Archive for the ‘Leftovers’ Category

Funny how things change…

Saturday, November 28th, 2009
funny-how-things-change

When I was younger, Thanksgiving was great for two things: mashed potatoes and stuffing.  Turkey?  Eh.  This was back in the days when brining was unheard of, and invariably, I found turkey to be dry and pretty awful, and useful for not much more than a delivery system for more gravy.

Oh what a difference a new cooking technique can make.  I really adore roasted turkey now – thank you brining!!  I don’t really make it outside the holidays, and I really should.  It’s not terribly expensive, it’s pretty healthy, and oh yes, I like it.

Leftovers aren’t an issue either.  I don’t have any recipes that take turkey, because I don’t need them.  My brother makes sandwiches, and I just eat it straight out of the fridge.  I may go nuts later this evening and fry up a couple pieces of bacon and make myself a club sandwich.

Thank you, thank you, thank you to whoever it was out there that informed me of this wonderful thing called brining.

Two good ideas I had yesterday!

Friday, November 27th, 2009
two-good-ideas-i-had-yesterday

We do a turkey breast and carve it in the kitchen and bring the goodies out on a platter to the table.  And it always makes a mess, even though I let the turkey rest, there’s still turkey juice going everywhere as I cut it up.

I had a flash yesterday.  (Doesn’t happen often!)  I have baking sheets that have a lip on them that is about 3/4″ high.  I have a cutting board big enough for the turkey breast that still fits within the baking sheet.  Result: The turkey juice that runs off the cutting board is caught by the baking sheet instead of running all over the kitchen counters!

After carving about 1/2 of it (that was more than enough for dinner and a couple midnight sandwiches) I took the remainder and just put the entire thing in one of those GIANT Ziploc bags to put in the fridge.  That way, I can carve the rest of it today when it is cold (and easier to cut up – I don’t know about anyone else, but I have trouble with the meat shredding when I cut it when it’s just out of the oven) and it was one less thing to need to do last night when I was in a turkey food coma.

TurkeyQuest 2009: Success!

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009
turkeyquest-2009-success

In my fridge there is a 7.92# Shady Brook Farms turkey breast!  The first market I went to last evening had at least a dozen of them.  Much better than the year I had to go to 3 different stores to find one.

I always get the biggest one I can get my hands on, because the leftovers will NOT go to waste.  I like turkey, but don’t eat it a whole lot.  My brother LOVES turkey.  Last year he had 8 meals in a row of turkey sandwiches after Thanksgiving.  We’ll see if he can break the record this year.

As it stands, we will again have enough food for a small army, even though it’s just my brother & myself.  But I won’t have to cook for at least 3 days afterwards!

The cheese & sausage plate will be a meal in and of itself.  I’ve got summer sausage, hard pepperoni and…  There’s one other thing and I can’t remember what it is off the top of my head but it’s in the fridge.  For cheeses, we have good old sharp cheddar, pepper jack, salsa jack (never heard of it before, but it looked interesting,) smoked gouda and dill havarti.  I also have a roll of Salame Panino.  (Salame rolled in mozzarella!) It just looked really yummy.

Can’t wait!

Gawd, it’s cold outside…

Friday, January 16th, 2009

It’s been absurdly frigid the past couple days and I wanted something HOT to eat.  I poked through the freezer and found a container of Chicken Chili Soup that I made a while back.  (No, really, it’s not the same batch I made a year ago!)

Defrosted and reheated it – pretty darn good!  Thicker than the original, and the beans were a little mushy, but it did hit the spot on a cold day.  The spices did mellow out a little, but it was still good.  It’s always good to know that something does defrost and reheat well.

Continuing the theme of “good food in the cold” I have a pot of beans soaking and tomorrow I’ll be attempting ham & bean soup.

Now, there are a million variations on it, and it was a favorite when we were kids.  My Mom never wrote down her recipe and I never paid terribly close attention to exactly how she made it.  And I am terrified of screwing it up.

I don’t know why, but it seems that trying to recreate the great comfort foods that my Mom cooked is more intimidating than doing some crazy elaborate recipe I’ve never tried before.

I’ve got some carrots, onion, and celery to toss in it, and smoked ham hocks.  Normally Mom always just used a lefotver ham bone, but I don’t have one of those, and I was lucky to even get the ham hocks – they were the last package in the store.  I think the smoked aspect of it will make it a little interesting.  I’ve also got a big ham steak to shred up and toss in as well.

Keep your fingers crossed!!