On the First Day of Christmas … (or the Christmas Season)

Happy Holiday Season. We ended Thanksgiving day here with Gracie bringing us the first gift of the season.

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That is a very bad picture of a very terrified mouse. Gracie brought home, and into the house, a very alive, very not hurt mouse. This would be bad enough, but once she let go of the mouse, the poor thing ran behind the television.

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Shouldn’t be a problem, right? Get the mouse cornered, catch the mouse, take mouse outside and release. No big deal. Except here we had Gracie and Leia trying to catch the mouse before we did, Jessie trying to figure out what al the fuss was about and a mouse that disappeared. Yep. Gone. Can not find. In the house. With two adults, two cats and a dog watching it.

Bob found the mouse … It hid in one of his speakers. So how does one get a mouse out of a speaker? Take the whole thing apart. Bob took the speaker outside, I got the cats inside, and he took the speaker apart only to find the mouse hid itself in the insulation. After poking it with a small bamboo pole it came out and scampered under the grill then up the wall. Cats were safely in the house so they could not recapture it. The speaker however …

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Had to be put back together again. We did manage to get everything back together again and in working order …. ok, Bob got everything together again and in working order and I tried not to laugh after it was all over.

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Be on the look out for an eight pound, very cute, tri colored possible serial killer. She responds to cheese, chicken and bacon and is not afraid of dogs.

Thanksgiving – Non-Traditional

Happy Thanksgiving – the celebration of the settlement of the new world and the survival of those who made the harrowing trip.  At least that was the idea originally; now it is the beginning of the holiday season, the start of shopping madness and the forced happiness to demonstrate that one has the “holiday spirit.”

Despite that cynical beginning, I do love the holidays, but I miss some of the real spirit of the season.  Christmas decorations are up at Halloween, Christmas carols are heard on Veteran’s Day and Thanksgiving is just the feast before the shopping rush.  Or it can be that. I still refuse to play carols until the day AFTER Thanksgiving, will not shop on Friday (and totally refuse to shop today) and take the day to relax and be thankful for all I have.

We didn’t travel this year (a complete first for me).  Yes, we did not spend Thanksgiving with any extended family, but that doesn’t mean I didn’t cook.  And only cooking for Bob and one co-worker/friend I had the freedom to go very non traditional and experiment.  And there were lots of experiments today.  I went safe with the ham and went with a Honeybaked Ham.  Yes, it is cheating, but what a way to cheat.  I did, however, make …

Homemade stuffing.  My nod to tradition.  I made the bread (yes, this is totally homemade), used leeks, bacon, apples, sage, celery and thyme.  It came out pretty good – but the bread does need to be harder before soaking in the veggie broth.  Not bad for a first try.

First there is a tomato/mozzarella salad with basil (from the garden) and balsamic dressing.  This should be a summer dish, the tomatoes were so pretty, I just had to do it. The other dish is a celery and apple “slaw.”  It is almost a salad, but I wanted to ensure there was something that was not sweet and added some crunch.  And really, I had apples and celery in my basket last week, so I HAD to use them.  Both of these were very simple and hard to mess up, so I knew we would have something to eat today.

Then was the experiment I was most excited about – mashed squash.  One is an acorn squash and the other is a butternut squash.  Both were roasted on the grill and mashed with caramelized onions that I made yesterday … Yes, I caramelized onions all by myself.  And yes, it does take an hour to do it, so do not believe the recipes that tell you it takes ten minutes.  …. This was a good dish and made a great substitute for mashed potatoes.  The squash was just savory enough to take the caramelized onions.  My only complaint is that that cooled really, really fast.  As in it was the last dish finished and it was the coolest on the table.  But, they still tasted great.

Then came the roasted green beans.  I am not a huge fan of green beans, but I got some in the basket last week and wanted to use them today.  So … I marinated them with olive oil, sage, garlic, scallions and a little salt then roasted them on the grill as I did the squash.  They looked a little weird but tasted really, really well.  I may come to like green beans yet.

If you are a dessert fan, I highly recommend the Pecan Pie Cheesecake.  This is one of my favorites.

The cheesecake itself is pretty basic, but the yummie goodness on top makes this dessert.  It has brown sugar, cream, butter, whiskey and toasted pecans.  The ingredients don’t tell the whole story, but just think of a warm, velvety pecan pie and you begin to get the idea.  The crust is chocolate wafer and toasted pecans which just adds a depth of flavor that is magical.

So this was our experimental, non-traditional Thanksgiving dinner.  We didn’t travel, didn’t do turkey, are not going shopping, but are celebrating in a classic sense – we are thankful for all that we have, those we love and the health and blessings we enjoy each day.  To me, that makes this a perfect day.

Oh, and if you need one more sinful delight Caramel hot chocolate with homemade caramel whipped cream.  YUM.

Happy Thanksgiving everyone!  Get ready for the post titles to be holiday songs – I get to enjoy them for one month a year, so I made the most of it!

The Wimbledon Project

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Tennis is not my sport. I don’t plan vacations around tournaments, don’t know who is number one in the world or who is on the current teams. But I do love Wimbledon. There is something about that tournament that I love and watch every year. Maybe because it is held just as soon as school is letting out for the year, or perhaps the tradition of the place, but it is the only tennis I watch.

When I first started working, I put in a ballot application for Wimbledon tickets each year. I was careful to mail it in time, and mail the ballot back promptly. I never got chosen for tickets, and later I stopped applying. But this year, we are back to trying for tickets!

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You can only request one ballot per household. The rules are very clear, one per address or all will be discarded. So, I have multiple people willing to try for a ballot for me this year. I got the International Response Cards from the post office today, picked up extra air mail stamps that I can send everyone who is helping in the Christmas cards, and made sure I got everything out today! All requests must be postmarked by December 15 and all ballots must be returned by December 31. I’m cutting it close but hopefully we will still be ok.

I did actually buy air mail stamps when we were in the UK in July. I just totally and completely lost them, so we went for the alternate route.

The wrinkle in this is the new(ish I assume) rule that you cannot buy tickets for anyone else. I am hoping that does not mean the name of the person on the ballot must buy the tickets, but we will see. If nothing else I will know for next year.

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Wish me luck and thank you to everyone who said they would help!

Where Have All the Christmas Cards Gone?

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Yes, those are tomatoes. Beautiful heirloom cherry tomatoes fresh from the farmer’s market today. I feel a tomato-mozzarella salad or sandwich coming soon.

But today was not all about food; it was a good portion about food, but not all about food. We had a bunch of errands to run today including pet food (never a good idea to run out of that), people food in the form of cheese, and fresh veggies. So I started with the farmer’s market this morning where I found those lovely tomatoes, some baby bok choy and a few other veggies to make throughout the week. Then on to the pet store and then continuing the search for Christmas cards.

Has anyone else noticed the dearth of cards this year? When did this happen? I started looking for cards a week or two ago. Target did not have a selection, WalMart had a very limited and very poor selection and even the stationary store only had a handful. Yes, I looked at Amazon, but trying to find specific cards there was just way too much hassle. We hit Barnes and Noble (I do love bookstores) today and even that was depressing. I remember tables and tables of cards when I worked at Borders all those years go. But now … one table. That was it, just one. I did manage to find cards I liked, but it was just depressing.

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On a happier note, we have found a cheese shop in Sarasota. This was very exciting to us although I am embarrassed to say that it has, apparently, been there for a little while and I totally missed it. I really have to get out. More. But, We stopped in for lunch today and both had

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Five cheese Mac & Cheese and a salad. Yes, this is totally and completely off Bob’s diet, but as we both ate the entire thing, I can honestly say it was worth every carbohydrate and calorie it contained. And … The shop is incredible. Lots of unique cheeses and a really exceptional staff. We found a sheep’s milk cheese for a dish I want to make over the next week and maybe for Thanksgiving and an herbed goat cheese that I swear is amazing. Maybe not the goat cheese of Scotland. But totally different and wonderful. Both are U.S. cheese’s too, which somehow pleases me. Now I can’t wait for the Cheese class! Yes, we are taking a Cheese 101 class and I am super excited.

Friday’s Experiment

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Since Wednesday a pork chop has sat in the fridge, waiting to be cooked. But due to getting out of work pretty late Wednesday and Thursday, it sat uncooked just waiting. Today it became a tasty experiment.

I was trying to find something different to do with a pork chop and the answer came to me as I perused some cooking blogs and old recipe magazines. Nothing jumped out at me except a braised leek recipe, a leek and gouda stuffed chicken recipe and a bacon, leek and tomato soufflé. I still had a leek from last week’s veggie basket, so I decided to start with that. I had a beautiful tomato and the pork chops. So, I chopped the leek and sautéed it with a little butter and garlic. Next came the tomato, salt and pepper. I cooked all that down just a little, then browned the pork chops, just to get a little color. I stuffed the chops with some goat cheese and the tomato leek mixture, popped them in the oven for about 25 minutes. The results …

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A pretty dish that actually tasted pretty good. I think I could have used a sharper or stronger cheese, but the goat cheese worked pretty well. I’m not sure if this will become a staple or not, but it worked well for an experiment.

I should have a few more recipes to try next week. Let’s just hope I get to making them. I do have a pretty veggie basket this week to work with.

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Kale, celery, green beans, onions, sweet potato, bananas and a pumpkin. Not sure what to do with the pumpkin, but I might find something.

Happy Thanksgiving week!

Cream Puffs

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Years ago I wanted to make real, homemade cream puffs. I made a cream filling that was fabulous, but on the time consuming side. A few years later, I began experimenting with easier, short cut options and came across one that very quickly replaced the original recipe. In all honesty, I can’t remember the original filling recipe, this one is so good.

Mom and Dad came over for lunch today and I used that as my excuse to make cream puffs. The recipe is simple. 1 stick (1/2 cup) butter, 1 cup water. Combine in a sauce pot and bring to a boil. Add 1 cup flour and stir until the dough forms a ball. Remove from the heat and add 4 eggs, one at a time, mixing well after each one. I use an ice cream scoop to form the shells and then bake for about 20-25 minutes at 400 degrees. Let cool, cut the top off and remove insides.

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Now the filling … I almost feel guilty for this one. One small package instant Jello vanilla pudding and two cups cream (I like regular, but heavy works also). Mix with an electric mixer. It will take all of two minutes to get the right consistency.

Fill, top and then use powdered sugar, melted chocolate or (as pictured above) caramel to drizzle over the tops. The caramel is homemade, but I don’t have the recipe on hand as I made it months ago for a cake then froze it. Let defrost, drizzle then go.

These cream puffs have been requested by family, used for showers, parties and various family events. And the recipe has not changed. I think when I made these today I spent all of 15 minutes actually doing anything. The rest was wait time – wait for the butter/water to boil, wait for the shells to bake, wait for them to cool .. But, as often happens, simple is best and these cream puffs just prove that point one delicious bite at a time.

There are no leftovers.

Mish Mosh of a Post

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It was a full week and a full Saturday this week. Lots going on at work and in Saturday Bob and I went out and about to Art Slam to see some of my kids from work perform. It was a beautiful day and we discovered the Riverwalk area of Bradenton. Neither of us had ever been there before, but I think I found a great place to take Jessie when I want to get her out and to a different place for her to sniff. I was glad we didn’t bring her yesterday because there were so many dogs and people there. Have to try a mid week afternoon when I don’t have I work.

But the show was great. Our Dance department put on a fabulous show – one a few of my kids specifically asked if I would come see, so I dragged Bob out (ok, no dragging was really necessary – I think it is because I limit the school functions I ask him to attend with me) and we had a really good time. The kids did a great job.

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For food this week, it was a lot of quick not so creative meals. But … I did make …

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Yes, that is pasta and meatballs, but the pasta is quinoa pasta! Ok, it is still a grain, but it is probably better for you than regular wheat, so I’m going with it. I’ve have a spaghetti and meatball craving for a while, so I found that in the grocery and decided to try it. I have to say, the texture is just a little different, but no real noticeable taste difference. It was a nice change from no grain meals and one that I can see making again, although I will really, really limit it. I just have to sit down and look through my cookbooks again for some new inspirations.

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I had two different cider’s this week in the quest to find the perfect hard cider for fall. Well, that is still the Stella that I can’t get in the states, but the quest for the perfect cider that I CAN get. So this week we had …

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The Woodchuck I have had before and it is a good, all around easy to drink cider. It doesn’t floor me, but I would reach for it without hesitation over some others. The Crispin did surprise me. It has a very light/pale color so I thought it would have a very light taste, but I didn’t. It actually tasted pretty much like apple juice, only kinda of fizzy. Good, but the Spire from last week is still in the lead.

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Gratuitous cat picture because I did manage to get a picture of Gracie, admittedly mid meow. She really is a cute kitten – and I’m keeping her even through everyone else thinks she is too much work.

Things I’ve Learned This Week

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The last few weeks have been a little rough. Not compared to those who have lived through fire, floods, war and famine, but in the every day “this really has to stop” way. I won’t go into the work stuff, but there is a glimmer of light that it is getting back on the right path. One of these days I may even find my desk beneath the piles of papers that amass themselves there every single day.

Gracie and Tigger have taken turns getting sick. I’m pretty sure it is their food, but whenever we get one kind that Tigger doesn’t throw up, Gracie does; when we find a food Gracie can eat, Tigger gets sick. Yes, I have tried having two different kinds out, but somehow, someone always ends up eating the one to make him/her sick, so I am back to square one.

Speaking of the kitties, Gracie decided to be cute this week. Ok she is always cute, but really, this was priceless.

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That is her, hiding among my clothes. I think she wanted to get warm as we did have a rather odd cold spell here. I even broke out the boots and lightweight sweaters. The sad part is that at work, I was still freezing.

I finally seem to be kicking whatever weird ailment had me nauseous the last few weeks. After trial and error at the doctor’s they decided that I was, in a very literal sense, motion sick. Yep, motion sick. And while the cure is pretty simple, it did manage to knock me out for a while. And the cider I had with dinner Friday certainly didn’t help. Note to self, no alcohol with meds that make me sleepy.

I love a good cider, much like some enjoy a good beer. I decided to pick up a couple and try them over a few weeks. I had the Oliver that I posted a week or so ago and it was ok, but nothing that I really want to pick up again. Friday’s cider was …

20121104-214508.jpg an Irish cider and it was very good on is own, but only ok with food. I found this a little odd as usually drinks taste better with food.

Today’s cider was very different.

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I was rather pleased with this one. It has a very strong apple taste which I like in a cider and except for the slight fizz and a very velvety texture, it could have been just a good apple cider. But it was heavier than non-alcoholic ciders and had a fizz, but not really carbonation. So far, Spire is my favorite, but I still have three more to try before my experiment is done.

For dinner tonight I did a plain old hamburger, but I tried a we side dish – grilled tomatoes with garlic and parmigiana cheese.

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It was very pretty smelled fantastic, but there are a few things I really need to do differently. First, rather than half the tomato, I think thick slices will work better. I need to grate the garlic rather then chop it, and I think I need to brush the garlic over the tomato as it grills and not worry about frying it first. A different cheese may also be needed. I am thinking of a nice sheep’s milk cheese. Specifically I am thinking about the cheese we had in Scotland, but I know I will not find that in Florida. (cue dramatic sigh.)

So this week I learned:
1. Yes, it really does get better
2. When it is cold outside, cats become very, very cute
3. If the prescription bottle warns it may cause you to become drowsy, avoid any alcohol
4. Try the recipe, but try changing the recipe too

Little Acts of Kindness

I am making Bob go vote today. Florida has early voting and while I voted by absentee ballot, he hasn’t voted yet. Needless to say the line is long. We are still in line as I write this. However, no one is upset, argumentative or complaining. There are lots of pleasant conversations going on and one very kind older gentleman handing out water to those waiting in line. Not selling it, not advertising anything, not trying to get people to vote a certain way. He is not an election official, just a man who filled his trunk with bottled water and handed them out to those waiting in the very long line to vote. Talk about a random act if kindness – this just might be the best example I have seen in a long time especially given the current political mood in this swing state.

This one is for Brad

Today was a quasi experiment. I had made the basic dish before, but tried it with a few changes. Bob L-O-V-E-S the sauce with this one and wanted me to send the recipe to Brad. Brad and Emmie, I’m not sure if you have the sriracha chili sauce from when we saw you last, but if you do you might want to try this …

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Ok, maybe not the entire dish, but the sauce that tops this dish … The original recipe calls for 2 tablespoons sriracha chili sauce, 4 teaspoons honey, 1 tablespoon sesame oil and 1 tablespoon toasted sesame seeds. My version is pretty much equal parts sriracha chili sauce and honey, about half as much peanut or walnut oil (although I would use sesame if I had it in the house) and a sprinkling of sesame seeds. Mix well. That pretty much does it. So Brad, if you have some of the sriracha left, try it. Bob says you should.

For the rest of this dish, I did a basic marinade of soy sauce, peanut oil, garlic, ginger and honey. I pan fried the pork then added the carrots, red peppers and rice noodles. When cooked I finished it off with the mizuna from the CSA basket and topped everything with the sauce above. Bob really liked this dish even though it does contain a grain. I’m not sure where rice noodles fall on the can’t have list (really, really can’t have to limit but not so bad) but since I do the cooking, we were going for the, today. I think he just liked that it was really spicy – I added extra sauce to his plate.

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As fall has arrived I have also gotten into the hard cider thing agin. This is an every fall thing for me – cooler weather, football … they just go with cider. This week’s try is …

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Oliver Hard Cider – or as the ingredient list says “apple wine.” This was pretty good. Not the best as that still goes to the Stella cider that was on tap at the pub in England. I still dream about that one. But I digress. This cider had a nice tart bite to it, but not much apple flavor. I do love the bottle, however. Have to see if one of the others that I picked l are any better. I figure if Bob can have his fancy beer, I can try for fancy cider.