>It’s the economy. Or maybe it’s due to the increasingly common food-borne illnesses like salmonella. More and more people are turning to buying locally and cooking from scratch. Where do they get their recipes? For many of today’s cooks, the basics and the preserving tips skipped a generation. Our mothers (and occasionally our fathers) cooked from mixes and made convenience foods whenever they could. These frozen foods and boxed mixes made it easy for working parents to feed the family when they got home. For a long time, there was no desire to go back to the old ways of slow cooking, starting with the basic ingredients. Time-saving was time-saving, and thank goodness for that!
Category Archives: kitchen stories
>NFL Season: what do you cook?
>Game Day meals can be so much more than pizza or bratwurst. What’s a bratwurst? If you’re not from the Midwest, you probably don’t want to know. It’s kind of like really knowing the ingredients in sausage – a little too much information.
>Too many tomatoes? Never.
>It was a classic pantry raid. It started as Truck Tomatoes: tomatoes, diced and cored and peeled, sauteed in olive oil with a little garlic and thyme. Then in true Daisy form, I looked into the refrigerator and started adding random goodies. A little oregano. Peppers, green onions. A small handful of spinach, a little grated zucchini. Two cobs of (already cooked) sweet corn – I could have and probably should have left it at one. Simmered to pieces while I boiled up a little pasta, it was an aromatic sauce that promised to be delicious.
Daughter looked at it with suspicion. “What’s in it? The corn is a little overkill, isn’t it?”
Chuck looked at the stove and the wall and asked, “Who cooked here? A chimpanzee?”
Okay, I admit it. I used a wee bit too much corn. I should have used the bigger pan. If I’d stopped at the basic recipe, the small skillet would have been okay.
Despite their skepticism, they liked it. And yes, if you’re wondering, I did clean the stove myself.
>Lemongrass Adventures
>We were walking down Main Street on our usual trek through the Saturday Farmers’ Market when Chuck said “Let’s go back to the booth where we bought the peppers and carrots. She had lemongrass. I want to try it.”
>Tomato Salsa for Canning
>My new go-to book is Put ‘Em Up! by Sherri Brooks Vinton. I bought it myself; this is not a sponsored post or a review. I had a lot of tomatoes, but we had to buy the jalapeno peppers. Mine are not growing very quickly – or they’re being eaten by the furry creatures that bounce through the yard. Maybe that’s why the bunny was collapsed under the rain barrel? Never mind. Just kidding.
>Old Time Baked Beans in the Crock Pot
>I found this recipe long, long ago when my kids were young, our incomes were low, and we needed cheap and decent nutrition. Using dried beans and a few basic kitchen staples, these baked beans are delicious and high in iron. This dish can be vegetarian or use salt pork or bacon. The flavor is similar either way.
>Something Tomato-Inclusive
>I don’t know if tomato-inclusive is really a word, but it should be one for August. Tomatoes keep ripening, a few every day. I have a big bowl of plum tomatoes, a colander half full of yellow pear tomatoes, several Romas in a size larger than I’ve seen in stores (and much more tasty, I assure you), and a few paste type tomatoes, too. I don’t have quite enough to can; I did some of that a few days ago. What now? Eat tomatoes. Cook tomatoes. Look for ideas with tomatoes.
BLT sandwiches – preferably on homemade bread – are popular with three out of four in the family. Grilled cheese with a thin tomato slice works; even better, add enough herbs and a little ham or turkey and call it a panini. Salads, of course, incorporating as many tomatoes as possible. But that might not be enough. I predict tomato soup soon. Next week I start school, which means the crock pot will become a mainstay of supper preparations. Crock Pot Tomato Soup on the way! Or maybe minestrone. Minestrone (a.k.a. Oops Soup) is good with a tomato base.
The plant yielded some good tomatoes. I roasted them in a deep pan with salt, olive oil, cloves of unshucked garlic, and sprigs of thyme. You ladle off the juice every twenty minutes of so and freeze it for a sweet, delicate stock best consumed during snowstorms. The residual pulp gathers body from the garlic and spirit from the thyme. The spent garlic, when squeezed warmly from its husk directly upon your tongue, will slacken your face and make you shimmy.
>My Garden keeps me humble.
>Every year I start with plans – big plans. This year the big change was the new tomato plot. We planned ahead, set it up as a large triangle with layers of cardboard and newspaper covered with compost in the style of a lasagna garden. When spring came, we braced the three sides with boards donated by a generous neighbor and then covered the area with about 4 inches of soil trucked in from a local nursery. Then I planted: tomatoes, peppers, and broccoli, with a few wildflower seeds scattered across the back. Fleet Farm had the tomato supports I wanted, and we were set.
>Zucchini Cookies!
>Yes, it’s that time again! It’s August, the only month when small town folk lock their car doors for fear they’ll come out of the grocery store or a church service and find a stack of zucchini in the back seat. Never fear, people. There are ways to hide zucchini in something that actually tastes good.
>Lemon Honey Chicken
>From the cookbook 70 Meals, One Trip to the Store comes a simple chicken marinade.