Tuesday, March 5, 2024
Sourdough Plum Kolache and a Recipe for Sourdough Rich Dough (Suitable for Sweetened Buns)
Monday, March 4, 2024
Menu Plan for a Week With Appointments
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| Brussel sprouts leaves in the late winter garden in my growing zone can be sliced thin and sautéed, then steamed as a side dish. |
I have a couple of days this week with afternoon appointments. So I've had to think of meals I could make ahead or with less time.
Tuesday afternoon I have a less-than-pleasant dental appointment. It's not the next "big" appointment, but I will likely feel wrung out by the time it's over. I'll still have to make dinner when I come home. Here's my plan. I made a soup today, Monday, that I can heat and serve along with garlic toast with minimal effort on Tuesday.
Thursday, again I'll be out of the house for several hours in the afternoon and will need something quick to make. I have a tub of extra firm tofu in the fridge that I can work with. Tofu is great for quick meals, as it only needs heating through, no lengthy cooking. I'm thinking about how to prepare it. Rice takes a while to cook, so perhaps noodles, like a lo mein. I can add fresh and frozen vegetables at near the last minute. What would you fix using tofu as the base and if limited in preparation time?
Here's the meal plan for the week.
Beef and vegetable stir fry over brown rice
Tuesday (my dental appt day)
Hummus soup
Garlic toast
Wednesday (other daughter's night)
Meatloaf
Mashed potatoes
Thursday (other busy afternoon)
Friday
Pepperoni, olive, and green pepper pizza
Thursday, February 29, 2024
Easy-to-Make Vintage Confection
Do you remember last month when I noted that some of my groceries would be used to make a vintage recipe? I said at the time that it was for a 1940s treat. I was mistaken. This is a recipe from WW1. It's from the cookbook Win the War, by Reah Jeannette Lynch, published 1918. I found it on archive.org, page 122 in a section on saving sugar.
I finally made this treat this afternoon. They're chocolate-dipped dried fruit.
Bitter Sweets (my batch yielded 11 candies)
I used 1 ounce of Baker's 100% cacao unsweetened chocolate, and 5 1/2 pitted dates.
I loved these. The dates gave just enough sweetness to the confection, while still allowing the dark chocolate flavor to come through. I appreciated that there is no added sugar, and the dates provide fiber and minerals in a piece of candy.
If you enjoy very dark chocolate, this may be just up your alley. And if you're counting calories, one ounce of unsweetened chocolate contains 140 calories, and 5 1/2 dates contain 126 calories, total. So each piece of candy has 24 calories.
If you make this recipe, please come back and share your opinion on these vintage confections.
Wednesday, February 28, 2024
Grocery Shopping for February
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| Before this week's snowfall, I cut some branches from the native plum trees, providing us with an indoor taste of spring. |
So the month of February is about over, and I'm done with grocery shopping until next month. I feel like I shopped an average amount of days in February. Some of these trips to stores were two-in-ones, going to two or more stores on the same run. I tend to grocery shop once per week. WinCo is further away, so I limit trips there to every other week. Walmart, on the other hand, is practically right around the corner, and Grocery Outlet is directly across the street from Walmart.
The tally for the month
What I bought this month
How is grocery shopping going for you in 2024? Do you drive out of your way to shop at a preferred store as I do? Are you still able to stick to your budget, or have you had to increase your budget due to rising costs or a new emphasis on eating better? It can be challenging, can't it?
Tuesday, February 27, 2024
To Commemorate the Four Year Anniversary of the Beginning of the Pandemic . . .
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| It's alive! |
I fished the sourdough starter out from the back of the shelf of the fridge. It's been sitting there, untouched, for three and a half years. I wasn't sure if it would even be viable at this point. But I got it out anyway.
After giving it a good stir and a feeding, I set it on the counter for the night. Low and behold, that thing is still alive!
Anyway, I'm thrilled it's still viable. This afternoon I started a batch of rich sourdough to make jam-filled kolache buns tomorrow. I'm working through our stash of homemade jams this month and next. I think kolache sounds like a good use for the plum jam.
So, during the pandemic, did you ride the sourdough train, too in 2020?
I ran out of yeast early on and couldn't get any until mid-summer of 2020. I made sourdough pizza crust (very good -- gave the pizza a cheesier taste), sourdough burger and hot dog buns (my son and his wife thought those burger buns were the best they'd ever tasted), sourdough bread, and sourdough raisin and spice rolls (favorite of mine) that spring.
Monday, February 26, 2024
Menu Plan for the End of February/Beginning of March
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| Nature can't seem to decide if it's winter or spring. The native plum is in bloom, but I woke up to snow. Later in the day we had hail, graupel, then large heavy snowflakes. |
Last week's menu went close to plan. We did swap out a couple of side dishes for items that we needed to use soon. But the mains were all as planned. So, in reality, successful menu planning requires some flexibility in its execution.
Green vegetable frittata, using frozen garden greens and onions in the egg dish
Brown rice
Apple wedges
Tuesday
Beef braised in a tomato sauce (I have some leftover pizza sauce to use up)
Mashed potatoes (the instant variety -- not my favorite, but it is what we have)
Carrots added to the beef braising sauce
Creamed frozen garden greens
The cut of beef is called a heel roast. I’d never heard of this cut before, so I googled how best to prepare it. Braising it is!
Wednesday (other daughter)
Cabbage patch soup
Toasted cheese sandwiches
Apple, garden-fresh kale and cranberry salad
Thursday
Taco bowls using leftover beef from Tuesday, green pepper, tomatoes, avocado, garden watercress, cucumber slices, cheese, and tortilla chips
Mixed fruit crisp (using frozen apple chunks, frozen blackberries, and frozen rhubarb dices)
Friday
Pepperoni, green pepper, mushroom, and olive pizza
Steamed garden-fresh Brussel sprout greens with onions
Carrot-raisin salad
Weekend dinners:
One night of mostly leftovers from the fridge. The other night will likely be a meatless meal, using dried beans (black-eyed peas).
Lunches:
We're experiencing a brief return to winter this week. After a couple of weeks of slightly warmer days, we've now had snow and hail in the last 24 hours. I'm thinking hot soup and egg salad, toasted cheese or peanut butter sandwiches plus apples and a batch of slaw will be welcomed by all for lunches. I'm baking 3 loaves of whole wheat bread today and will make some cookies tomorrow to add to our lunches.
Thursday, February 22, 2024
Thoughts and Review of February's 1950s Tuna Bake Meal
All of the recipes came from Better Homes & Gardens New Cook Book, publish date 1953. To refresh your memory, here's the menu from the other night:
- chopped green pepper
- chopped yellow onion
- cooking fat (I used vegetable oil)
- salt
- flour
- can of condensed chicken with rice soup (I used homemade chicken stock, seasonings, and leftover cooked rice)
- milk
- canned tuna (I used 2 cans)
- lemon juice
- Cheese Swirls for topping
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| to give you an idea of what the cheese swirls were, this is what the casserole looked like before baking |
- flour
- baking powder
- salt
- shortening
- milk
- American cheese (I used cheddar)
What I didn't like about this recipe:
1) The canned soup. I don't keep canned soup on hand. Even if I did, this would be an odd type for me to have chosen. Since I was able to find an easy work-around for the canned soup, I wish the recipe had just added an alternative to the chicken with rice soup, something such as " or 1/2 cup leftover cooked rice, 2 teaspoons of chicken bouillon granules, plus water to equal 1 1/4 cups."
Green Beans in Crumbs
Ingredients:
- canned green beans
- butter (I used part butter, part vegetable oil)
- salt
- cracker crumbs
- black pepper
- butter
- prepared mustard
- honey
- Worcestershire sauce (I used a combo of soy sauce and brown sugar)
- paprika
- salt
Key takeaways from this menu:
I missed having a light and cold side dish, like a salad or marinated vegetables. However, this was a filling, comfort food meal that was good for a chilly day.
While we all liked the tuna bake, my husband really, really, really liked it! The combination of biscuit topping with the creamy tuna filling was a hit with him. We all enjoyed the leftovers the next day, too. Fish is not my favorite food, yet this was very good, and even I liked it the next day.
I'm inclined to make all of these recipes again. In the future, I would turn the tuna bake into a one-dish meal by adding vegetables to the filling. This would cut down on my kitchen time for a meal such as this. I think I spent about an hour to an hour and a half over the course of the day in hands-on work.
I liked the way the biscuits were prepared. To me, rolling out the dough, then rolling up jelly roll-style and cutting felt less time-consuming than rolling out biscuit dough and cutting with a cutter, followed by re-rolling the scraps and cutting. And yet, the end presentation following the recipe was very nice. My mother-in-law would have been very impressed, if I'd served this to her. Yes, I do think this could make a nice potluck or informal gathering dish. If one wanted to simplify the cheese biscuit topping, drop scratch cheese biscuits (wet biscuit dough with shredded cheese mixed in) or canned biscuits topped with cheese could be used, saving 15 minutes or so on the preparation time.
This was a frugal meal for my family. The main protein was inexpensive (as far as meat goes), and the rest of the ingredients were basics for me to keep on hand. Not only was this a budget meal, but it also used basic cooking techniques, making this a good meal for anyone of any cooking ability to make. Canned vegetables are a big help for meal prep on busy days. There's no cooking, just heat and flavor right before serving.
I've had fun cooking recipes from this 50s-era cookbook. It's been a great way to shake up the cooking doldrums that can set in after many years of family cooking. I'll continue to look through this cookbook and do another meal in March. I hope this has been enjoyable for you to read about.
Wednesday, February 21, 2024
Dinner at 50's O'Clock: 1950's Pantry Staple Recipes
More recipes from my mother's copy of the Better Homes & Gardens New Cookbook, publish date1953
Tonight's 1950's dinner relies on several pantry items. Since I wasn't going shopping specifically for this menu, I needed to find recipes that used foods I had on hand. As it turned out, I used a lot of basic pantry foods, such as canned vegetables, crackers, and canned tuna. The main dish recipe called for a can of condensed chicken with rice soup. I made my own version of a condensed chicken with rice soup. Walmart sells a Great Value brand of this sort of soup for 92 cents, so not real a budget buster to buy a can. But like I said, I was using items I have on hand.
Better Homes & Gardens budget meal recommendations usually have a main dish (one that contains both protein and starch), a hot vegetable side dish, a cold vegetable salad, and a dessert (often fruit). I wanted to try new recipes, and my fresh vegetable selection is limited right now, so I went with two hot vegetable dishes instead of a vegetable dish plus a salad.
Again, I'm feeding a family of four adults.
Here's the menu:
Tuna Bake -- Cheese SwirlsGreen Beans in CrumbsDeviled Beets
I didn't choose a dessert recipe for tonight because our house is currently deluged with desserts that need eating up. We'll have a choice between leftover Valentine's cake, scratch brownies, or blackberry crisp for dessert.
Tuna Bake --Cheese Swirls
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| the casserole filling in the dish, waiting to be topped a baked just before dinner |
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| the biscuit dry mixed with fats |
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| all of the green bean dish ingredients except the cracker crumbs |
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| the beet dish, ready to heat and serve the orange color of the sauce is the combo of mustard and paprika |
Tuesday, February 20, 2024
It's that time of the year again . . .
You know what this means, right? It's indoor seed-starting time in my area. I've got my empty cells, seeds, potting soil, and master list of what I plant, how much, and when.
Once the seeds are planted, I need a way to tell which are which. Some seedlings look an awful lot like others. And sometimes, they require different spacing when going out into the garden. So I took an empty plastic milk jug and cut it into strips, using ordinary kitchen scissors. Sharpies work great on this plastic surface. I made a mistake on one and could not rub off the name. So, I'm pretty certain these plant labels will fare well with watering. Free plant labels. Woo hoo!
My flat of early season veggies is seeded, labeled and under lights. Now it's a matter of waiting for sprouts to grow.
I'll start a second flat of different veggies, flowers and herbs in another 10 days. I have indoor capacity under lights for 4 flats altogether. And every year I use every last spot for seeds.
How about you? Will you be starting some seeds indoors any time soon?
Monday, February 19, 2024
Menu Plan for Presidents' Week and My Recipe for Peanut Butter Granola
Most of last week went according to the menu plan. I had some leftovers from Valentine's Day that needed using for Thursday's dinner (fresh strawberries instead of the planned creamed spinach) and some rapidly ripening avocados and Roma tomatoes that I ended up using for Friday's dinner instead of the steamed broccoli. And of course, we had lots of waffles and scones left from Wednesday brunch to add to breakfasts, lunches and snacks for the remaining day of the week. We're back on track now with all of the leftovers gobbled up.
Curried lentils with carrots, celery, onions, frozen garden greens, homemade chutney and brown rice
Apple wedges
Tuesday
Stir-fried beef with cabbage, broccoli, carrots, green onions, Swiss chard, and homegrown mushrooms over rice
Blackberry crisp
Wednesday
Another rockin' 50s dinner from my mother's 1953 cookbook
Thursday (other daughter)
Meatloaf
Mashed potatoes and gravy
Roasted broccoli
Friday
Pepperoni pizza
Creamed garden greens
Spiced fig-applesauce
Weekend dinners -- one night of miscellaneous leftovers from both fridge and freezer. The other night baked beans with ham, Cole slaw, honey-mustard carrots
Breakfasts -- peanut butter granola, Cream of Wheat, toast, eggs, peanut butter, apples, bananas, milk
Lunches -- egg salad sandwiches, peanut butter sandwiches, toasted open-face cheese sandwiches, homemade tomato-basil soup, carrot sticks, apples, raisins, cabbage, cookies, various leftovers
Peanut butter granola is something I've made for my family for many years. The recipe is my own. I came up with it as a way to boost the protein content of quick breakfasts and as a way to use up lingering jars of peanut butter in the pantry. Since I've mentioned this as a breakfast food in our house in previous weeks' menu plans, I thought I'd share the recipe today. If you're a fan of peanut butter cookies, this granola may just be your new favorite breakfast cereal. Enjoy!
Peanut Butter Granola
large jelly roll pan (baking sheet with 4 raised edges)
microwaveable mixing bowl and large spoon
Butter the baking sheet. Preheat the oven to 325 degrees F.
1/2 to 2/3 cup peanut butter
6 tablespoons of brown sugar (or granulated sugar plus molasses)
1 to 2 tablespoons vegetable oil, butter, or coconut oil
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 to 2 teaspoons vanilla flavoring/extract
2 tablespoons water
3 cups rolled oats
Dump all ingredients except oats into large microwaveable bowl. Stir together. (Don't worry about lumps of butter or coconut oil, if using either as your fat.) Microwave for 30 to 40 seconds.
Finish combining these ingredients.
Stir in the oats. (Taste a small amount for sweetness at this point. Add additional brown sugar if desired.)
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| unbaked |
Spread in the prepared baking sheet.
Bake for 20 minutes. Check. Stir the edges into the center and spread out again. Return to oven for 9 to 10 additional minutes, until the granola looks golden.
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| fully baked |
Turn off oven, open the oven door a crack, stir the granola again and allow to cool in the warm oven. When completely cooled, the granola should "feel" dry when stirred.
I bake granola on an insulated sheet (double-layered). If baked on a single-layered baking sheet, the bottom may brown faster than mine. You may want to adjust the time slightly, for example, reduce the first baking period from 20 minutes to about 18 minutes, and the second baking period from 9-10 minutes to about 8 or 9 minutes. Also, stirring the granola more frequently should prevent over-browning of the granola.
Thursday, February 15, 2024
Update on the Mushroom Growing Project
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| That's a developing mushroom! |
Well low and behold, after spritzing it with water daily for a week, the block began sprouting new mushrooms! I'm excited to see how well it will do for a second flush. Supposedly, I may be able to get a third flush from the block. So after it slows down this time, I'll repeat the resting period followed by soaking and see if any more mushrooms will sprout at that point, too.
Wednesday, February 14, 2024
Happy Valentine's Day, Friends!
You may notice the waffles have a non-waffle shape. I found this waffle iron, still in box, with instructions, and still two sides zip-tied together (never used) at Goodwill a couple of weeks ago. Since my 30-year old waffle iron died last year, I thought I'd pick this one up at a bargain basement price. It worked great today!
Tuesday, February 13, 2024
Pro Tip: Best Time Ever to Go to Home Depot
If you want the parking lot practically all to yourself, lots of employees to answer questions, no wait to check out, then I have the absolute best day/time to go to Home Depot.
I'm not really into football, and the commercials and half-time entertainment are often not my thing. So, skipping the Super Bowl seemed like a good opportunity for me to go to Home Depot to pick up some flowers for a large pot by the kitchen door. I've been needing a bit of cheer to get me through some down days this month. When I thought about what would bring a smile to my face, spring flowers was the answer.
Sunday afternoon, just after 3 PM PST, one daughter and I headed out to get some flowering plants. When we pulled into the parking lot at HD, it was almost comical how few cars there were. And I'm assuming several of those cars were employees'. Even the employees inside the store were joking around about how empty the store was. Everyone was in good humor and very helpful. My daughter and I walked out with plenty of spring flowering plants and no hassle getting in or out of the parking lot.
I'll keep this in mind for next February. Now, I have to go outside and plant these into the pot's soil.








































