>Variations on a Soup Theme

>Readers, you know me. I’ll see a recipe and say “I could make that! But….” and then the variations begin. This one started as a Lentil soup. I didn’t have lentils, but I had beans. Kidney beans. No, I know, they’re not the same, but as the basis for a soup, they’ll both work. Prep the beans first; soak overnight, at least. I put mine in the crock pot on high for a few hours, then turned it to Keep Warm for overnight. In the morning, I rinsed the beans and started over with the rest of the ingredients.

Daisy’s Variations on a Soup
Ingredients:
1/2 cup dried beans, soaked overnight and rinsed
1/2 cup chopped onion
1/2 cup chopped red or green pepper (or both)
1 clove garlic, minced
4 cups chicken broth
1 1/2 teaspoons snipped fresh basil OR 1/2 teaspoon dried basil, crushed
1 teaspoon fresh oregano OR 1/4 teaspoon dried oregano, crushed
3/4 teaspoon snipped fresh rosemary OR 1/4 teaspoon dried rosemary, crushed
1/4 teaspoon pepper
1 cup chopped chicken or turkey (save this until Thanksgiving leftovers – sure, why not?)
1/2 cup sliced carrots
1/4 cup quick-cooking barley
1 14 1/2 oz. can of tomatoes – or the equivalent in fresh tomatoes, if you have them
Prepare beans by soaking overnight. Rinse.
Add all other ingredients except the chicken and barley.
Simmer all day long – 4-6 hours on high, 6-8 on low.
Add chicken and barley 1 to 2 hours before serving.
Serving suggestion: serve with Nuts and Twigs bread topped with Nutella.
Note: I was really attracted to this recipe because I have basil, oregano, and rosemary growing wildly on my deck. I feel pressured to use up as much as I can before the frost hits. Coincidentally, Chuck brought home a rotisserie chicken for lunch on Sunday. The leftover chicken will be perfect for this. It’s all part of meal planning according to what’s in the house already. Well, in the house or growing outside the house, that is.

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>What to wear?

>Most weekends it’s easy. Pick something green and gold out of the closet, support our Super Bowl Champion (I never tire of saying that!) Green Bay Packers.

Friday I wore the usual to work – pink Packers polo shirt, neutral sweater in case the room was drafty. But then…. but then….
Saturday the Milwaukee Brewers started a playoff run. The Wisconsin Badgers had a big game on national importance. Brewers blue or Bucky Badger red? Or both? Or neither?
We expanded our Eating the Opponent plan instead. Saturday night’s dinner included grilled Black Angus beef (the Denver Broncos), sweet corn on the cob (Nebraska Cornhuskers), and a nice salsa in the omelets we ate for lunch.
No matter, both teams won decisively on Saturday followed by another great set of games on Sunday. It’s a good time to be a sports fan in Wisconsin. Whatever I wear, however we decorate the cubicles (Brewers and Packers in mine, Badgers across the wall in the math teacher’s space), autumn is going to be fun.
Saturday:
Badgers 48
Cornhuskers 17
Brewers 4
Diamondbacks 1
Sunday:
Packers 49
Broncos 17
Brewers 9
Diamondbacks 4
On, Wisconsin — sports!!

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>Eating the Opponent – beyond the cheesehead

>It all started when the Packers opened the season against the Philadelphia Eagles and Chuck served up a delicious Philly Pepper Steak with cheese. The next week Green Bay played Buffalo, so we served (you guessed it) Buffalo wings. A challenge, a tradition in the making was born: Eating the Opponent.

We had some easy ones: Buffalo wings, Chicago style pizza, jambalaya for New Orleans. There were some challenges, too. Minnesota? I refused to even consider lutefisk, so we went Lake Wobegon style and served stuffed meatloaf. Sunday breakfast included turnovers, in honor of then-QB Favre.
Playoffs extended our menu into January. Philly again, Atlanta, and another Chicago foodie weekend led up to the final meal against Pittsburgh, and there the story ended with pierogies, Klondike bars, Super Burgers, and the return of the Lombardi Trophy to Green Bay where it belongs.
We thought about it. Are we superstitious, or just hungry? Whatever the truth may be, here we go again.
The 2011 NFL season started with jambalaya and two great quarterbacks (Aaron Rodgers and Drew Brees, if you didn’t know) passing for the highest score. The second week of the season featured Chicago style hot dogs with the works.
I put week three to my friends on Twitter and Plurk. What should we serve when Green Bay plays Denver? Suggestions mounted.
  • Rocky Road ice cream
  • Denver omelets
  • Coors beer
  • Rocky Mountain Oysters (Not. A. Chance.)
The final decision: A major product of ranchers in the west, Black Angus beef. Sorry, Coors, but I’d rather have a Leinenkugel’s stout or a New Glarus Spotted Cow. It’s a Wisconsin thing.
Now, readers, here’s your chance. Next weekend the Packers play the Atlanta Falcons. Coke products are a given. But what else? Suggest, please.

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>Bread with Nuts and Twigs

>Readers, you know I’m a creative cook. I like to toss in a few extra or alternate ingredients to jazz up a recipe.

You might or might not know that Chuck, bless his heart, balks at knowing his food is healthy. He’ll eat it, even enjoy it, but don’t tell him that it’s high fiber or low fat or contains just the vitamins he needs. Just tell him it’s delicious and settle in to enjoy.
He calls all my favorite cereals Nuts and Twigs.
He’ll choose plain white bread over whole grain, given the choice.
He refuses to take daily fiber supplements because they make him feel old. Ahem.
So I made this. It’s a basic white bread in the bread machine with a few additions for, well, for fun.
Daisy’ Bread with Nuts and Twigs
makes a 1 1/2 lb. loaf

1 cup + 2 Tablespoons warm water
1 Tablespoon butter or margarine, softened
2 Tablespoons sugar
1 Tablespoon non-fat dry milk powder
1 1/2 teaspoon (1/2 Tablespoon) salt
3 cups bread flour
2 1/2 teaspoons bread machine yeast
Now the fun. Add in 1 Tablespoon each:
wheat germ
flaxseed
pine nuts
sunflower kernels (dry roasted)
Set the bread machine to normal, push play, and let it bake!

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>Autumn. Fall. Apples.

>

There’s no Downtown Market this weekend due to the frivolous fall festival that my town insists on naming Octoberfest, even though it always falls on the last Saturday of September. I have plenty of good fresh food at home, though. In fact, I spent some time recently with these:


Apples! Apples! I made three kinds of applesauce. Plain, cinnamon, and red hot (with the candies, not with peppers). It’s going to be a good year for eating locally; all of the apples were from a nearby orchard.

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>Chocolate Zucchini Bread

>This is a delicious, light (not lite) recipe. It’s sweet, but not heavy-tasting. Chocolate chips might be fun; I didn’t add those to this batch. Instead of two regular sized loaves, I made one regular and three small loaves. I’ll freeze at least two of the little ones for later. Use a good quality cocoa; it makes a difference.

Chocolate Zucchini Bread
makes 2 loaves

Beat together:

1/2 cup butter or margarine
2 cups sugar
3 eggs or 3/4 cup egg substitute
2 teaspoons vanilla
3 cups grated zucchini
1/2 cup milk

Sift and add:

2 cups all-purpose flour
1 1/2 cup wheat flour
1/2 cup cocoa
3 teaspoons baking powder
2 teaspoons salt
1 teaspoon cinnamon

Pour into two greased loaf pans. Bake at 350 degrees F for 50-60 minutes.

Don’t tell the Boyz; I added wheat germ and flax seed. This sweet treat actually has fiber. Shh.

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>Butternut Squash Soup in the slow cooker

>I used my big slow cooker, the 6 qt model, for this soup. One butternut squash yields a lot of squash! I may need to freeze some of the soup for later.

Ingredients:
1 large butternut squash (about 4 lb), peeled, seeded, and cut into pieces
(estimated amount: 10 cups)
1 large apple, peeled, cored, cut into 1-inch pieces
1 medium white onion, diced
1 large carrot, peeled, diced
2 teaspoons curry powder
1/2 teaspoon sea salt
1/8 teaspoon white pepper
3 1/2 cups chicken broth or chicken stock
1 Tablespoon minced fresh ginger root
1/2 cup sweetened condensed milk
3/4 cup packed brown sugar
Directions:
Spray slow cooker with non-stick spray. In cooker, toss squash, apple, onion, carrot, curry powder, salt, and white pepper. Pour broth over vegetable mixture.
Cover; cook on low for 8-10 hours or on high for 4-5 hours.
Use immersion blender or remove small amounts of soup (3 cups at a time) into blender to blend until smooth. Add milk and brown sugar while blending.
Turn heat setting to high. Cover; cook for another 30 minutes.
Serve. Enjoy.
The question remains: how will I prepare the hybrid?

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>Prepping the Corn for Winter

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Instead of a recipe, here’s a seasonal how-to post. This is exactly how I prepped the corn to freeze for winter. We’ll keep buying sweet corn at the market as long as it’s in season and it’ll be the theme ingredient for meals. Meanwhile, I approached the guys in the worn-out brown van and asked for five dozen ears of corn. Here’s the bag, sitting outside on the deck making friends with the potted herbs.

Then we went to Milwaukee to visit La Petite on Sunday. On Monday, Amigo and I got up early for an appointment and the day just flew by. Tuesday, I had training all morning and an appointment in the afternoon. Wednesday, I had another appointment, one that dilated my pupils for the remainder of the morning. All this time, the big burlap bag sat on the deck. I really should have prepped it immediately, but it just didn’t happen. Thursday it rained. Friday afternoon I finally got the corn out of the bag, let it dry in the sun, and then husked the entire batch.


Below you’ll see about half of the result.


Then I used my nifty gadget to cut the corn kernels off the cob. This is potentially a messy job, but I learned a trick from Kristin at Blackrock. Standing up the corncob in the center of a Bundt pan keeps the corn steady and directs the kernels to an awaiting bowl.

Next step: blanch. A few minutes in hot water followed by a few minutes in cold water stops the ripening process so the corn will taste fresh when I pull it from the freezer in January. I spread the kernels as evenly as possible on a wax-paper lined pan and insert the pans in the freezer. What you see beside the sink is about one third of the entire batch.

I was too worn out to take pictures of the final bags. Rest assured, there are plenty of freezer bags full of corn (the vacuum kind with the air pumped out) in the freezer along with the beans, peas, and asparagus.

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>The Daisy Reality Show Returns!

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Director: What’s on the agenda today?
Daisy: Farmers’ Market. That’s always on the schedule for Saturdays. grabs the big bag on wheels, full of other smaller cloth bags
Assistant: You have a garden. Why do you need the Market?
Daisy: Quantity. I have quality, but I need more to fill the freezer and feed my family. Wow, and I’m alliterative, too.
Director: laughs
Assistant: huh? looks confused
At downtown market
Daisy: Sweet corn. I’ll take a dozen.
Director: Do you always buy a lot of whatever is in season?
Daisy: Absolutely. Part of the locavore philosophy is eating what’s in season so it doesn’t have to travel a long way to reach the table. The theme ingredient on my table right now is (drumroll) tomatoes.
They continue down the street, taking in the booths, while Daisy picks out fresh peaches, zucchini, green peppers, sweet corn, butternut squash, blueberries, fresh honey oat bread, and a luxury, kettle corn. Oh, heck, just see the picture below.
Assistant: (sniffing the air near kettle corn booth.) Wow, that smells good.
Daisy: Try some.
Assistant: Oh, oh, this is good. Oh, oh!
Director sotto voce: Let’s leave him here to enjoy his kettle corn.
Assistant: OH, THIS IS WONDERFUL!!
Woman at kettle corn booth: I’ll have what he’s having.
Back at Daisy’s house unpacking the goods.
Assistant: I know I asked you this. Why did you buy zucchini and butternut squash? You planted both.
Daisy: Look at what I bought. Then go out to the garden and look at the squash plants.
Director: Let’s get a good shot of the produce we just bought.

Assistant, back from garden: Daisy, what do you call that kind of squash? Butter-chini? Zuchnut?





Daisy: Hybrid. Turns to director. Let’s take a break and watch a movie while the soaker hose does its work on the tomatoes. How about When Harry Met Sally?

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>Tomatoes + Peppers = Salsa

>

My dear readers;
I’m in my final session of training for my new job, and I’ve been using most of my online time to learn the new software for presenting live lessons to my online students and their learning coaches. I must beg off from presenting a new recipe today. I posted this one last fall and made it again last week. Since I have tomatoes and peppers ripening like crazy, some of you must have those around, too. Feel free to adapt the peppers to include whatever you’re harvesting! A hot red chili pepper instead of the dried kind… a sweet yellow banana pepper instead of the yellow bell… you know how these things work.


Tomato Salsa Dip


1 small to medium onion, diced
1 yellow bell pepper, seeded and diced
1 red bell pepper, seeded and diced
1 jalapeno pepper, seeded and diced
4 ripe tomatoes, cored, peeled, and diced (mine were small, so I used 7)
1 cup tomato juice
2 teaspoons dried hot red pepper flakes
5 Tablespoons red wine vinegar
2 Tablespoons brown sugar
2 teaspoons cornstarch
4 Tablespoons water
Directions:
1. Warm the onion, peppers, tomatoes, tomato juice, hot pepper flakes, red wine vinegar, and brown sugar in a saucepan.
2. Mix the cornstarch and the water and add to the simmering salsa.
3. Stir until thickened. Then remove from heat and allow to cool.

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