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NJCher

(37,743 posts)
Wed Feb 8, 2023, 04:47 PM Feb 2023

What's for Dinner, Wed., Feb. 8, 2023

Soup and salad.

Broccoli-pepperjack cheese soup with garlic-parmesan croutons.

Baby arugula, red ruffly lettuce, and romaine tossed green salad with red onion, chopped red and green pepper, and cucumber. I'm making tuna-egg salad to go in the center and topping it with avocado and toasted almonds.

Vanilla pudding, blueberries, and decaf coffee for dessert.

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What's for Dinner, Wed., Feb. 8, 2023 (Original Post) NJCher Feb 2023 OP
Hawashi, tangerines, coffee with cinnamon Tetrachloride Feb 2023 #1
Pork chop Yonnie3 Feb 2023 #2
Bowtie lasagna and salads. Cookie bar for dessert. Luciferous Feb 2023 #3
Entree salads... hippywife Feb 2023 #4
Much better, thanks NJCher Feb 2023 #10
Cheeseburgers and crinkle cut fries. Emile Feb 2023 #5
Dungeness crab, fresh corn, and a salad mike_c Feb 2023 #6
Chicken of Muchness. PoindexterOglethorpe Feb 2023 #7
I once read NJCher Feb 2023 #9
Pot Pie Retrograde Feb 2023 #8

Yonnie3

(18,086 posts)
2. Pork chop
Wed Feb 8, 2023, 05:29 PM
Feb 2023

slow baked with a rub of garlic, pepper, salt, paprika and other spices plus a thin coat of BBQ sauce
baked sweet potatoes
mac-n-cheese
stewed apples and raisins with cinnamon (no sugar added) but the raisins sweeten them

hippywife

(22,767 posts)
4. Entree salads...
Wed Feb 8, 2023, 05:50 PM
Feb 2023

with fried chicken tenders (chopped), lettuce, grape tomatoes, cucumber, red onion, peas, carrots, black and green olives, mandarin orange segments, dried cranberries with candied walnuts, crispy fried onions, croutons, crumbled gorgonzola, homemade bleu cheese dressing.

Mint chocolate chip ice cream for later.

How's your finger tonight? Seems burns are always more irritating while they're healing, at least to me they are.

NJCher

(37,743 posts)
10. Much better, thanks
Thu Feb 9, 2023, 03:43 AM
Feb 2023

Doesn’t hurt at all today. I just have blisters.



Oh, ouch. That fist bump hurt!

mike_c

(36,332 posts)
6. Dungeness crab, fresh corn, and a salad
Wed Feb 8, 2023, 07:30 PM
Feb 2023

The local mkt had two steamed crabs marked down from $45 to $18, thank you very much. I miss fresh crab right off the boat on the North Coast.

PoindexterOglethorpe

(26,639 posts)
7. Chicken of Muchness.
Wed Feb 8, 2023, 08:23 PM
Feb 2023

It's a soup, derived from a Middle Eastern recipe.

It's the cinnamon sticks that make all the difference. A completely different flavor profile than you may be used to. Today I used my largest pot and have put the soup into a whole lot of containers that are in the fridge right now, will get labelled and frozen tomorrow. So now I have a about thirty portions of this soup for future use. Tomorrow I'll have it again, and then probably make a chicken curry on Friday. And I'll be freezing up portions of that, also.

When I was working the kitchen in the homeless shelter I learned the value of labelling everything I freeze. Very helpful. I actually just threw away something I'd cooked in March of last year, and never got around to finishing. Maybe it still would have been okay, but I'd rather throw out.

Because I live alone, and because I have a small appetite, and because I really love my own cooking, I am actually spending less on food these days than ever before. Lucky me.

Anyway, the recipe.


Chicken of Muchness

3 large chicken leg quarters
Lots of carrots. Lots. It’s cheaper if you buy the loose ones, rather than the already packaged ones. But I’d say you need a pound or so
2 cans of diced or crushed tomatoes. Maybe one of each. I had a large can of crushed tomatoes, and a small one of diced.
1 medium onion, maybe two. I happen to like a lot of onion.
Olive oil
Several chicken bouillon cubes. I used three.
3 bay leaves
4 cinnamon sticks
At least ¾ tsp each of celery salt, marjoram, thyme, basil, and tarragon, ground black pepper
3 Tablespoons butter
3 Tablespoons flour
additional chicken broth or stock.

Start by putting the leg quarters in your largest pot, cover with water, then dump in about a half cup of salt. Give it a half hour or so, then drain and rinse. This is a version of brining, and I’ve been doing it for decades. It’s one of the very few things my mother-in-law passed on to me. Clearly, you can skip this step.

Now bring the chicken to a boil with just enough water to cover. Turn heat down to simmer and skim off scum and fat that comes to the surface. This will take ten to fifteen minutes. Maybe longer, if the chicken is like that. I do think the earlier brining helps reduce this part.

Once skimming is done, put the bay leaves, peeled carrots, and cinnamon sticks in pot with chicken, bouillon cubes, cover and let simmer for an hour.

Remove carrots and chicken. Let them cool while you sauté the sliced onion in a little olive oil. You want them to get a little brown. Put in soup pot. Add the tomatoes.

Make a roux with the butter and flour in that same pan, then add a cup or two of broth. Stir and let it thicken over the heat until it seems thick enough. Pour into pot.

Cut up the carrots, strip the chicken from the bones and return to soup pot. Now add the other seasonings. You will probably need to add more chicken broth to have the right amount of liquid.

Cover and simmer for an hour or so.

Originally I used to include green pepper, but eventually realized that it didn't really freeze well, and for me the whole point of this is to freeze up lots of portions.

If you want, separately make rice towards the end of the cooking time, put some in a bowl, then add to the soup.




NJCher

(37,743 posts)
9. I once read
Thu Feb 9, 2023, 03:40 AM
Feb 2023

That green pepper in soup makes for a bitter taste.

Totally with you on the labeling. I have labeling supplies all over the kitchen to make it easy. Little boxes with stick on labels and a pen. Freezer tape hanging in the utility room. Sometimes I use whatever’s handy, like cardboard from an aspirin box. The worst thing is trying to figure out what something is.

Anyway, chicken recipe sounds good.



Retrograde

(10,626 posts)
8. Pot Pie
Thu Feb 9, 2023, 02:58 AM
Feb 2023

made from the leftovers from a pot roast and roasted vegetables. Tomorrow's lunch will be leftover pot pie.

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