>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.
Category Archives: kitchen stories
>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.
>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.
- Rocky Road ice cream
- Denver omelets
- Coors beer
- Rocky Mountain Oysters (Not. A. Chance.)
>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.
>Autumn. Fall. Apples.
>
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.
>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.
>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.
>Prepping the Corn for Winter
>
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.
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.
>The Daisy Reality Show Returns!
>
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?
>Tomatoes + Peppers = Salsa
>