Archive for Salad

Easy Meals: Saturday and Sunday, March 10 to 11

Saturday night, we had salad. We were having a power down weekend, because we both spend far too much time online, so we had scheduled salad. At some point, we decided that the prohibition against using the stove wasn’t really what we were after this weekend (which was getting us offline) so I used the stove to make up a couple of boiled eggs, and the toaster oven to turn the last hamburger bun into croutons (that may sound weird, but these buns are much heftier than what you would buy in a store. It made fantastic croutons.) The salad had local hydroponic lettuce, local hothouse tomatoes and green peppers, organic carrots, and local eggs and cheese, and absolutely hit the spot Saturday night. Tossed salad is one of our favorite things, and we’ll be eating more of it as the weather warms up.

Sunday night, we did homemade pizza. Easy, tasty, and just what was called for. I ate an organic Florida orange along with mine.

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Catching Up

So, things have gotten a little behind here at Chez Nitty Gritty. Let’s see how quickly we can recap this past week and get it caught up.

Sunday, we did tossed salad. Local hydroponic lettuce, local greenhouse tomatoes and green peppers, organic carrots, local hard-boiled eggs, and homemade croutons from the tail end of a loaf of bread machine bread. (I don’t think I’ve talked about croutons yet. Cut up whatever old, stale bread you have that’s not green yet into cubes - I like large, restaurant style ones, but one of the great things about making your own croutons is that you can do whatever you like - and toss on a baking sheet with a little olive oil and whatever spices you care for. Bake in the oven somewhere between 350 and 400, depending on what else you need to bake, for 10 to 15 minutes, or until brown and toasty. Dead easy, and much cheaper and better for you than croutons from a box.) Dinner was around a dollar apiece and took about 20 minutes to put together, including boiling the eggs and making the croutons. Jeff also had some leftover lasagne.

Monday night, we did chili in the crockpot and cornbread. Monday was a late class night for me, so I made the cornbread in the morning before I headed up to school.

- 1.25 cups milk, buttermilk, or yogurt (you can fake buttermilk by mixing 1.25 cups milk, gently warmed, and 1 tablespoon white vinegar. It’ll sour in about 5 minutes)
- 2 tablespoons butter, olive oil, lard, or bacon drippings
- 1.5 cups cornmeal
- 0.5 cup all-purpose flour
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 1 tablespoon sugar
- 1 egg

Heat the fat in a small skillet, and pour into your baking dish (I used an 8×8 Pyrex, which I put into the oven at 125 to keep the fat warm.) Meantime, combine the wet ingredients in one bowl and the dry ingredients in another; mix the wet into the dry until everything is combined well (if the mixture seems a little dry, add a little more milk). Pour over the fat in the baking pan, set the oven for 275, and bake about 30 minutes, until the whole thing is slightly browned and firm.

This was pretty good; it wasn’t perfect - my ideal cornbread is more moist and sweeter than this turned out. However, it wasn’t at all bad. We have about half the pan left, that I think I want to turn into cornbread stuffing for lunches this week.

The chili was as simple as chili gets - about a pound of ground beef in the crock pot with half of a 28 ounce can of tomato puree, a little water, and some garlic powder, salt, pepper, and chili powder. There was just enough left for a lunch portion the next day, and Jeff said I should make more next time. The beef, milk, cornmeal, and egg were local, and the flour and tomato puree organic. Total active prep time was 15 minutes, and it ran about $3.50 for the two of us, including the leftovers.

Tuesday, we did a repeat of the tofu salad tacos, along with wild rice and a simple carrot and apple salad. Organic ingredients included flour, tofu, carrots, and apples, and the lettuce was organic. The rice was some that we’re using up from our previous eating habits, so I’ve no idea where it was from. Cost was comparable to the last time we did this dinner, but the time was longer, partially because the rice takes awhile to cook. I wasn’t tracking the time very well, because I drafted my cousin into helping, and we were socializing while we cooked.

Wednesday was a pseudo-new recipe. I say that because it wasn’t much of a recipe. I took a 3/4 pound pork tenderloin, sliced it up into medallions about a quarter of an inch thick, and pan-fried them in a little olive oil, along with a liberal dousing of black pepper, salt, and thyme. I served the medallions up with a topping of garlic butter and sides of roasted potatoes. The potatoes, pork, and butter were local (from our own homemade butter). Active prep time was about half an hour, mostly accomplished while the potatoes were baking. There were enough leftovers for me for lunch the next day and for breakfast the day after (I minced the pork finely, and tossed it and the potatoes in with a bunch of other stuff and two scrambled eggs), and the whole thing cost about $7.

Thursday, I was supposed to have a late class, but class got canceled. We did tossed salad again.

Friday, we were scheduled originally for pizza. However, our cheese vendor wasn’t at the market by the time we got there on the 24th, so we decided to do beef ribs, which had been on sale. However, we had friends coming in from out of town, and the flight got rescheduled from a midnight arrival to noon, and our package of ribs was just enough for two people, not four. We updated to taco pie, and decided to just bite the bullet and buy some decidedly non-local cheese, before one of our merry band remembered that another of our merry band doesn’t much care for ground beef. Being picky on a few select food items myself (I hate beans, to name one), I try very hard to serve people food that they like. We decided to fix lasagna. However, as it approached dinner time, a sudden craving for Thai food descended, and so our friends took us out and fed us a veritable feast at a locally owned non-chain Thai restaurant. Dinner was delicious.

Last night, Saturday (the 3rd), there might have been a frozen Tombstone pizza incident, but if there was, I’m not telling. :) If there was such an incident, it was our first in about 6 months. Plans are underway to experiment with making our own frozen pizza, since that would be infinitely superior to Tombstone. (One good thing about the Tombstones is that they don’t use hydrogenated oils.)

This week I’m on spring break, which means that blog posting (hopefully) won’t be neglected, email will be caught up on, and there’s some new recipes coming up. The week after, we’re going to do a week of make ahead meals with mostly local and organic foods, which should prove interesting.

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Salad with Hot Country Ham Dressing and Rosti: February 22


salad and rosti

Meal: Salad with Hot Country Ham Dressing, Rosti
Cooking time: about half an hour, all hands on, plus time in the freezer for the potatoes
Cost per person: about $2.25
Local ingredients: lettuce, ham, potatoes, eggs
Leftovers: about half the potatoes, which we used for breakfast the next morning

Thursday night was another new recipe night - I’d seen the recipe for this salad, and thought it looked great, and wanted to try it. I did make some changes, so any disgruntlement we had with the salad can be laid on the changes, not the recipe. :) I used regular old green lettuce - we’ve been getting it, two huge heads for $5, from a hydroponic farmer at our farmer’s market. I used country ham instead of thick-cut bacon - we generally prefer turkey bacon over pork, and have yet to find a local source for it. We can get local country ham where the fat is easy to trim off. We didn’t have any shallots on hand (since I didn’t read the recipe carefully in advance) so I used garlic instead.

This wasn’t bad, but the flavors didn’t gell for us. It might have been better if I hadn’t made any changes, but I think it was mostly that the red-wine vinegar dressing didn’t appeal to us as much as I thought it would. This might be worth trying again, substituting balsamic vinegar, instead. Also, the eggs weren’t as good as they should have been, which was solidly my fault - I’m no good at poaching eggs. Next time, I’ll just cook them up over easy, which ends up with almost the same end product, and which is a lot more fool-proof for me.

However, the rosti was very tasty. I cheated on the potatoes - I microwaved them for 10 minutes, then put them in the freezer for about an hour. Otherwise, I followed the recipe, and the results were just perfect.

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