Monday, June 23, 2014

Mid-Century Style: Three-bean Salad

Well-marinated
I loved my grandmother's Three-Bean Salad.  I got the recipe from her before I got married, and made it on occasion for potlucks and family gatherings.  Unfortunately, my husband and kids didn't share what is arguably an acquired taste.  I did look forward to my father-in-law's visits, as he was a fan.  After he died, I had few opportunities to make it and, unfortunately, misplaced the recipe.

Recently, I had a hankering for the salad.  Also, I thought it might be a good meal to have on hand for visiting vegan children (once I located vegan Worcestershire sauce).

I had one recipe in my files, but when I realized it contained no Angostura bitters or celery salt, I knew it wasn't Grandma's.  So I asked my mom if she had it.  Yes, she thought she had the recipe her mom had written out.  This struck me as a little odd, since Gert (as the family called her) really wasn't a recipe follower.  In fact, she had a healthy disrespect for all directions, discarding the user manual for every appliance she ever brought home as soon as she took it out of the box.

Original "recipe"
My mom took a picture of the recipe with her iPad (for which, I'm sure, she still has the user's manual) and e-mailed it to me.  It gave me a big laugh.  Clearly, only Gert or one of her female descendents could prepare a dish from this recipe!

Actually, I'm not entirely certain I interpreted Grandma's instructions correctly.  It didn't taste exactly as I remember, but that could be the lack of anchovies in the Worcestershire sauce.  After two potlucks and many lunches, we just finished the first batch, and will make another before the second batch of vegans visits.

Mom said Gert got this recipe at a cooking class at Lawry's California Center, a Los Angeles landmark for decades which closed in 1992 as a result of cost-cutting by the parent company.  In addition to restaurants, the center offered cooking classes featuring Lawry's products.

One more note: Angostura bitters are most often used for mixed drinks, so look for them in the liquor aisle of your grocery store.  When we first moved to Washington, I had to go to the State Liquor Store to find it.

Gert's Three-Bean Salad
1/2 cup each white and brown sugar
1 cup oil
2 cups vinegar
2 Tbsp. Worcestershire sauce
3 Tbsp. Angostura bitters
1 tsp. celery salt
1 Tbsp. seasoned salt
2 cans each green beans, waxed beans, garbanzo beans, and kidney beans
1 cup each (or to taste) chopped celery, green pepper and/or red onions

In one-gallon container, mix all ingredients except beans and vegetables.  Drain beans and add to bowl.  Add vegetables to taste.  Refrigerate at least 24 to 48 hours, stirring twice a day.  (Also can be made in plastic food storage bags for ease of turning to marinate.)

Salad only gets better with age and can keep for a couple weeks.

Salad looks like this when first mixed.  Not nearly marinated enough!


Thursday, June 12, 2014

The priceless gift that costs less than an hour

This blog is about things we can do that are fast, frugal and fit - like being able to save a life (or two or three) by giving less than an hour of my time.

Every two months, the bloodmobile pulls up at work.  It's usually the highlight of my week.  Alas, today I was turned away; my iron tested slightly below the limit.  I'll have to wait two months to give again.  (Unless, of course, I get a call that my blood is needed because a child is having surgery.)

Why do I love giving blood?

It saves lives.  Each donation can be used for several patients, some with life-threatening injuries and illnesses.  When I was a young adult, I was afraid to give blood.  Then I visited my grandmother in the hospital and saw the blood she was receiving from an anonymous donor. I knew I could do it - as long as I didn't look.

It's a privilege to be able to give blood.  It means I'm healthy.  My irreplaceable friend Cheryl was a regular blood donor until she was treated for cancer.  (Since then, the guidelines have been eased so that it's not an automatic disqualification.)  I pledged then, I would never miss an opportunity to give.

It provides an opportunity to socialize with people on different floors.  There are people I work with I only see on bloodmobile day.  Call it networking or socializing, you can learn a lot from someone when you're reclined with a tube coming out of your arm.

It helps the nurses in my life.  I have "baby blood," because I've not been exposed to a common virus which is OK when blood is transfused to adults, but not children.  My niece is a pediatric nurse; she says my blood is like gold.

A few years ago, we lost Cheryl over Thanksgiving weekend.  It was a bittersweet time, because we also learned we were to be grandparents for the first time.  The week before Christmas, the blood center called.  "We need your blood for a young boy who is having surgery.  Can you come in?"  As I was sitting at the center giving blood, I thought about the young boy who could have surgery because there was blood available, and realized I was giving his parents - and grandparents - the gift of hope.  It was the best Christmas gift I received that year.


The life you save could be someone in your family.  I have the same blood type as my son and at least one of my grandsons.  Of course I pray they never need blood, but it's comforting to know that if they did, they might get mine.

It's a reminder that I live a quiet (read, boring) life.  OK, no one likes the intrusive questions that have been in the screening for the past couple of years, but isn't it nice to report I haven't done anything dangerous in the past couple months?

The perks.  Every donation is an opportunity for juice, snacks and a cool-colored bandage on my arm (I always go for hot pink).  My blood center has an annual dinner to honor donors, with small gifts like lunch bags.  My husband goes to a different center (that conveniently visits the church up the street every two months); his center gives out cookbooks.  Now no one is going to give blood for dinner or a cookbook, but it's nice to hear "thanks."

Giving blood could have health benefits.  One study found blood donors are less likely to have heart problems.  The screening process also lets donors know if they have conditions like high blood pressure or, in my case, low iron levels.  It's also a great excuse to have steak for dinner, to replenish the iron in our bodies.

In short, giving blood not only saves lives, it makes donors feel better in body and spirit, and it doesn't cost a dime.

To find out more about blood donations, you can check out the FAQ of my blood center.

Wednesday, June 11, 2014

Reduce, Reuse, Recycle - and Repair!

At one of my Toastmasters meetings, I heard a speech from about the three "R's," no, not the "reading, 'riting and 'rithmatic" from my youth, but "reduce, reuse and recycle," a way of cutting down on pollution, energy consumption and/or landfill waste.  The speaker mentioned a fourth "R," which I can't remember - and when I looked on line, I found variations of the extra "R," the most common being "recovery" and "reclaim."

There were some interesting points in the speech.  Through ads on Craig's list, he sells his empty beer and wine bottles (no screw tops) to home brewers and vintners. He doesn't make a lot of money, but it's a nice reward for recycling. 

Inspired to do my part, I started looking for a small sewing kit to repair some clothing, my choice for the 4th "R."  I started with items of clothing which, well in the interest of being delicate, wouldn't be seen by anyone besides my husband and the ladies at the gym.  I spent $1.25 on the sewing kit, and saved several times that with my first "repair" session.  Maybe my work will improve and I can graduate to sewing buttons on blouses and repairing hems on skirts.

None of us can save the Earth by ourselves, but we can all do little things:
Whatever your 4th "R" is, you can help save the Earth - and a little of that other kind of green, money.

Tuesday, June 10, 2014

Card crazy, getting organized

As I mentioned last month, the Hallmark Store is one of my happy places.  I buy special cards that say "mom," "dad," "husband," "son and wife," "grandson," etc. for birthdays, anniversaries, Fathers Day, Mothers Day, St. Patrick's Day, and other card occasions.  Every once in awhile, I'll go in and buy cards for the next two or three months (allowing time for cards to reach the kids who live overseas). 

Did I mention I have a lot of people to buy cards for? Two parents, a husband, 5 kids, 3 spouses, 2 (soon to be 3) grandsons....  Yes, life is full.  And February is our "tornado alley" for cards: 5 birthdays (not counting mine), 1 anniversary, 2 Vietnamese New Year and 8 Valentines (not counting mine). 

The system usually works pretty well, until this weekend when I tried to find the Fathers Day card I know I bought for my dad.  It wasn't in the Hallmark bag with college graduation cards for my son and daughter's boyfriends.  Surely I must have bought it when I was getting May (2 birthday, 1 anniversary, 2 Mothers Day) cards.  Why would I buy cards for graduations that took place on Fathers Day weekend, and not the Fathers Day cards.  I must have put them in a safe place, but where?

I finally just made a stop at the grocery store (Hallmark not yet open) on the way to work so I could get my dad's card in the mail today.  Yes, I can drive to his house in 24 hours, but sometimes it takes a week for the Postal Service to get it there. 

The time has come, I realized, to come up with a better system for keeping track of what cards have been purchased, and which ones I still need to shop for. 

I carry a small photo album (purchased from  Dollar Tree) with a few 4x6 photos of my kids and grandsons.  I use the pockets to keep things like: the list of who drew whose name in the Secret Santa Sibling exchange; the monthly Joann's coupons; and coupons from Hallmark which can get you 25% off or $2 off your total purchase.  So I decided to make a list to go into one of the pockets, next to the Hallmark coupons. 

In Word,  I did the following:
  1. Using "Page Layout," orient is landscape, and increase the bottom margin to 1 1/2 inch.
  2. Make four columns.
  3. Using bold ALL CAPS, type every month of the year.  
  4. Under each month, put bullets with the birthdays for that month, one per line.
  5. Add "Anniversaries," with bullets for the names.
  6. Do the same with card-giving occasions that apply to only certain people, like Mothers Day, Fathers Day, Halloween and Veterans Day.  Put bullets for those names.
  7. Now add in holidays where you'll get personalized cards for all/most people on your list: Valentines Day, St. Patrick's Day, Easter, Thanksgiving and Christmas.  Bullet the names for each card recipient(s), then copy and paste for each occasion.
  8. Add spaces, if needed, so each month is in the same column.
  9. Print and cut into 4x6 sheets to go into the album pocket.  (I put them all in the same pocket and will just put the current sheet in back when all cards have been purchased.)
  10. Cross off the cards as you buy them.  It'll save a lot of searching through bags, desks and wondering if you're going crazy.
  11. SAVE the list for next year, to add new grandchildren, delete graduations, and if necessary move Easter to March.
For now, I keep the cards in the Hallmark bag.  If the family gets much bigger, I'll have to use one of the card organizers I've collected over the years.  But I found one blogger who made her own, if you'd like to try.

Now, I just have to see if I can find the cards I may or may not have bought for my husband and son before Sunday.....

Monday, June 9, 2014

Five life lessons from the thrift store

Antique pressure cooker - do not use!
I love to brag on our Goodwill Store.  I've been to more than a dozen in three states, and the one near my house always has real gems.  I like to go every month or so just to see what I can find; maybe a piece of my stoneware or china that was discontinued 35+ years ago, or some flatware to replace the lost forks and spoons from my set, or a great cookbook.

I usually start in housewares.  We always need Corningware casseroles and/or lids, then a careful look through dishes and flatware.  A quick trip through pots and pans to see what Revereware is there.  Then over to afghans to see if there are any worth rescuing.  Across from that is yarn, notions and pattern books. 

Unless I'm in the market for clothes or a new purse, I head over to books and get lost for awhile in the cookbook aisle.  I've gotten some fun ones for myself or my newlywed daughter.  On the way out, I'll look at movies.  My treasure hunt usually lasts about an hour and costs less than $20. 

This time, I came home with one book for my husband and a sewing kit for more purse - but also with five lessons learned.

Know what you're looking for.  With the help of my favorite vegans, I put together a list of desert-island vegan and vegetarian cookbooks.  I keep a copy of it in my purse.  This weekend, we looked at the library book sale and at Goodwill, and couldn't find any on the list.  In fact, there were very few vegetarian/vegan cookbooks at all.  (Unlike diet cookbooks, people don't donate these books; even if they go back to eating meat, everyone eats vegetables.)  So I didn't buy any cookbooks this trip.

Know what you can live with.  Last month, I made a great find at another thrift store, $40 worth of Homer Laughlin Fiesta dishes for $10.Yesterday, I found dinner dishes and soup bowls in the same color.  What a great find!  Unfortunately, the dishes were in poor condition, so I passed. 

Think before you give: What has lasting value?  The chotchke aisle is always good for a laugh.  You see vases, photo frames and other "collectables" that are very dated.  "Oh, this person got married in the '90s."  "Oh, I remember getting something like that as a wedding present in 1978."  None of these seemed to hold their value.  All those gifts, I'm sure, were given with the best of intentions.  All ended up at Goodwill (especially those that outlived the marriage).  Hence, we are careful what we give for wedding gifts.  Usually, we give a check (so we know it was received; thank-you notes are falling out of fashion) with a book and/or hand-made potholder. 

Finish what you start.  Several of the afghans I found on this trip were incomplete; squares needed sewing together, yarn ends left to be woven in.  It reminded me I have two baby afghans I need to complete - projects I lost interest in or put aside before moving on to a more-urgent project.  I need to finish them myself, before then end up on the rack at Goodwill for $5.99.

Recognize what is a bargain, and what isn't!  Need a pressure cooker?  Do not buy the antique one pictured above.  This is the kind your mother or grandmother used.  They've gotten much safer since then.  I  have bought small appliances at Goodwill.  The bread maker was a bust, but my husband found a $150 coffee maker for $10.  Research before you go, and also consider buying new at Big Lots, Wal-Mart or Amazon.  Same with other items.  Donated yarn was bagged up in odd lots, for a cost about what I could get at a craft store with a coupon (for colors and yarns I choose myself).  My daughter, on the other hand, got three sweaters and a shirt for $18.  (Yes, bargain shopping runs in the family.)

Got an hour and a few bucks to invest, visit your local thrift store.  You could walk away with a few life lessons.

Sunday, June 8, 2014

Read the label, don't pay for the label

As I mention in my post, Help! My kid has gone vegan!, I love making big family meals even when dealing with complicated food preferences.  (Maybe even more, since I also enjoy a challenge.)  I have two recipes in mind to make for my son and his wife when they visit, my grandmother's Three-Bean Salad (recipe to come soon) and Ree Drummond's Burgundy Mushrooms.  Both call for Worcestershire Sauce, which surprisingly is not vegan, since most contain anchovies.

I took a look at Trader Joe's, and was surprised not to find it there.  My Facebook friends had helpful suggestions for stores that might carry it, as well as mail-order Worcestershire labeled as vegan.  Since Whole Foods and PCC have yet to open in my middle-class suburb, I hadn't made the trek yet to the wealthier neighborhoods.  But the mail-order bottles were way north of $5, with none of them on Amazon Prime.  

So I started checking our local stores, including Fred Meyer, a chain of grocery/department stores in the Pacific Northwest.   I scoured the organic/vegan/specialty aisle and found a few vegan items, some by the manufacturers recommended to me, but no Worcestershire sauce.  So I went to the Worcesterhire Sauce aisle.  Nothing was labeled "vegan."  However, I read the ingredients on the labels.  Two did not contain anything I recognized as animal products.

The Kroger (store brand) bottle was $1.59 for 10 ounces.  Another was labeled "Louisiana Worcestershire Sauce," but it was actually manufactured in Washington State by Cornet Bay.  The cost was $2.29 for 6 ounces.  I confirmed on a vegan Q&A board that the Kroger is vegan; the Cornet Bay has the same ingredients, but I have sent a message to the manufacturer to confirm.  

The moral of the story:  Don't pay for something labeled "vegan."  Just read the label.  You might save some money.

(Reviews and recipes for the "vegan" Worcestershire sauces to come.) 

$5 fashion refresh

I love wandering through my local Dollar Tree store.  I just never know what I'm going to find.

This spring I found some lovely scarves to add color to my wardrobe.  (A reminder that solid color tops and skirts are so practical!  They can be perked up with a bit of color.)

I grabbed the colors that appealed to me most, purple and coral because they're among my favorites, and bright green because it's a Seahawks color, duh.  I went back the next week to get a couple colors I passed on, including blue and gold.  Since my local store is small, they had sold out.  But this is Seattle, so I grabbed a couple light winter scarves because, hey, this is Seattle.  You never know what the weather will be like, even in spring.

I knew I had a winner with the scarves when my daughter looked through them, seeing which ones she wanted to borrow. 

And that's my $5 fashion refresh.

Friday, June 6, 2014

$3 taco meat!

Since I first tried this Slow Cooker Salsa Verde Beef, my family has been hooked!  I've made it both in the pressure cooker and the Slow Cooker as in the original blog by Queen Bee Coupons.  I've kept a jar of salsa verde on hand, and kept my eye out for roast or stew meat in the "Manager's Special" bin at the store. 

Today I found a 3-lb. roast on sale for half-price, which brought it down to about $9.  I'll cook it right away (since it's at date) and freeze in three segments for dinners.  It may take 20 minutes of prep work now, but I can guarantee when I serve it on tortillas or a baked potato some work night, it'll be fast, frugal and fit!

View my original blog here.

Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Desert-island vegan cookbooks



 
As I mentioned in previous posts, I have a few kids who eat exclusively – or mostly – vegan, and I’ve tried to go a little bit vegan myself.  Being a cookbook collector, I’d like to get a couple that will help me make vegan dishes.  So I went to my advisory board (my daughter, daughter-in-law and Facebook friends) asking for their five "desert-island" cookbooks.  I hope to find at least a couple of them at this weekend’s library book sale. 

I already have two vegan/vegetarian cookbooks: “Happy Herbivore Abroad” by Lindsay S. Nixon, a gift from my daughter, published in 2012; and “Ten Talents,” a classic published in 1968 by a Seventh-day Adventist couple, Fred and Rosalie Hurd.

 My informal poll found that most people had favorite authors/series, not just cookbooks.  Here are the top-five recommendation of my expert panel:
  

  1.  Lindsay S. Nixon's Happy Herbivore series.  Highly recommended by my daughter and daughter-in-law.  "The recipes are not complicated at all; they're easy, healthy, and cheap."
  1. "Veganomicon" or other books by Isa Chandra Moskowitz.  This was my daughter-in-law's first vegan cookbook, and she still calls it her vegan bible.   Other recommendations in the series are "Isa Does It" (good, basic, "how-to" vegan); and "Appetite for Reduction" (concentrates on healthier dishes).
  1. "Betty Goes Vegan" by Dan and Annie Shannon.  Like my mother and grandmother before me, I raised my kids on the Better Crocker Cookbooks, so my daughter has found some comfort foods in this one.  "It's a great transition book for new veggies," she said.  The author, Annie, started a blog and worked her way through the Betty Crocker Cookbook, veganizing the recipes as she went along. My daughter's two critiques are that it uses a lot of oil and synthetic meat.
  1. Moosewood series  Recipes from the 40-year-old restaurant in Ithaca, New York, like the Seventh-day Adventists early pioneers of American vegetarian cooking, and especially beloved by early adapters.  Among the most highly recommended are: "Enchanted Broccoli Forest," "The Daily Special," and "Moosewood Restaurant Favorites."
  1. "How to Cook Everything Vegetarian" by Mark Bittman.  According to my colleague Ryan, "has tons of good recipes and does a really good job of giving you pieces of the meal to combine with other (dishes)."  
And honorable mention goes to:

  I'll be expanding my collection, and sharing with you all as I go along.

Tuesday, June 3, 2014

Six lessons for weekday lunches

When my kids were going through youth group at church, I was the mom the youth pastor could call to organize lunches for after-church training for missions trips.  The pastor graduated to adult ministry, and so did I!  This past Sunday, I put together lunch for about 40 people, mostly adults but a few teens and older kids, interested in tutoring refugees over the summer.

I spent about $85 between Costco (for the large quantities of veggies, oranges, big tin of tuna and large bag of chips), Safeway (less-expensive bread, eggs, cheese and other items where I didn't need Costco-sized quantities) and Dollar Tree (for mustard, peanut butter and jelly - the latter as alternatives for vegans, not choices for picky kids).  I added about $5 in staples at home, but we brought home about 1/4 of what we took, so we easily spent less than $2 a person.

Some lessons for making weekday lunches for the family:

Spending 20 minutes chopping celery is a great investment.  I bought the Costco bag of celery because I needed one head for the tuna sandwiches.  I cut up another couple heads for the luncheon, and with the leftover I've been able to pull a handful out of the refrigerator to put in my lunch.  They go well with baby carrots from the Costco bag (no chopping required).  Fast, frugal and fit!

Quartered oranges are so much easier to eat at work.  Instead of cookies, I bought a 13-lb. box  of oranges at Costco, then quartered them.  Again, I grab a few pieces each morning for my lunch, which I don't have to peel like a whole orange.  And everyone at the luncheon appreciated the healthy alternative to baked goods.

Tuna and egg salad sandwiches are still the bomb!  I know it's very mid-Century of me, but I've always loved tuna and egg salad sandwiches.  I brought home the leftovers (made with reduced-fat mayonnaise); my husband and daughter have been enjoying sandwiches and wraps all week.  Both are easy enough to make on the weekends for school and work lunches during the week.

Lettuce wraps aren't just for the gluten intolerant!  I have been eating gluten free for the past year, and wanted to make sure we covered all our bases at the luncheon.  Gluten-free bread is expensive and I have yet to find one I like.  So I brought corn tortillas, and we also announced there was plenty of lettuce for wraps.  I was amazed at the number of people who skipped the bread and just wrapped their proteins in lettuce.

Buying in bulk really saves $$.  In the past, I would have bought variety packs of chips in individual bags.  But my life has gotten simpler over the years - as well as my tolerance for picky eaters.  I bought the 3-pound bag of baked tortilla strips for $3.59, and put them in a punch bowl.  Again, plenty to bring home, which my husband and daughter have been snacking on.

Leave some room for life's little pleasures.  I had extra cans of olives from the holidays, so we brought one along and put them out.  It was just a nice little extra, which didn't cost much. 

We learned a few lessons about putting on a luncheon, as well.  I left the egg and tuna salads in large containers, so people thought they were salads and kept asking where the forks were.  Two cans of olives next time.  And the white cheeses (Swiss and Mozzarella) were more in demand than the yellow (American). 

The biggest lesson, however, was I could do the same thing on a Sunday for less time and money, to prepare for weekday lunches for my family.

Sunday, June 1, 2014

Desert-Island Appliance: Egg Cooker

What appliance would you take with you to a desert island?  Granted, it would need to be an island that was fully wired with electricity.

When I was a kid, my mom had an egg poacher.  It was the only way I knew how to make eggs.  As a bride, I tried to make boiled eggs on the stove.  Tried several different methods, but just couldn't get them perfect.  A few years ago, my mom sent me a "just because" gift, a new egg poacher.

It's been a treat for the whole family. In 20 minutes, we can have seven hard-boiled eggs, an inexpensive source of protein and a quick snack.

Peeled, hard-boiled eggs are now a stable at grocery and big-box stores.  I priced them recently at $2.79 for six, a good price for a healthy snack.  But yesterday I bought a dozen eggs for $1.09 and boiled them myself, saving more than $5.  Mine turned into egg salad sandwiches for a lunch at church, but my daughter likes making deviled eggs, or just eating them as a snack. 

One hint for using them; if you want to keep the shell intact, prick a little hole in the top.  (I use the end of the a corn skewer.)  My mom's mid-century cooker had a small needle in the lid. 

So packing for my desert island?  The egg cooker might not make it into the first suitcase, but definitely the second.

Friday, May 30, 2014

Sheryl vs. the Legume, Curried Lentils

This is the recipe that gave me hope that I could win the war with the lentil!  Adapted from my favorite pressure cooker cookbook, "The Easy Pressure Cooker Cookbook" by Diane Phillips, it freezes well and makes a good 7 Weight Watcher Points Plus lunch.

Don't have a pressure cooker? Here's my blog on how to choose one. Or, I found this recipe online which is similar. 

Curried Lentils
2 tbsp oil
1 medium sweet onion, such as Vidalia, finely chopped
3 medium carrots, finely chopped
2 tsp madras curry powder, plus more if needed
2 cups lentils, rinsed
1 cup vegetable or chicken broth
1 cup coconut milk
Salt and freshly ground pepper, to taste

Heat oil in the pressure cooker over medium-high heat.  Add the onion, carrots and curry powder and saute until the onion begins to soften, about 2 minutes.  Add the lentils, stock and coconut milk.  Lock the lid in place and cook at high pressure for 6 minutes.

Quick release the pressure and remove the lid, tilting the pot away from you to avoid the escaping steam.  Stir the lentils and taste for seasoning.  Add more curry powder, salt and pepper to taste.  Transfer to serving dish and serve hot.   Serves 6.

Thursday, May 29, 2014

7 tools for $7 to ease cooking day stress


This past weekend I made some freezer meals - half for me, and half for my kids.  Before I was done, my Sharpie marker gave out.  I also realized I could use a few other tools that would help make cooking day - and serving days - easier.

(What did I make?  Vegetarian Chili to get my vegan daughter through finals.  The slow-cooker version of this Taco Meat, half for us and half for my son so he won't starve while his wife is visiting her sisters.  And several freezer meals from two of my favorite cookbooks, "Once a Month Cooking" by Mary Beth Lagerborg and Mimi Wilson, and its sequel, "Once a Month Cooking Family Favorites" by Ms. Wilson.)

I headed to my local Dollar Tree store and picked up seven things that make it easier to prepare, label and keep track of freezer meals:

Extra measuring cups and spoons:  We still have the aluminum set of serving spoons that we got when we were first married 36 years ago.  Two problems.  If you used it to measure wet ingredients, you'd have to wash and dry it to measure a dry ingredients.  And the whole set was hooked together, so when one was used, they all needed washing.  One Thanksgiving, I bought a plastic set at Dollar Tree, then separated them as soon as I got home.  It worked out so well, I bought a couple more.  Now I can use the 1 tbsp measure for lemon juice, put it in the dishwasher, and get another clean one out for chili powder.

Similar story with measuring cups.  We have two sets from my husband's bachelor apartment, three Tupperware sets and another we bought when we moved to Thailand.  The problem is that some are broken, melted or have the marks of dog teeth; some are missing (especially, for some reason, the 1/2 cup measure); and we can't always find what we want.  A new set for $1 is a good investment in avoiding frustration.


Kitchen scissors.  I have a good set I use for opening packages, cutting chicken skin, snipping parsley and even cutting green onions.  But when you're cooking multiple meals for the freezer - or one large holiday meal - it's nice to have an extra pair (especially when one was used for cutting chicken - that one goes straight to the dishwasher)..


Sharpie and color-coded stars to mark food containers.  I wrapped all the meals in plastic freezer bags - even the ones that were already covered by aluminum.  At a minimum, the bags should be labeled with the name of the dish and the date it went into the freezer.  If you really want to be nice to the person responsible for getting it on the table, you also can write directions for thawing and preparing. 

I also bought some color-coded stars.  I eat gluten-free.  A couple of my kids are vegan.  My husband doesn't eat certain vegetables.  So I can put the star on to indicate the presence (or lack thereof) of animal products, gluten, broccoli and any other allergies, preferences or phobias that develop in my family.

And finally, a weekly calendar and dry-erase markers.  This will require a little more discipline, but since I usually am the last one home from work, someone else will likely be getting dinner on the table.  By taking a few minutes on the weekend, I can let everyone know what's for dinner during the week, how to prepare it, and which cookbook they can search for the recipe.

Tuesday, May 27, 2014

Help! My kid has gone vegan

Breathe.  Breathe.  It's not that bad.

I raised three boys and two girls.  By the time I got to teenager number four, my third boy, I learned not to sweat the small stuff.  Whenever we got that call, I asked the essential questions: Is anyone dead? Is anyone in the hospital?  in jail? pregnant?  So it's just property damage?  We can deal with that.  (You didn't really want that letterman's jacket, did you?)

Seriously, having a kid (or two or three) who is vegan is no big deal.  In fact, I love a puzzle and I love making foods that all of my family will enjoy - the vegans, mostly vegans, the picky eaters and the carnivores.  I learned from the best, my good friend and mentor Cheryl.  Cheryl was raised on a dairy farm in Wisconsin and loved putting on family spreads and organizing potlucks.  Then her husband decided to become a vegetarian - actually a pescetarian, because he ate fish.  (Good thing, since they soon moved to the Pacific Northwest.)

Cheryl switched into high gear, designing holiday meals and everyday dinners that made all of her family and guests happy.  Planning menus was her fantasy football.  She just added extra side dish that her husband would enjoy.  Of course, once in awhile she and I would sneak out for lunch and eat meat.  

So when our oldest son told us he was joining his fiance as a vegetarian, it was no big deal.  And I was able to plan a holiday menu without much fuss; I just made sure there was plenty of Potatoes Au Gratin oozing with cheese.  "At least you're not vegan.  I don't know if I could deal with that."

And, of course, that was the next step.  Then one of my daughters became a (somewhat less strict) vegan.  But by then I'd learned a few things.

It's not about me.  Becoming a vegetarian or vegan is not a rejection of the way I raised them; it's merely a food choice.  I've always tried to respect that choice, just like Cheryl.  And accommodate them by adding extra side dishes at family meals.  (Of course, it helped that I miss them so much since they moved to Malaysia.  When they do visit on vacation, the last thing I want to do is fuss at them about meat.)

Respect is a two-way street.  I respect their choices, and they respect mine.  They have never asked that we not serve meat.

They'll live without meat.  Cultures around the world restrict their diets in some way for cultural, religious and health reasons.  Hindus don't eat beef.  Buddhist monks are vegetarians.  Observant Jews don't eat pork or shell fish.  My favorite doctors and the hospital where I delivered my babies were Seventh-day Adventists, U.S. pioneers of vegetarianism - and among the longest-living people in the country.

If they're adults, respect their privacy and choices.  If it's your minor child who wants to explore a vegetarian diet, make sure they understand nutrition.  Our second son announced one day that he was interested in becoming a vegetarian.  As it happened, we were eating at Cheryl's house that day, so he had a long talk with her husband.  He asked good questions and listened thoughtfully.  Then, on the way home, we saw a deer grazing next to the highway.  "When I grow up," he announced, "that's the kind of deer I'm going  to shoot."  Needless to say, his vegetarian experience lasted about 24 hours.  (Good thing, since I don't imagine the Marines have a wide variety of vegan MRE's.)

Tofurky is terrible.  Don't serve it.  Really.  One Thanksgiving our oldest son bought one and we respectfully tried it.  That was the last time we served "pretend meat."  Seriously, if you're going to choose to go without meat, why eat food made to resemble what you're giving up?  Especially when there are so many wonderful vegetable, legume and grain dishes to choose from.

Most of the meat, cheese and egg substitutes are considerably more expensive than the foods they are intended to replace.  Many of them are made of soy, and I am suspicious of a diet that contains too much of it.  Nuts, wild rice, vegetable medleys and mushrooms all are acceptable alternatives, which can be enjoyed even by carnivores.  

Look beyond "American" foods.  Having grown up in Los Angeles and lived in different countries, we appreciate ethnic cuisine.  We don't expect every meal to include a protein, starch and vegetable.  This weekend our daughter and husband were visiting.  For a quick dinner, I made a taco bar.  I tore some cilantro into a can of black beans and heated it in the double boiler.  She put that on her taco in place of meat, and could eat the rest of the fixings.

Let them cook.  I know, this is hard.  As a mom, it's part of our job description to feed our kids - no matter what their age.  But do let them contribute to family meals.  And you might just learn something.

Keep an eye on this blog.  I'll continue to share both vegetarian and carnivore meals.  Watching football?  Serve Vegetarian Chili.   Wild Rice makes a great holiday side.  I promise to share more recipes for all occasions.

And relax.  It's not the end of the world.

Sunday, May 25, 2014

Vegetarian Chili

Two of my children and one of their spouses are vegan.  I confess I love the adventure of designing menus that make everyone happy at family dinners.  This is one I first made for my birthday party, which also happened to be the "big game" where the Seahawks beat Denver and became world champions of the 2013-2014 season.

This is another winning recipe from my current favorite pressure cooker cookbook, Diane Phillips' "The Easy Pressure Cooker Cookbook."  If you have a pressure cooker, you need this cookbook!  What I love about this recipe is that it uses four different kinds of beans, making it more interesting, both in taste and visually.  I usually make a batch the day before my daughter visits, then freeze it in individual portions for her to take home.  It gives her a quick meal between work and school.

Note: Although the pressure cooker compresses the cooking time, you still have to start this recipe five hours before you want to serve.  Soaking the beans is critical to soften the beans.  I always add baking soda to the soaking liquid; it cuts down the acids which cause gas.

Here is my version of this recipe.

Bean and Veggie Chili
1 cup pinto beans
1 cup kidney beans
1 cup black beans
1 cup red beans
1 tbsp. baking soda
4 tbsp. oil, divided
2 large sweet onions
1 tsp. chile (ancho suggested)
1 tsp. ground cumin
1/2 tsp. dried oregano
1 green bell pepper, seeded, deribbed and coarsely chopped
1 red bell pepper, seeded, deribbed and coarsely chopped
1 orange or yellow bell pepper, seeded, deribbed and coarsely chopped
1 (28 oz. can) chopped tomatoes, with juice
7 cups chicken or vegetable stock
2 cups corn kernels, freshly cut from the cob or frozen corn, defrosted
Salt and freshly ground pepper, to taste

Soak beans in water and baking soda for four hours.  Drain and rinse well.

Heat 2 tbsp. of the oil in pressure cooker over medium-high heat.  Add onions, garlic powder, cumin and oregano and saute for 2 minutes, or until onions begin to soften.  Add the bell peppers, beans, tomatoes and stock.  Drizzle with remaining oil.  Lock the lid in place and cook at high pressure for 20 minutes.

Release the pressure naturally and remove the lid, tilting the pot away from you to avoid the escaping steam.  Stir in corn.  Taste for seasoning, adding salt and pepper as needed.  Serve or freeze immediately.  Serves 8.

Don't have a pressure cooker but interested in buying one?  Here's how we chose ours.
Don't have a pressure cooker and don't plan to get one soon?  Here's a great blog on how to cook beans on the stove.
Don't live in the U.S.?  Here's how to convert the recipe to Commonwealth measurements.

Saturday, May 17, 2014

$5 finds: Library book sale



When we moved to the Pacific Northwest, I fell in love with our local library system. Extolling all its virtues would take an entire blog or two, but for now I'll just brag about today's finds.  I happened to be driving by in the late afternoon and saw a sign for the semi-annual book sale.  The car automatically stopped.  And, I discovered, the last two hours of the sale, everything you can fit into a bag is $5.  So I set to shopping.

First stop, the video section.  It was pretty picked over. But I picked up "Jerry McGuire," a documentary on Ronald Reagan and a classic musical in VHS.  Yes, we still have our VCR.  It's worth hanging on to.  You can usually find older movies for $1 each, less than a rental. And once you've watched the movie, you can toss or donate it.  If you don't still have your VCR, consider picking one up at the thrift store.

Moving to the next bin, I found two DVD's, one a favorite of my daughter's, and the other a sequel to one of our favorite holiday movies, "Christmas Vacation."  Sure, it's bound to be bad.  Maybe bad enough to be funny!

Next I visited the craft section and scooped up some booklets for crocheted stuffed animals. My next project after I pause the baby afghans for the summer.  Perhaps some baby shower or birthday presents?

Finally, the cookbook section.  Books sales and thrift stores are always a good place to find Weight Watchers cookbooks.  I found three.

All of the cookbooks were pretty picked over, but I found a few gems: one for the bread machine, if I ever dust it off.  One by the Frugal Gourmet, Jeff Smith, a TV cook before there was Food Network. I couldn't resist "The Lady & Sons," Paula Deen's first cookbook - and the only one I own.  And on the opposite end of the spectrum, a classic vegetarian cookbook from the hippie days (but written by a Seventh-day Adventist couple) which is still a reference for modern vegans.


Will I love every recipe in every cookbook?  Will I get around to making a stuffed animal?  Are the movies losers that will just take up space in the video cabinet?  No, but I'm sure I'll get my money's worth. 

The best part of the $5 finds, is I can always donate the ones who merit getting lost again.




A month of breakfasts for $10

Our office is located somewhat off the beaten path.  The nearest place to find food is about 10 minutes away.  So we've been quite spoiled in recent years by a vendor who set up a cafeteria downstairs that was open from early morning through lunch.  In the morning, my coworkers would line up for lattes, hash browns and breakfast burritos.  At lunch for taco salad or other daily special.

Alas, the vendor has left, and we've yet to find a replacement.  Some of my coworkers are looking quite forlorn - and hungry.

I would occasionally indulge in a salad at lunch.  But I realized for what I spent on one salad, I could make an entire week of soups and freeze them.  So the salads had become an occasional treat, at most.  And I would indulge in a coffee once in awhile.  But I could never understand why people couldn't manage to eat breakfast at home.

I'm an oatmeal person.  I find it holds me through the morning better than anything else I can eat for breakfast.  Most mornings, I put a heaping 1/2 cup of regular oatmeal and a cup of water in a casserole, throw in some dried fruit and a little cinnamon, and microwave for 3 minutes.  (Be very careful to have the ratio of water to oatmeal at slightly less than 2:1.  If the water is more than twice the oatmeal, it's prone to overflow.)

I do like steel-cut oatmeal, but it takes more than 3 minutes to prepare.  So I save time by doing it on the weekend, and then freezing for the week in individual containers.  (My mom also has a great recipe to cook it part way the night before, then finish in the morning.  Will share that recipe another time.)

If you have a 3-quart pan and the corresponding double boiler insert (mine is "vintage" Revere Ware), I find this the easiest way to make it.  By buying the Bob's Red Mill Steel-cut Oats at Big Lots, the raisins and freezer containers at Dollar Tree, I spend about $10 for a month of breakfasts.  That's less than three trips through the drive through, or two at Starbucks.

Steel Cut Oatmeal and Raisins
1 1/2 cup steel-cut oatmeal
1/2 cup raisins
1/2 tbsp cinnamon
4 1/2 cups water

Put ingredients in double boiler insert in order listed.  Put larger pan on a burner with 2 inches of water and bring to boil.  Meanwhile, put lid on double-boiler pan and bring to boil over another burner.  Simmer, stirring constantly, for 5 minutes.  Carefully transfer double boiler pan (use hot pads) into main pan, cover, reduce heat to medium-low, and let cook for 30 minutes.

Let cool a bit, then transfer to containers (mine were form Dollar Tree and hold slightly more than 1 cup each).  Put lid on and let cool before freezing.  Makes 6-7 servings, 4-5 Weight Watchers Points Plus each.


Thursday, May 15, 2014

$10 finds: $40 in dishes at the thrift store

One of my vices is a collection of Fiesta dishes by Homer Laughlin.  I have a large cabinet filled with place settings and serving dishes of various colors.

This started in the 1990s, when I realized that both my fine china and stoneware patterns had been discontinued.  I didn't have enough serving dishes for a growing family.  I could buy more, but they wouldn't match.  The fun part of Fiesta is that it doesn't have to match; you can mix pastel colors for Easter, autumn colors for Thanksgiving; red and green for Christmas; and my favorite, blue and green for the Seahawks.  Plus, my kids and husband can buy me a piece at a time (hopefully on sale) for Mother's Day, Christmas and birthdays.

Our family loves shopping at thrift stores, going in the door with a sense of adventure and exploration.  Today I had a half hour to kill between a doctor appointment and picking up my daughter at work, so I stopped by Value Village, a chain of thrift stores where I've made finds such as DVD's, yarn, and dishes to match my vintage 1970's stoneware.  They're a bit more expensive than Goodwill, but there are special sale days for loyalty club members - if you time it right.

Today I found an end display with blue dishes and glasses, including Homer Laughlin Fiesta in Cobalt - two salad dishes and half a dozen dinner plates.  I bought two salad dishes and the two dinner plates in best condition.  I paid $10.61 (including tax),   I checked the price on Replacements; the dinner plates run $12.99 each, and the salad plates $6.99.  A total of $40, not to mention shipping and taxes.

Not a bad $10 find, and I can't wait for Football season! #GoHawks

Thursday, May 8, 2014

The early bird gets the...Pork Roast!


I relearned a lesson Saturday morning.  As meat approaches its "sell-by" date, the meat manager moves them to a "specials" bin, with the cut discounted 30% (50% if it's still there after 6 p.m.).  The bin is at its fullest first thing in the morning. 

My daughter and I are sharing a car.  After I dropped her at work, I headed for the grocery store and got this roast at 30% off.  Searching the pressure cooker cookbooks I brought home from the library, I found several versions of this one.  Don't have a pressure cooker?  Cook in the slow cooker on low for 5-8 hours, or until it reaches 160 degrees on the meat thermometer.

Root Beer Pork Roast
1 4-pound pork roast
2 tbsp oil
1 can golden mushroom soup (I used regular cream of mushroom soup)
12 oz. root beer (not diet)
1 envelope onion soup mix

In pressure cooker, heat oil.  Brown the pork roast, then remove.  Add mushroom soup.  Measure root  beer into can to catch some of the residue, then add to pan, along with onion soup mix.  Mix.  Return roast to pan.  Lock pressure cooker lid onto pot, set to high and bring to pressure.  After it comes to pressure, lower heat and cook for 40-45 minutes.  Release pressure.  Be sure to take the meat's temperature before removing from pan.  If it hasn't reached 160 degrees, put the lid back on, bring to pressure and cook for another 5 minutes.

Remove roast from pan, and allow to sit for 5 minutes before slicing.  Put pan juices into a gravy boat to serve alongside. 

Wednesday, May 7, 2014

Converting recipes between the U.S. and the Commonwealth




As a new blogger, I was checking (OK, obsessing over) my reader stats, and noticed that I have a few in Australia, Canada, Malaysia (thanks, kids) and other places outside the United States.  On a scrapbooking board, I used to participate in recipe exchanges with scrappers from New Zealand, Australia and elsewhere.  I made the following guide to converting recipes.



Converting to/from American recipes; more than just metrics!

For Americans using recipes from other countries, and visa versa, disaster can ensue without the following key information:

The U.S. does not follow the metric system (although many U.S. recipes and measuring instruments do include metric equivalents).

Not only that, but U.S. fluid measures different from those of their British cousins; to convert U.S. fluid ounces to British multiply by 1.04; to convert U.S. pints to British pints, multiply by 0.83.

Further complicating the conversion, America measures dry ingredients differently from the rest of the world; flour, sugar, rice, etc. are measured by volume, where cooks in other countries measure by weight.  In the U.S., 1 cup is 1 cup no matter what you’re measuring; but it could be 125 grams of white flour, 120 grams of whole wheat flour, 100 grams of rye flour, 200 grams of white flour, 220 grams of brown sugar, etc.  So consult a scale or equivalent chart (see below) when converting dry ingredients. 

One final thing to keep in mind: in the U.S., butter is sold and measured in “sticks.”  One stick of butter equals one-quarter pound (4 ounces) or one-half cup. 

Here are some helpful references for converting recipes: