Baking Day

This morning I packed my kitchenaid mixer, some stoneware and half of my pantry into the car. The kids and I drove over to my friend Elizabeth’s house. A few weeks ago Liz had the brilliant idea of planning a day to bake until our freezers were full of goodies for school lunches.

She’s a genius. And she has a great new oven with two compartments that you can have going at separate temperatures. At one point we had four bundt cakes (chocolate zucchini) in the bottom oven and two dozen muffins (carrot pineapple) in the top. We also made cookie dough (oatmeal raisin) to freeze into logs for slicing and baking at a later date, savory cheese and herb muffins, and some homemade granola bars that didn’t want to come out of the pans properly, but that were delicious nonetheless.

When I got home with my share of the goods, I divided and wrapped everything into individual proportions and organized them into the freezer. I have over 5 dozen individually wrapped treats for the kids’  lunchboxes, as well as one whole bundt cake and a roll of cookie dough. Not bad for a days work. Thanks Elizabeth!

Flexitarian

My children know that meat comes from animals. Bacon and ham come from pigs. Hamburgers and steak come from cows. chicken comes from chicken. Fish from fish, and so on. They know all this, and have for some time.

Well, Adora got it in her head that she would like to be a farmer when she grows up. So we spent some time talking about farming. We talked about Grandma Sonia and Bruce’s farm and we talked about the life cycle of the sheep. What Adora and Grace know of the sheep is how cute the lambs are every spring when we go visit, and the funny sound of the bleating Mama sheep, and how the wool gets sheared off. She turned three shades of green when we began to talk about slaughter (we were eating lunch while we talked). We went on to talk about how the steaks in the shiny packages at the store came from real animals from real farms that really, really had been slaughtered so we could eat them. The reality of what they already knew began to sink in. They wanted details. They wanted to know how the animals were killed. I told them I didn’t know. I lied. We were eating lunch after all.

Grace sat in stunned silence. Adora made gagging sounds, declared she wanted nothing to do with farming, and wanted to end the discussion right this minute. I told her that it is important to know where your food comes from.

She said that she wanted to become a vegetarian. Grace agreed. They know about vegetarianism because some of their friends from school are from vegetarian families. I explained a bit about vegetarianism and how you can’t just stop eating meat, you have to eat other things to make up complete proteins, yada yada yada. Still, they want to go meatless.

I was a vegetarian for a few years, as a bleeding heart teenager (although I never really gave up bacon and would be willing to occasionally eat ground beef or cut up chicken breast if, and only if, it was cooked in a manner to disguise the meatiness of the meat – think stir-fry or spaghetti). As it was, when I met Matthew, waaaay back in the day, my family ate meat a few times a week and his family ate it three meals a day. Over the years we hit a balance and meat is included in most dinners around here. I even learned how to cook a pretty good roast and handle raw meat (I was squeamish about it for a long time). In the last eight months or so though, I have shifted my stance on meat again. I have purposefully begun cooking at least one meatless dinner per week, sometimes two or three, in a weak non-committal attempt to both reduce our family’s carbon footprint and reduce our saturated fat intake.

Now we’ve come full circle and I have two little girls who are beginning to make choices about how they want to live their lives. In light of my own past, and the fact that a big juicy steak still doesn’t appeal all that much to my palate (I’m fine until I start thinking about it in the middle of my meal and sometimes have to stop eating because my imagination grosses me out) I fully support their desire to explore other dining options. I have two hang-ups, though.

1. My poor, poor husband, who is a meat-itarian, and has worked so hard to incorporate veggies into his diet in the same way I have worked hard to become accustomed to meat. I will probably be having to cook double meals to keep everyone satisfied, which is something I swore I would never do. Oh well.

2. Re-learning how to cook. I have a few good meatless dinners in my repertoire, but I am going to need more variety, and I am going to need to study up on vegetarian nutrition. All I can say is thank God for the internet.

That being said – if you have any great vegetarian recipes that make a nutritionally complete meal, please pass them on!

Only time will tell if this will be a passing phase for our family or the beginning of a pretty major diet change. I don’t plan on going full-vegetarian myself, but we will certainly be shifting more to a vegetable and grains based plan around here for a while at least. Pray for my husband ;-) for patience and that all his needs will be met while us girls experiment in the kitchen.

Me In My Kitchen

This is me. Standing in my kitchen in front of the window, right now, thinking of what to cook and blogging about it.

I feel like cooking. I’m low on supplies though. I could use a trip to the store. But Adora has a cute little child over for a playdate right now. The three children have popcorn and craft supplies scattered all over the great room and I don’t think they want to go to the store. Correction. I don’t want to take them to the store.

In the kitchen I stand.

I have a belly full of hot dogs. because it’s Tuesday. Hot Dog Lunch day. I have also had popcorn. I feel the need to cook something real.

I just checked the phone messages. There was a message from the stylist reminding me of my appointment tomorrow. YAY I get my haircut tomorrow! It’s been three months. I guess the above photo can double as a ‘before’ shot. Anyways, when I got the message I checked the calendar to make sure I had it written down right. I did. And that’s when I noticed something else written on the calender. I have to hand something into the school office for the Cake Walk tomorrow for Thursday’s Fun Fair. So I need to bake something.

In the kitchen I stand.

For dinner tonight, I will make Cumin chicken with avocado and orange salsa from this month’s Chatelaine. There is also a scrumptious looking recipe inside for Cranberry-pecan butter tarts. But I think that if I make those I will not want to give them away for the Cake Walk. What to do…what to do….

I want to learn to grill. I want to make the famous grilled pasta.

I want to make something with peaches.

I’ve been craving peaches for about three days. Peaches with vanilla ice cream? Peach crumble? Something.

Here I am. I’d better get baking.

What’s for dinner at your house today?

Chicken with Lime Sauce

Ingredients:

  • 4 skinless, boneless chicken breasts
  • salt and pepper
  • olive oil
  • 3/4 cup low sodium chicken broth
  • 1 tbsp brown sugar
  • 3 tbsp lime juice, divided
  • 2 tsp Dijon mustard
  • 2 tbsp water
  • 1 tsp cornstarch
  • 1 tbsp butter

1. Pound each chicken breast to 1/4 inch thickness using a meat mallet or small heavy skillet. Sprinkle chicken with salt and pepper.

2. Heat oil in a large non-stick skillet over medium-high heat. Add chicken, cook 4 minutes on each side or until browned. Remove from pan; keep warm.

3. Add chicken broth, sugar, 2 tbsp juice and mustard to pan; bring to a boil over medium-high heat, scraping bottom of pan to loosen browned bits.

4. In a small bowl, combine water and corn starch. Add cornstarch mix to pan; stir well with a whisk. Boil one minute until mixture begins to thicken. Whisk in remaining tablespoon lime juice and butter, stirring until butter melts. Add chicken to pan; simmer 2 minutes until chicken is thoroughly heated.

Cooking for Kids (Keep it Simple)

Not to yank my own chain but I’m a pretty good cook.

I was reading an article about Jamie Oliver in my favorite cooking magazine today and he was going on about this passion he has to overhaul the way America eats – he’s doing a new show or something. I know, I know, I am not America. But I’m an avid reader of this american magazine. Anyways, one of the things he was saying went along the lines of – if only we could get families to cook a good meal from scratch and sit down together as a family, even three nights a week, the whole country would see a dramatic change in the way they view and use food. And I thought, Ummmm, We already do that. Nothing new to learn here. That’s our house, like, 6 or 7 nights a week.

What? It’s nice to feel like you’re doing something right for a change.

Tonight I was going to make Chicken with Lime Sauce. And a some kind of robust salad. And maybe rice, although we had rice last night and I like to change it up. But Matthew had to go out to do some work. So it was just me and the kids. And a recipe that takes nearly an hour looked all of a sudden less appealing. So instead I’m making Bell Pepper Quesadillas, with sugar snap peas on the side. Crunch crunch. Fast for me. Nutritious and delicious. And the kids will be waaaaaaay happier eating something they can pick up rather than something they need cut up for them. And quesadillas mean salsa. I love salsa. Win. Win. Win. Win. Chicken with Lime Sauce tomorrow. Hoo-ray!

Maintaining a family kitchen is a lot of work! But a lot of people do it. It’s one of those life skills. I’d like to thank the following people for equipping me with my tool belt of knowledge: Mom, Grandma Sonia, Nana, Jan, friends who have passed their best recipes on to me, Cooking Light Magazine, Martha Stewart, the Pioneer Woman Cooks, All Recipes.com and I have to add the Pampered Chef because without my stint with them I wouldn’t have a fully loaded kitchen (imagine filling a garage or workshop with flimsy tools from the dollar store. A lot of women do that with their kitchens and then wonder why cooking is so frustrating).

And Adora and Grace. For reminding me that the best things in life need not be complicated.

Have A Very Cherry Christmas

I’ve only made two types of cookie this year. Aside from the gingerbread house, that is. The first was Nana’s Whipped Shortbread. What is Christmas without shortbread? But this year I altered the recipe. I chopped up some white chocolate and some glacee cherries and threw them into the dough. This was a big deal for me, as I am a shortbread purist. But I can tell you, that they are deeeeeeeelicious with my little alteration.

Last night I was scrambling at the last minute (surprise, surprise) to bake 8 dozen cookies for today’s cookie exchange. We are going for our annual Christmas dinner with my Mom’s side of the family in salmon Arm, at Grandma Sonia and Bruce’s sheep farm. Every year, this is a gift exchange. I got to buy for my Mom (yay). Every year, we also have a cookie exchange. I made these:

They are called Chocolate Covered Cherry Cookies, and you can find the recipe here. After baking them, I tried one. Okay, I tried two and I had one of the shortbread ones to round out my evening. I thought they were pretty good, but after so much finger-licking during the process, and the chocolately scent wafting through the house for so long, I couldn’t really tell if they were fantastico. So when Matthew got home I forced him to try one. He confirmed it. Fantastico. “I’ve had cookies,” he said, “and that was not a cookie.”

It’s better than a cookie. It’s chewy chocolate cookie, imprinted with a maraschino cherry, topped with some fudgy goo that has sweetened condensed milk in it. Sweetened condensed milk is pretty much the best substance on the planet. This is definitely going to be added to my annual cookie list.

I hear my sister is making rum balls for the exchange. I’m looking forward to that. My mom is making homemade chocolates. I don’t know what the others are bringing, but I have a feeling I will need to go purchase some stretchy yoga pants come boxing day.

Enjoy your holiday sweets folks.