The Conservative Cave
Current Events => The DUmpster => Topic started by: franksolich on March 29, 2015, 09:34:12 PM
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http://www.democraticunderground.com/115751540
Oh my.
NJCher (17,829 posts) Sun Mar 29, 2015, 03:12 PM
Ms. Vanderbilt-Astor, winner of the franksolich for 2014
What's for Dinner, Sun., Mar. 29, 2015
Italian sausage, ravioli, and tomato sauce. I will put this in the oven on a slow (250) temp. It's so delicious when it's slow-cooked. On top, mozzarella. Out of parmesan, unfortunately.
Tossed salad with this dressing from Todd Wilkins' copycat recipe. Can't recall the name at the moment, but will post it when I find it. It's a vinaigrette.
For the uncouth slobs unfamiliar with the primitive cooking and baking jargon:
A vinaigrette is a culinary sauce made mixing vinegar and oil and usually seasoning it with salt, herbs, and spices. It is used most commonly as a salad dressing, but also as a marinade. Traditionally, a vinaigrette consists of 3 parts oil and 1 part vinegar mixed into a stable emulsion, but the term is also applied to mixtures with different proportions and to unstable emulsions which last only a short time before separating into layered oil and vinegar phases.
thunderthighs (22,370 posts) Sun Mar 29, 2015, 03:19 PM
1. i have to do some grocery shopping
it's been nothing but takeout and convenience foods for a week. i'm still trying to climb out of my funk.
hippywife (19,646 posts) Sun Mar 29, 2015, 06:52 PM
7. Totally understand, Fizz.
It's very hard to be motivated to do any creative cooking when you're in a funk. Sending feel better wishes your way.
MerryBlooms (4,370 posts) Sun Mar 29, 2015, 03:23 PM
2. Honey-Dijon chicken w/rice
I made up a batch of this Cheesy-Bacon-Jalapeno-Corn dip for my husband to nosh on throughout the day... lol, he's so happy. It really is the little things that matter.
Galileo126 (848 posts) Sun Mar 29, 2015, 04:24 PM
3. 1/2-rack of baby backs
with a spicy BBQ sauce. I made a classic spud salad this morning, and I have some cole slaw leftover. Also, some leftover roasted Brussels sprouts.
Currently making some chix stock from a whole chicken I just butchered. Using the spine, neck and other unmentionables.
Erich Bloodaxe BSN (7,095 posts) Sun Mar 29, 2015, 05:09 PM
4. za. neither of us was up to much work
with everything else we're trying to get done in the next week or so.
I'm still a bit 'meh' on the new foster beagle mix, but the housemate thinks it will settle down some and quit attacking our current senior beagle, so she's for keeping it at this point. It's not housebroken yet at 1-2 years of age, and I'm suspecting it was previously an outdoor dog. It's got one more week with us before we decide whether we keep it or take it back to the vet for them to keep trying to find it a forever home.
cbayer (142,769 posts) Sun Mar 29, 2015, 06:57 PM
9. I hope for the dog's sake that things work out, but
I hope for your sake you will carefully weigh what you've got on your hands before making the decision.
Not housebroken would be a deal breaker for me.
Erich Bloodaxe BSN (7,095 posts) Sun Mar 29, 2015, 07:12 PM
12. Well, our prior male never did get fully housebroken, in his entire 13 years.
He was MOSTLY there after he hit 2 or so, but every blue moon, if he couldn't wake me up to hold open the doggie door, I'd wake up to a nasty surprise. He'd fetch, but if he had to go, he had to go, whether or not he could get a human to let him out. (He stopped letting himself out at roughly that 2 years old, when the electronic doggie door we had at the time malfunctioned and shut on his back. Ever after, he made a human come let him outside.) The new dog learned how to use the doggie door watching the older dog the first day, and after 3-4 days seems to have mostly figured out to go outside, again from watching the older dog.
cbayer (142,769 posts) Sun Mar 29, 2015, 07:22 PM
13. I had one of those and much as i loved him, it was hell.
Once my kids grew up and left and it was just me, it got much worse because I wasn't there to let him out. Doggie door was not an option because he was a runner.
I don't think I will ever have a dog again unless I can live in a place where the dog can freely get in and out and roam as s/he pleases. It could happen, but I'm not counting on it.
I know you lost your other dog this year, and I truly hope this works out for you.
greatauntoftriplets (148,406 posts) Sun Mar 29, 2015, 05:46 PM
5. Spareribs.
Leftover Brussel sprouts.
Phentex (10,500 posts) Sun Mar 29, 2015, 06:35 PM
6. Spouse is grilling a chicken...
this could take a while!
Green beans and don't know what else yet.
cbayer (142,769 posts) Sun Mar 29, 2015, 06:55 PM
8. Leftover pot roast and root vegetables and a cucumber/olive/almond salad.
Slow sunday around here.
Enjoy your raviolis and sausage.
hippywife (19,646 posts) Sun Mar 29, 2015, 07:09 PM
10. Oven Roasted Chicken Shawarma
from a NYTimes recipe. First time making it and I recommend it. Served in whole wheat pita and topped with homemade zatziki, fresh veggies, sliced olives and crumbled feta.
http://cooking.nytimes.com/recipes/1017161-oven-roasted-chicken-shawarma
I did change it up just a little. Those of you who know me, know I usually do change up most recipes.
First, I had to use the bone in chicken thighs that were on sale this week, rather than boneless, skinless. I really wanted more of the marinade to have contact with more of the meat. So when skinning and deboning, I went ahead and cut the meat into strips before adding to the marinade this morning rather than after roasting. I also didn't remove it from the marinade. Since there wasn't really all that much marinade to meat, I just dumped it all on the sheet pan, spread it out good and put it in the oven that way so it would be moist, juicy and saucy. Also cut the onions horizontal and then cut the slices in half again since the cooking time on the smaller pieces of meat would be shorter.
The recipe says 4-6 servings, but since there were no sides, our servings were two half pitas each, so it really comes out to about 3 servings that size. If fixing for two or more people with normal appetites, I would adjust up accordingly.
Everyone else's dinners sound pretty dang good, too. Bon appetit, y'all!
It's also been husband approved as a keeper recipe (He's having a procedure Tuesday morning and is allowed no solid food at all tomorrow, so wanted to fix him something super yummy tonight. Will try to eat something cold myself for dinner tonight rather than heat the leftovers and create yummy smells to make him miserable.)
japple (5,127 posts) Sun Mar 29, 2015, 07:12 PM
11. Leftovers. I cleared some stuff out the of the freezer--a few servings of pot roast,
a few slices of grilled pork loin. Roasted potatoes, steamed broccoli, sauteed squash. We ate the first harvest of asparagus for this year, picked during the past week. Unfortunately, we had a hard freeze last night and the few spears that came up yesterday were frozen and limp. We each got about 2 spears!
Also needed to use up some milk, so I made a chocolate and a vanilla pudding. It was Jello pudding cooked on the stovetop, cooled, then poured in a dish--vanilla on one end, chocolate on the other, with vanilla wafers all around. I did make whipped cream for the top. This is a huge favorite with the kiddies in my family.
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hippywife (19,646 posts) Sun Mar 29, 2015, 07:09 PM
10. Oven Roasted Chicken Shawarma
from a NYTimes recipe. First time making it and I recommend it. Served in whole wheat pita and topped with homemade zatziki, fresh veggies, sliced olives and crumbled feta.
http://cooking.nytimes.com/recipes/1017161-oven-roasted-chicken-shawarma
I did change it up just a little. Those of you who know me, know I usually do change up most recipes.
First, I had to use the bone in chicken thighs that were on sale this week, rather than boneless, skinless. I really wanted more of the marinade to have contact with more of the meat. So when skinning and deboning, I went ahead and cut the meat into strips before adding to the marinade this morning rather than after roasting. I also didn't remove it from the marinade. Since there wasn't really all that much marinade to meat, I just dumped it all on the sheet pan, spread it out good and put it in the oven that way so it would be moist, juicy and saucy. Also cut the onions horizontal and then cut the slices in half again since the cooking time on the smaller pieces of meat would be shorter.
The recipe says 4-6 servings, but since there were no sides, our servings were two half pitas each, so it really comes out to about 3 servings that size. If fixing for two or more people with normal appetites, I would adjust up accordingly.
Everyone else's dinners sound pretty dang good, too. Bon appetit, y'all!
It's also been husband approved as a keeper recipe (He's having a procedure Tuesday morning and is allowed no solid food at all tomorrow, so wanted to fix him something super yummy tonight. Will try to eat something cold myself for dinner tonight rather than heat the leftovers and create yummy smells to make him miserable.)
Go to Chick-fil-A,it will taste better then that mess.
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Go to Chick-fil-A,it will taste better then that mess.
<<<wonders what's getting fixed on hippyhubby Wild Bill.
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Go to Chick-fil-A,it will taste better then that mess.
I agree. I would not eat half the garbage they cook and the other half I wouldn't even feed to my doggies.,, and they will eat anything.
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hobbit709 (34,212 posts) Sun Mar 29, 2015, 08:59 PM
14. Grilled pork loin sandwiches with ciabatta bread buns.
Ciabatta, literally slipper bread, is an Italian white bread made from wheat flour, water, salt, olive oil and yeast, created in 1982 by a baker in Adria, Veneto, Italy, in response to popularity of French baguettes. Ciabatta is somewhat elongated, broad and flat and is baked in many variations.
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thunderthighs (22,372 posts) Sun Mar 29, 2015, 10:11 PM
in response to Mrs. Alfred Packer's concern, above
15. thank you
this has been a terrible month and i'm just plodding along. i got to the store and found that i couldn't deal with a full trip, so i just got coffee and beer. we'll scrounge tonight and there's stuff in the freezer i can pull out for tomorrow.
i'll try a real shopping trip again in a few days.
it is great to see you back, by the way
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What is fizzy's complaint about being in a "funk" and therefore cannot eat well ?
Just go on another cruise and strap yourself to the all you can eat bar.
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i got to the store and found that i couldn't deal with a full trip, so i just got coffee and beer.
I'm confused. For fizz that is a full trip to the grocery.
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How many hours did fizzy the freak park her huge ass on a bar stool at the pub?
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How many hours did fizzy the freak park her huge ass on a bar stool at the pub?
I think the proper question, neighbor, is "How many of us would have to take off our shoes and socks to count those hours?" :confused: :whistling: