up to a nice cherry red, just like it is supposed to! :)
I am excited about the oven working, however I am going to do some more research on oven wiring to be safe, but my repair appeared to have worked, and was stable at 350 degrees.
So, being tired after this, and having homework, I am afraid dinner was chips with cheese and salsa, with a Mexican beer.
This morning was yogurt again, and I brought leftover pizza for lunch, as I was in a hurry from having to give one of my kittens an antibiotic this morning, and had to resort to the frozen pre-prepared stuff as I ran out of time.
Dinner, however, will have something to do with eggplant! I have three of them that need to become something yummy.

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

A Shiny New Blog, And A Resolution

I have had several online journals in the past, and have had problems with posting anything but food. My Facebook account is riddled with pictures of dinner, of lunch, of tasty food I ate when I was insert name of place here.
I love food. If I was a little skinny girl, no one would care if I loved food, other than to say "Good for you!"
But I am not a little skinny girl. I am a big girl, with lots of jiggling when I get crazy enough to jump around in joy!
And you know what?
I love food!
So, I made a resolution at New Years this year, that I would eat more vegetables, more fresh things, and try to eat out less. So far, my success has been middle-of-the-road. Some days I am successful! And other days, I fail horribly.
So, I made another resolution. This time I made the resolution at the end of June, almost 6 months into my Eat More Vegetables resolution. This time, I am resolving to not eat fast food. At all. Until Thanksgiving.
So, here I am. Day 1.
Today has been a good day so far. I had some strawberry yogurt and a cup of coffee for breakfast, while making my lunch of cucumber and cream cheese on wheat roll sandwiches for lunch. I tossed in some extra cucumber slices, as I had cut too many, and a banana. I got the cucumbers yesterday at the produce packing house just down from work. They are interesting cucumbers - they actually look more like small melons than cucumbers, being more round than long and thin. They made great sandwiches.
I also picked up some other vegetables yesterday. I purchased three shiny purple medium-small eggplant, some regular cucumbers, some bell peppers, and a cantaloupe, which is not a vegetable, but is the only fruit they grow.
After wards, I stopped at Walmart and purchased my groceries for the next several days. I picked up Horizon Organic whole milk, which I purchase due to it's longer shelf life. I dring a half-gallon of milk in about 2 weeks or more, which is usually too long for standard milk to still be viable, while the Horizon milk is ultra-pasteurized and has a shelf life of a month or longer. I also picked up eggs, some sliced cheese, some cream cheese, some plain Greek-style yogurt, two types of whole wheat rolls, some bakery raisin bread, and some carrot juice as a treat. As a result, I had an Egg and Green Pepper sandwich for dinner, as I had the three necessary ingredients - namely eggs, green peppers, and bread. I learned this recipe from a YouTube series called "Depression Cooking" or similar - some interesting recipes and stories! :)