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an everyday life

an everyday life

Tag Archives: Cooking

Breakfast for One

03 Sunday May 2009

Posted by Janell in Good Reads, Life at Home

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Tags

Cooking, Dining Etiquette, Dog Tales, Everyday Life, Writing

It’s Sunday morning and a little drippy outside.  Our day at the zoo has been cancelled – even if our party hadn’t minded getting wet, I imagine most of the animals would be hiding under the driest shelter they could find.  Even ‘wild’ beasts know enough to come in out of the rain.

So with no part of a picnic lunch to prepare, I set about to make breakfast for one – just my old standby pancakes and sausage.  There is an everyday comfort in hearing the sound of pots and pans coming out of hiding and the first sizzle of butter melting in the pan.  When my husband’s home, he generally puts aside his newspaper just long enough for us to converse over breakfast.  And while I’m not above talking to myself – in fact, I’m quite accomplished in this art through many years of practice – this morning I opted to open a used book I’d recently purchased from Langhorne’s Antiques:  Savory Suppers, Fashionable Feasts.

The book records the dining habits of Victorian America, and knowing very little about the subject, I now know three pages more.  I’ve learned that ‘three square meals a day” is a twentieth century invention, and that people once got by on only two meals – a late breakfast and a light early supper.  Maybe less food for thought would be a return to a healthier America?

The book describes in detail, the everyday rules that made for good manners at the dining table.   And back in the time of my granny’s mother, America was interested in knowing and observing these rules, as noted by the author,

“Etiquette books by the dozen were written by both men and women in the nineteenth century.” ….The importance of ‘good breeding’ at the dinner table was compounded by two facts that most Americans readily recognized.  Eating, they acknowledged, was a most basic function, common to both man and animal.  Only manners could separate man from beast in the act of consuming food and drink.” 

I don’t know what the zoo animals would have to say about this, but I know the two tame beasts I live with observe their own form of mealtime etiquette.  Without fail, both begin their meal from their own food bowls, and then sometime mid-course, by apparent agreement, they switch and sample the other’s food.  They may or may not switch back.  Max almost always finishes first, as Maddie is by far the daintier eater.  And without the benefit of an etiquette book to teach him, Max has learned from the school of hard barks that it’s best not to breathe down Maddie’s neck while she’s still eating.  But once Maddie has consumed her fill, Max knows he can then move in for the kill and finish up Maddie’s leftovers.  These doggie rules of mealtime etiquette are observed three times a day. 

But what about breakfast, I wondered.  With the books detailed index, I found and consumed this bit of wisdom rather quickly:

 “At this first meal of the day a certain amount of freedom is allowed which would be unjustifiable at any other time…” 

Here, I see that reading the newspaper, correspondence and even a book is all okay.  But what about that bit of fluffy pancake I just fed to Max and Maddie that they took so carefully from my hand?  The book breathes absolutely no word of advice.

I guess there are just some mealtime situations where its every beast for himself.   But I’m pretty sure I know what Granny would say…

Sure Shot Rolls

17 Friday Apr 2009

Posted by Janell in In the Kitchen

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Tags

Bread, Cooking, Everyday Life, In the Kitchen, Yeast Rolls

It’s nice to sift through the magazines and junk mail to discover that rare piece of personal correspondence.  I could tell by its shape and size it was either an invitation or a thank you note.  And when I saw my cousin’s name on the return address, I decided it had to be the former, as I couldn’t imagine what I had done to deserve a note of thanks.

Of course I remembered as soon as I read Judy’s words of gratitude.  At my sister Christi’s urging, I had made my cousins Judy and Mike a batch of home-made rolls, using a recipe from the cookbook, Rather Sweet Bakery.  The recipe calls for over six cups of flour, so it makes a bunch of  yeast rolls.  And with just a pinch of cinnamon in them, their baking makes my kitchen smell so lovely and inviting.

At least my dogs think so.  Max and Maddie grab a spot near the oven, where they wait in anticipation until the bread comes out to the cooling racks.  Rarely are they disappointed, as this recipe makes enough rolls to share with them and enough to store in freezer bags for later.  A few hours before serving, I take them out of the freezer.  Then with a quick reheat in a moderately heated oven, they taste just like fresh baked.  And because of this, it’s a great way to share fresh baked bread with others — like Mike and Judy.

But if I could use only one bread recipe for the rest of my life, it would have to be Judy’s own mother’s recipe.  I still remember the first time I tasted these light and fluffy rolls, when Judy’s parents came to share Sunday lunch at Granny’s house.  I had never tasted anything like them and still find them special after thirty years of making them.  I’ve made these rolls so often I no longer need the written recipe.

In today’s note, Judy asked for a bread making lesson.  She wrote that learning to make bread from her mom was one of her ‘wish I would haves’ that she regrets not doing before her mom died.  I know exactly what she means, as I too have my own ‘wish I would haves’ with my own Mom. But rather than the Rocket Roll Recipe I used a couple of weeks ago, I wonder if Judy might enjoy a bread making lesson using her mom’s own recipe.

I could hunt down my old recipe card of “Patsy’s Sure Shot Rolls” that I recall is in Judy’s own hand.  And together, we could honor the memory of Patsy as we followed the recipe Patsy handed on to me through Judy’s hand.  And that I now hand on to you.

Patsy’s Sure Shot Rolls

Makes 2 dozen rolls

Preparation Time:  Total 4 hours – ½ hour preparation time &  3 ½ hours rising time

Dissolve 1 package of dry yeast in 2 Tbsp of warm water – set aside to rise for 5 minutes

Mix in a large bowl until dissolved:

1/3 cup of canola oil

1 cup of hot water

6 Tbsp of sugar

¼ tsp salt

Let water cool, then add:

1 egg, well beaten

Yeast mixture

Finally,stir in until dough forms:

3 ½ cups of All Purpose Flour (or enough to make a stiff dough)

Let rise 2 to 2 ½ hours.  Then, on a lightly floured surface, roll dough to 1/4 “ thickness.  Cut dough with kitchen sheers or an inverted glass.  Fold cut dough pieces into half and pinch together.  Turn over in a greased 9×13 cake pan and let rise about 1 hour.  Bake 20 minutes in a 350 preheated oven, or until golden brown.

Best when served immediately.

Papa’s Greek Chicken & Potatoes

28 Saturday Mar 2009

Posted by Janell in In the Kitchen, Life at Home

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Tags

Chicken, Cooking, Greek Food, In the Kitchen

The chicken is roasting in the oven; the potatoes are ready to go in.  It’s a quick meal — we’ll be eating in two hours, maybe a little more.

This meal brings to mind many surprise Sunday suppers from my childhood.  It was an unspoken rule of the house that mom didn’t cook Sunday nights.  We had little reason to complain, having enjoyed a big Sunday lunch—pot roast if we were home, as it was a meal that cooked itself while we were at church, or some huge fried chicken dinner if we’d gone to Granny’s house to visit family—then for supper, we’d eat something simple, maybe leftovers or a Western Egg Sandwich–another one of Papa’s specialties.

But some Sunday evenings, we’d arrive home to find this roasted chicken and potatoes waiting in the oven.  I think Papa liked to cook when he was home alone.  It filled the empty hours and made the house smell all lovely and homey, just like mine smells right now.  And who knows–perhaps after eating mom’s cooking all week, he was hungry for a taste of home.

After Papa’s death, Mom continued to make this meal, as I did in my own home when the kids were growing up.  Like a family tree, this one connects me to a past beyond my memory and maybe someday, to the future in the homes of my children and grandchildren.

If a recipe is good enough, it can survive in an unwritten state for years, as it’s handed down from generation to generation. But this one deserves to be in writing, so it can live on its own.

Papa’s Roasted Chicken & Potatoes

Serves 3 to  4

1 fryer, washed and dried (with paper towels)

½ cup butter

½ cup olive oil

6 medium potatoes, peeled and halved

1 lemon

Paprika, salt & pepper

Preheat oven to 350.  Rub chicken lightly with olive oil and season with salt, pepper and liberally with paprika.  Cut 2 T. of butter into small pieces and place all over chicken.  Set in baking dish (or cast iron skillet), coated lightly with olive oil, and roast in oven for 2 hours or until juices of pierced chicken thigh run clear.

Meanwhile, sauté potatoes in remaining melted butter and olive oil, in a cast-iron or other oven proof skillet, over low heat for 20 to 30 minutes until brown and crusty.  Set aside.  After chicken has roasted for an hour, put potatoes in oven and cook for a hour, until fork tender.  The chicken and potatoes will finish roasting at about the same time.

Take both out of oven and cover with foil, letting chicken rest for at least 10 minutes, then squeeze fresh lemon juice on both potatoes and chicken before serving.   Serve with a nice Greek salad and crusty bread.

Note:  Original recipe called for a cup of butter, rather than half butter and olive oil.  Also, potatoes were cooked around the chicken rather than in a separate dish.  I’ve made these two modifications to skinny it down – without sacrificing flavor.

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