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Thanksgiving in our PJ’s

December 2nd, 2009

Yes, we did.

We ate Thanksgiving dinner in our pajamas.

No need to loosen the proverbial belts.  They’re elastic.  Sweet.

This was the first year I have ever prepared the entire Thanksgiving meal by myself.  Chris gets credit though for washing dishes as we went.

The menu included turkey (no picture – it was sad looking coming out of the roasting oven but it was SO yummy, very juicy!)…

sweet potato stuffing…zucchini au gratin…

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…these yummy bacon bundles – a recipe from our worship pastor’s wife, Monica…(I didn’t get the recipe exactly right but even still, they were SO good!)…

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…and these are supposed to be cloverleaf rolls but I ran out of muffin pans (must invest in more) so improvised on the pizza stone…then they looked ore like shamrock rolls or something…but even so, yummy!  Making them from scratch wasn’t too terribly hard either.

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We also had baked macaroni and cheese, pecan pie and pumpkin pie (store-bought).

My mom and dad and Aunt Judy were in town for the festivities as well!

I highly recommend PJ’s for Thanksgiving Day.

Gone Cookin'

Randomness 64

September 6th, 2009
  • G starts preschool on Tuesday!  Yea!!!
  • I’m busy getting organized.  This is a whole new world.  Whew!
  • And the homework?  Preschool homework.  Yup.
  • Our first project was to decorate a “blank” apple to bring in and display.
  • Ok…that’s going to be a whole ‘nother blog post.  Tune in for more later this week…
  • I’m looking forward to one-on-one time with S.
  • G and S just got back from a deluxe luxury weekend at Grandma and Granddaddy’s.
  • Needless to say, it took Chris 15 minutes to even get them in the car to return home.
  • Ouch.
  • We love that they have such a great time with both sets of grandparents.
  • We are making progress on the house.  While the kids were away, we didn’t play…we worked.
  • We painted our new doors.  We bought the kind with the blinds on the inside – very cool.
  • We are living on concrete floors, but finally have a tile picked out.
  • Tonight, I fixed a recipe I recently read on Pioneer Woman’s website. Gilled Ribeye Steak with Onion-Bleu Cheese Sauce.  I added homemade mashed potatoes topped with sour cream and fresh chives, and some corn – nothing added to the corn.  I love the sweet taste of it all by itself.
  • It was a success.  Yum!

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Going Nowhere, Gone Cookin'

Out of the Box

August 28th, 2009

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This post is part of Food Renegade’s Fight Back Fridays.  For more recipes, tips, and info, head there!

My husband is spoiled by his family’s baked mac’n'cheese recipe.  I grew up on Kraft mac’n'cheese.  The raging debate in our home over something as simple as macaroni and cheese has been going on for years.  In my quest to make and eat real food, I finally had to let go of my love for Kraft and find an alternative that was a bit easier than traditional baked mac-n-cheese.

Out comes my Southern Living cookbook.  My favorite cookbook.  Love it.

I found a page that listed basic recipes for white sauce then what to add to make it cheddar cheese sauce (um, hello, cheddar cheese?).  And it was easy.  I love easy.

In fact, I found it had only a few more steps as in-the-box mac’n'cheese.  This may be common knowledge to many out there, but for me it was a eureka moment.  Just let me enjoy the moment, if you please.  :)

Basic Thick White Sauce

3 tbs butter

3 tbs flour  (to make thinner sauces, you can decrease to 2 tbs of butter and flour, or 1 tbs of butter and flour.  See?  Easy!)

1 cup whole milk  (I prefer whole for a variety of health reasons)

1/4 tsp salt

Dash of ground white pepper

Melt butter over low heat; add flour and stir until smooth, cook 1 minute stirring constantly.  Gradually add milk over medium heat and stir constantly until thickened.  Stir in salt and pepper.

To turn this into cheddar cheese sauce:  Stir in 1 cup of shredded cheddar cheese (4oz) and 1/4 tsp dry mustard.

Pour that over the noodles, or vegetables, or whatever strikes your fancy.  It was easy, all-natural, and delicious!

Gone Cookin'

Empowered by Basics

July 11th, 2009

Of course this post is about food!  I’ve finally done something this past week that seemed so out of reach and awe-inspiring when I heard others talk about it.

“You mean you make your own tomato sauce/spaghetti sauce?”

I was always so impressed with it.  That means they took the time, energy, and had the know-how to make something truly delicious.  And generational.  And empowering.  At the time when I would make such comments, it was so much easier to buy a cheap can or jar of sauce and be on about my life.  But now?

I made tomato sauce last week…from tomatoes. It was a beautiful thing!  Excuse my excitement if this is old-hat to you.

I started by going to one of the local farmers’ markets and buying some organic tomatoes.  I even got a better deal because said farmer forgot to change the price of the tomatoes on the box from last week so I got them cheaper than he intended.   I did not have fresh herbs (trying to grow them!) so I did use dry and that’s ok. I used a combination of recipes and guides from the internet to help me out as well.  (Ok, I’ll admit it – I had to look up “blanching.”)

It was so much easier than I thought!  Granted, the labor at the beginning was a little time-consuming, but it was worth it.  The smell while it was cooking – oh my!  Even my hubby with the deficient sniffer (allergies) could smell it and it smelled divine.  The taste was so fresh and flavorful.

Jars and cans are now a thing of my past.  I did not even look back.  That love affair is over.

Here it is while it is still simmering on the stove.  I have a dream to be a great photographer one day, but alas, music and sound are all I can do.  (ie – sorry for the bad photos)

Homemade Tomato Sauce

Homemade Tomato Sauce

Blanching, skinning, seeding, dicing…messy job, but it was great.  The other downside?  I got a migraine nearly instantly.  I found this fascinating because in the past it would take a few hours, when I used jarred sauce.  There is something in the “freshness” of it all that is a huge trigger.  Was it worth the taste?  Oh yes.  However, in the future I’ll only be able to eat it when all my other triggers for migraines are non-existent or minimal.

I’ll be eating lots of tomato sauce and noodles in Heaven.  Migraine-free.

The next recipe I wanted to share was from an online friend.  I’ve always been at a loss as to how to make something with zuchinnis (besides bread) and this recipe piqued my interest.  I made it.  It was easy.  And it was fabulous!!  I didn’t get any pictures, but that doesn’t matter.  It was so full of flavor from such basic ingredients.  It did not even need salt and pepper.  Loved it!  Here it is for you, complements to Heather Anne and her friend Sami…

Sami’s Baked Zucchini Gratin

1 medium onion, sliced thin

2 lbs zucchini, sliced thin

1 stick butter, melted and divided (1/4 cup and 1/4 cup)

2 cups shredded mozarella cheese

1/2 cup dry bread crumbs

1/4 cup Pamesan cheese

In a lightly greased 2 quart baking dish, layer onion and zucchini slices; drizzle with 1/4 cup melted butter. Sprinkle with mozarella cheese. Combine remaining butter, bread crumbs, and Parmesan cheese. Sprinkle crumb mixture evenly over the top. Bake at 350 degrees for 35-40 minutes or until zucchini is fork tender.

To sum up, I’m feeling so empowered by knowing the basics, especially for tomato sauce.  No more reading the ingredients of jarred sauce (or paying upwards of $7 for an organic jar!) to check for MSG or other preservaties or disagreeable ingredients.  And more ideas for zuchinni!

This is posted as a part of Fight Back Fridays.  Yes, I know its Saturday but better late than never!  I’m a great procrastinator that way.

Gone Cookin'

In a Year…

June 25th, 2009

I know this is longer than my usual post, but bear with me…  :)

My how our lives have changed in a year!  It has been a very gradual change and definitely an adventure, but our lives are all the better for it!

I’m going to use this post to back up and explain more fully how we have gotten from point a to point b.

In this post I explained how I was changing my cooking and diet to benefit my migraine habit.   To sum up just in case you do not want to go back and read (and I don’t blame you, time is precious!), a year ago next week (July 2, yes I remember the day) I had my last visit to the emergency room in a neighboring city for a horrid migraine.  I was chaperoning teens, not in my own car, but thankfully a college-age student was with my group and he was able to drive them the remaining two hours home while I finished my trip in an ambulance to a nearby hospital.

Embarrassing.

I had gotten to the point after that trip where I was terrified to even leave the house for too long of a distance, especially without my various migraine and pain meds.  I was a walking pharmacy.   I was having 3-4 debilitating headaches a week.  Functioning?  No, not really.  I decided I had hit rock bottom with my headaches.

I found a book that was highly recommended (Dr. David Buccholz’s Heal Your Headache) and put its 3 steps into practice – wow, the difference was amazing.  What I discovered was that MSG-laden foods, in addition to tomatoes and lemons (I’d known those were triggers for years), were migraine triggers for me.  Once I started cutting those MSG-rich foods out of my diet, my migraines decreased significantly.

If MSG was making my head feel this bad, I wonder what other additives and preservatives were doing to me?

Why not try it out?  We had nothing to lose.  I was already learning how to cook from scratch to reduce MSG, so cooking completely from scratch and with only fresh ingredients was really not a far cry from where I was.  This decision happened in September or October of last year.  Chris and I stumbled upon a documentary called A Beautiful Truth on our Netflix and watched it.  I had decided to watch it because they would be talking about MSG and its horrible effects on the body, but we learned so much more.

The entire premise of this film is centered around the life and work of Dr. Gersen, who apparently discovered the cure to various illnesses, even some cancers, through simply changing your diet.  It was actually the various parts of the film that were fascinating to us – further information about MSG and aspertame, genetically-modified organisms (GMO’s), and dental amalgams that contain mercury and how all of those are toxic to the body.

I had already discovered that simply eliminating my MSG-consumption had reduced my migraines significantly.  More than significantly.  So we took the extra step to move to organic foods.   We really had nothing to lose and health to gain, right?

Another discovery happened.  (I have mentioned this previously, but I’ll say it again.)  Where I thought I had developed an allergy to the few fruits I liked, I discovered through my lack of self-control that I had no allergic reaction to the equivalent organicially-grown fruit.   This was definitely intrigueing.  I can’t tell you how nice it is to eat an apple and not having my throat, ears, and mouth itch like crazy.

By the fall of last year and getting into winter, I had not only eliminated any and all convienence foods from my pantry and refrigerator, but had started buying only organic foods.  If there was any doubt as to what was on a label, I did not buy it.  If our bodies were not meant to consume it, then I did not want to buy it for my family.

What Chris and I realized over time was that we had been feeling better than we had felt in a long time.  To eat fast food or order pizza delivery sends our stomachs into tailspins.   It just feels good knowing you are eating healthy and feeding your family healthy foods as well.

This spring we discovered something else: the illnesses in our family have been nearly non-existent.  It has been quite a few months since we have had a cold.  Sure, we may feel like one is coming on, but by the following day we feel back to normal.  Is this because having eliminated various chemicals and poisons from our bodies, we are better able to fight off everyday viruses?  Food for thought…  (I had to say it…puns are great.)

Now, let me clarify that we are not the food police.  We are passionate about how we eat simply because we feel so much better for it, and I do get excited about it, but its not for everybody as much as I wish it were.  :)  We are also not going to be the food police when we are out and about.  We still eat out.  We still grab Chick-fil-A when time or energy is just too limited.  When dining with friends, we do not turn our noses up at non-organic foods.   I have no desire to make anyone feel guilty or to project us as superior.  (You have my permission to remind me if I come across that way.)  Even Chris doesn’t entirely follow it – he still has to have his Dr. Pepper.  (The large amount of high fructose corn syrup in it makes me shudder.)

I wanted to be able to share more and more about how we cook and eat and why we do the what we do as I continually learn how to cook – taking you on this journey with me, if you want to go.  It’s not cheap, and therein lies the challenge on how to do this on a budget. I found a huge amount of resources and ideas on how others do this.

There is a cookbook I recently purchased called Nourishing Traditions by Sally Fallon.  I was reading another blog and this book was mentioned – the ideas seemed interesting.  I read through it and the wealth of information in it is astounding.  It seems to be more book than cookbook, but thats ok.  Admittedly, I probably cannot follow every dot and tittle in the book, but the general ideas are really neat.  There is even an impressive amount of blogs out there whose writers are devoted to following the NT guidelines and giving recipes and other information on living a simpler, more organic lifestyle.  Who knew?!

This post is long enough…but I wanted to give a little background before diving into a whole new series of posts about what I am cooking and why I am cooking and shopping the way that I am.   I felt like I should give you a background on the whys and hows and how it has improved our lives thus far.

A year ago this week, I was eating a totally different diet – reliant upon convenience foods in a big way.  A year later – nary a convenient food in sight, more veggies, more fruits, baking bread and feeling tons better for it. Amazing.   I am no longer on pain meds, migraine meds, and am weaning off of my final maintainence migraine medicine (sllllloooowwwww process).    All glory to God for His wisdom and guidance in helping to improve my health, and ultimately my family’s health.

More to come!

Posting this as part of Food Renegade’s Fight Back Friday’s!  Head on over to see other great posts and blogs about this topic!

Gone Cookin'