Showing posts with label Eats. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eats. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Kid-Pleasing Weeknight Menu

Our family has had a bad habit of not eating our evening meal together regularly.  In large part, this is due to the fact that last school year I taught piano lessons three nights a week and the lesson times overlapped with mealtime.  I HATED that we were not regularly eating together.  This year, I'll only be teaching two nights a week though.  Over the last part of the summer I tried hard to get back into the habit of planning out our menus and making sure we sat down to eat together.  I think this is such an important thing to do as a family.

I've had fun planning our menu and trying new recipes from the many I've pinned on Pinterest.  This week I came up with a menu that was a hit with both my sons.  (Important sidenote:  My oldest son is picky about a few things, but willing to try most foods.  He's pretty easy to feed in general.  My youngest son is picky about many things and is hard to feed in general.)  Finding a meal that appealed greatly to both of them was really an accomplishment.  The best part is that these two recipes are super easy to throw together quickly.

I made pancake bites or pancake dippers (half with and half without turkey sausage) and breakfast potato bites.  Links to the recipes for both of these dishes are in the previous sentence; just hover over the name of the recipe to get the hyperlink.  I pretty much made each recipe exactly as written.  I had read the reviews of the potato bites and saw that several people had trouble getting theirs to turn out crispy.  I did not have this problem at all.  I used store-brand frozen shredded hash brown potatoes (only half the bag) and 3 eggs, as suggested in the recipe.  I was able to make 12 potato bites in full-size muffin tins.  They were really good with salsa on top.  The pancake bites were made in a mini-muffin tin.  I used my Pampered Chef cookie scoop to schlop the batter into the holes, which made it very easy, and not messy at all.

We gave each person an individual cup of pancake syrup for dipping (this was one of the best parts of the meal for the boys) and also had a bowl of salsa on the table for the potato bites.  Super yummy stuff!!  I highly recommend this recipe combo.  We also had fresh apple slices on the side, but I was thinking a fruit salad with berries, bananas, and peaches would have been a perfect accompaniment.










Friday, August 23, 2013

Hay-Time Switchel

Instead of writing a typical first post on a new blog explaining its purpose, blah blah blah, I've decided to just jump right in and offer you a nugget of pure ecleccentricity.  (If you want the story behind the blog, click on the ABOUT page above.  There are plenty of words there to satisfy your curiosity or put you to sleep.)

Recently my oldest son, as eclectic and eccentric as anyone, approached me with a request to help him make "switchel".  I promptly pointed out that I had no idea what he was talking about, asking him to repeat the request about a thousand times (I exaggerate) to the point of frustration on his part.  I finally discerned that he wanted to make a beverage and that he'd found the recipe in our copy of the Reader's Digest book, Back To Basics: How To Learn and Enjoy  Traditional American Skills.  (Note:  Our copy is the original 1981 version.  You can see this version on Amazon by clicking  HERE.)

I'm going to admit right away that I am not always jumping for joy when my children (most often the oldest) ask me to help them with projects like this.  Like most adults, I would think, I am not prone to quickly and willingly giving up whatever I'm doing to dive into a spontaneous beverage-making project that I was not expecting or wanting.  HOWEVER, I do, admittedly, like exploring things that are off the beaten path, and once I read the book's description of said beverage, I was on board with attempting to whip out a batch.

To draw you into this experience with me, I'm going to throw in a few quotes from the book's description.  It's pretty cool.  First of all, how awesome is it that this recipe is found in a section of the book called, "Soft Drinks and Juices To Slake All Thirsts"?  Pretty awesome if you ask me.  Secondly, who could resist being intrigued by the following:

"Switchel is a refreshing, energy-boosting drink used by farm-hands to slake (italics are mine.......this is my new favorite word) their thirsts during the heavy work of harvest season, especially the back-breaking labor of haymaking.  Long before refrigerators, or even icehouses, jugs of switchel were kept cool in the springhouse or by hanging them in a well."   Back to Basics (pg. 246)

After reading the above, my attitude about trying this beverage had changed from "I am so not into this" to "Bring it!"   The unusual list of ingredients sealed the deal:  sugar, molasses, cider vinegar, ground ginger, water.  Really?

So......my son and I carefully followed the instructions in the book and made up a big batch of switchel.  (The recipe makes a gallon.)  Sidenote:  When my husband came upstairs and witnessed the large quantity of switchel being produced, he wisely inquired why we had made a full batch.  Ummmm........cutting the recipe in half would have been a thought, wouldn't it?

I'm sure by now you're wondering whether this is, in fact, the beverage to slake all thirsts.  Well......here is the review direct from the mouth of my oldest:  "Because of the molasses, the taste is rather strong, but the sugar somewhat makes up for it."  When asked whether or not he would regularly like to have switchel as a beverage option, he said, "I would drink it sometimes."  I don't think I could give a better review than that.  I pretty much agree with him on all points.  It doesn't taste BAD, but it's not something I'd want to swill down in large amounts.  However, if I had been schlepping hay bales in the hot sun all day, who knows?  Maybe in that case that gallon of switchel would be swilled in no time flat.

I'll leave you with a photo of the switchel..........I had poured some into a mason jar and set it on our deck railing for this staged shot.  I don't have a great camera, so it did not turn out as glamorous as I'd hoped.  But.....it certainly gives you a visual image of hay-time switchel that you most likely did not have before reading this post.  (Yes, I do know that it closely resembles muddy water that could easily have been taken from a river, but I assure you that this jar contains 100% bona-fide hay-time switchel.)



One more funny thing about this story:  For some reason I'm having a really hard time getting my mouth to say the word "switchel."  In my brain, I want to say swizzle as in a swizzle stick you would find in an exotic adult beverage.  I have had to be corrected several times by my son on the pronunciation of this word.  Just wanted to forewarn you of this possibility in case you plan to use this new word in daily conversation.

Finally, my son would like you to know that "many drinks that are obsolete today have been drunken back in America's past, and possibly other countries, such as 'shrubs' and 'syllabubs'."  He encourages you to try to find a recipe for these two types of drinks.  We are lucky that our Back to Basics book has a recipe for both "Raspberry Shrub" (no trees or plants other than raspberries in this) and "Fruit Syllabub".  I am inclined to want to try the syllabub if for no other reason than that it would be very fun to slip that word into a conversation.  For example, "Gee, it was so steamy out today.  I'm so glad I had a nice cool glass of syllabub to help battle the heat.  Whew!!"  Wouldn't that be fun???