Sunday, February 28, 2010

A Lovely No-Number Day

As I look at my calendar for March, I realize that my original goal of cooking nearly every day just ain't gonna cut it. Soooo, I'll just number my cooking days from here on in. And put other (goofy?) titles on the other days' entries. Like today.

Yup, no cooking today because we went to Artisan in Paso Robles for brunch. Quiche. Excellent quiche. With fresh fruit and green onion hash browns. Randy had something southwestern that I can't spell. Neither of us could resist the house-made sorbets: 1 scoop each of orange, mixed berry, and zinfandel grape. Oh my!

We check out Chateau Bow-Wow as a possible venue for a NCHS event. And brought home a whole slew of plants from Hometown Nursery. The near-house landscaping is starting to shape up quite nicely.

Of course I worked on NCHS stuff for awhile when we got home, trying to get a list made up so I can implement a more organized plan of attack this week. The rest of the day I worked on a quilt I'm making for my friend Scott's sister. I got a good chunk of the sewing underway.

Saturday, February 27, 2010

Day 80 - Guacamole

Guacamole - pg. 219

How exciting can you get! Well, Alice does have directions for making guacamole. So I gotta make it. Three weeks ago I bought an avocado that would be ready to eat in one week. You do the math. It was certainly ready to be guacamole. This particular avocado was a low-fat type which, in my humble opinion, does not make a good guacamole. That nice rich flavor just wasn't there. Oh well. Not all culinary experiments work out well. I'm not sure what one could do with a low-fat avocado.

I made chili to go under the guacamole. Just hamburger, onions, canned tomatoes and seasonings. It was okay. Just okay. Good grief, I've gotten so spoiled. If my cooking isn't WOW!! I'm just not thrilled. And I want to be thrilled at dinner time. Now that is spoiled.

Another rainy day here. I miss the sun, but we need the rain. We still need the rain. I spent the morning doing the final phase of organization in my walk-through closet. Yippee! It's done! You might wonder how much organization a closet needs, but this particular closet is one of the busiest rooms in the house. It's a hall between the bedroom and the bathroom. It's Pearl's favorite sleeping spot (on the quilts on the top shelf, so the quilts have to be in pillowcases or wrapped in towels). It's where linens are stored and dirty clothes are dumped. My luggage is there. The bathroom scale. A small vacuum cleaner. A full-length mirror. All of our deceased cats' ashes. A couple of spare laundry baskets. And spare hangers. On top of all that, my clothes and other paraphernalia.

After a dash to Trader Joe's for some groceries I joined other staff and Board members at the shelter for Pet Point training. Pet Point is a very powerful web-based program for animal shelters that allows users to track absolutely everything about their charges in one convenient place. Making the transition to computer-based records isn't going as fast as we'd like, but what does. We'll get there. I continue to be just delighted with everything that's going on at the shelter and with the Board. Every day we make a little more progress toward our goals.

53 recipes down; 252 recipes to go

Friday, February 26, 2010

Good Day to Nest

It's cold and rainy and just dreary all the way around. I'm tired, too. I've been running on adrenaline the last few days. So, I just nested today. Read through reams of email. Napped. Watched the Olympics. Hung out in front of the fireplace with the cats. Randy brought home take-out from Pier 46. For me, it was squid and chips. Their squid is excellent: plenty of toes. Their chips are half potato and half sweet potato. Good rainy-day comfort food.

Thursday, February 25, 2010

When Do Leftovers End?

I'll grant you that I've been really busy with NCHS lately. And out of town. And Randy was out of town for a few days before that. I haven't actually cooked since February 11 (2 whole weeks ago!), but still... why am I still dealing with leftovers fercryin'outloud?

I'm on a mission now to clear old stuff out, out, out of the frig. I want to look at some new stuff. I want to cook with some new stuff. There are still asparagus in the veggie drawer. And a cauliflower? How did THAT get in there?!

Anyway, I did finally finish up that massive basket of brussels sprouts I bought awhile back with brussels sprouts gratin tonight. I love that recipe. Made with pancetta instead of bacon, it was an entree. Randy made a green salad with figs and candied walnuts that he got at farmers market last Saturday (maybe that's where the cauliflower came from...). I toasted some elderly bread and spread it with that darn fava bean/goat cheese/mint stuff. Good stuff, mind you, but I've seen enough of it. It has all too frequently been my lunch lately. So, that was dinner. Leftovers, basically. At least I cooked.

The Fundraising workshop yesterday was terrific. I came home really fired up. Of course I spent a good part of the day doing NCHS work. Yippee!!

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Fundraising Workshop

And today... I'm in LA to attend a Philanthropy Team Fundraising Workshop. I'm so excited! I'm hoping to get all kinds of great ideas to take back to NCHS/AFAR.

I drove down yesterday to avoid the worst of rush-hour traffic, which was the right thing to do. My hotel room is pleasant, as these things go. I answered a lot of emails, and worked on a quilt while watching American Idol and the Olympics.

Off to breakfast! (But it won't be as good as the great stuff I make at home....)

Monday, February 22, 2010

Luncheon was a BIG Success!

Saturday was NCHS's annual membership luncheon. We raised $1,755 specifically for our spay/neuter assistance certificate program. This translates, for example, into helping to neuter 44-45 female cats and dogs. More, if the animals are male. Several guests joined as new members. Our speaker donated $250 to our trap/neuter/release program.

There was SO much good energy in the room! That was the best part. The organization, like many non-profits, has had a rough go of it the last year. We've lost money. We've had to make changes that ruffled some old-time feathers pretty badly. Now I see the organization emerging stronger than ever. I said, "We're leaner, but not meaner. We're leaner and more compassionate." In our remarks to the membership, we sugar-coated nothing. We told it like it is. I've never heard that at one of our luncheons before. It was refreshing, transparent and hopeful.

So, was it worth it to make 19 of those bloody gift baskets? (We auctioned off a total of 21.) Was it worth it to make 70 table favors with doorprizes? Well, yes. It was. Sort of like childbirth, you immediately forget the pain and just fly high on the joy of it all.

For me, I won the gift basket I most wanted. A local pair of quilters made a fabulous butterfly quilt for us, using some of my favorite fabrics. It's all pastel and girly, the kind of thing I love but would probably never make myself since my quilts tend toward the edgy and dramatic. I had to have it. I now own it. Yippee! And there are a whole bunch of other coveted things in that basket, too. A pound of Starbuck's coffee. Breakfast for 2 at one of my favorite local cafes. Such a deal!

Tomorrow I'm going out of town to attend a nonprofit fundraising strategy workshop, so I'm not at all sure when I'll get back to cooking. Sometime soon. I miss it. We did get a great lunch yesterday at another new local hot-spot, Farmstand 46.

Monday, February 15, 2010

My Life Is A Gift Basket

I'm obsessed. I volunteered to put together the gift baskets for the NCHS membership luncheon silent auction. So, of course, every one of them has to be perfect. Not big. Just perfect. So I shop at the grocery store. I shop at Ross Dress-for-Less. I shop here at home and discover that I moved stuff from the old house that I can now easily part with. Fancy that....

Otherwise, a million little things every day. Just like real life.

Miss Maizie Jane Valentine had a short visit at Dr. Cherbinsky's office this morning to give him (reluctantly, I'm sure) another urine sample. Something is still amiss. The in-house lab culture grew some unknown something. The urine sample today did not look good. Cloudy. A less than wonderful color. The good news is that she at least seems to feel pretty decent. So, we'll await the culture results from the Big Lab.

There was something else interesting to report, but I can't remember what it was. Apparently, not that interesting after all.

Had some more of that pot roast for dinner tonight. With a new batch of celery, potatoes and carrots. Do pot roasts go on forever???

Saturday, February 13, 2010

I Forgot...

Yes, I know. I forgot. Well, I'm going to take a few days off from the project, if not from blogging. Randy is at a conference and we have a lot of leftovers in the frig... It's leftover management time again, Dear Readers! I did get just a couple things at Farmers' Market this morning -- a half dozen Satsumas (we won't have them much longer), an avocado that won't be ready to eat for a week anyway, and a bunch of asparagus from my favorite organic seller. This is his first week for them. Damn, I'm getting picky! I have a short list of favorite growers, mostly organic and heirloom, and I turn my nose up at anything that isn't top-notch.

Last night we had dinner at my favorite seafood place, Pier 46. It's a combination fish market and eatery. They do mostly take-out, but have a few tables, too. They are all about quality and customer service and are VERY popular! It's fun to get a table and just watch the floor show while waiting for your order and eating. It's organized chaos at its most delightful. I love the owners and the people who work there. Did I mention that the food is beyond wonderful?

Oh, otherwise I'm working on making up the gift baskets for the NCHS luncheon auction. I went shopping a little this morning, but only brought home soda and fruit juice. Oh yes! And potatoes. I bought potatoes. I'm watching the Olympics, being a big fan of same. I managed to stay awake all the way to The Great One lighting the outdoor cauldron last night. Yawn. The hour, that is, not The Great One.

In Wisconsin my mother is in the hospital. Again. This isn't a bad thing, though. It means she's safe. Which she isn't normally. I had a very long talk with my cousin Marta, also in Wisconsin, last night. She had visited my mother so we were able to talk about the situation, a situation over which neither of us has a shred of control. Hence my gratitude that she is in the hospital. Well, I always enjoy talking with Marta. That's a good thing, too.

Did I mention that I've been listening to Susan Boyle's first album? My gawd, what a voice. She blows me away. She is a great singer. Now, it's back to getting those gift baskets organized.

P.S. I've had a request for an update re: Maizie Jane Valentine who was in the emergency vet hospital last Sunday. She seems to be fully recovered. Finished up her antibiotics and was on pain medication for about 4 days which seems to have done her more good than anything. Without pain, or at least with much less pain, she wasn't trying to pee all the time, so her bladder was able to rest instead of getting constantly re-irritated. She's been entirely off medication for 3 days now and seems fine. She snoozed next to me while I watched the open Olympics ceremony last night. She's such a good cat.

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Day 79 - Pot Roast by Any Other Name...

Beef Pot Roast - pg. 355

...is still pot roast. I've made pot roast in the past. Sometime, somewhere, in the ancient past. Directions in TAOSF are kinda complicated. I certainly didn't follow them exactly. My eye round got seasoned and sat in the frig for days. I forgot the second browning. And I had a disagreement with Alice! I cooked my vegetables (the day AFTER I braised the meat, which was several hours AFTER I browned the meat) in the braising juices rather than just plain water. Why would you boil the veggies separately in plain water when you have all those braising juices (mine was packaged beef broth and Two Buck Chuck Shiraz)??? Makes no sense to me.

Well, the results weren't anything to write home to mother about. Not bad, but not exactly inspiring either. This dish merits further research and a do-over.

Otherwise today? A meeting of the Central Coast Weavers, which is always good. An overdue haircut. A certain amount of cat petting. Watching Survivor and Project Runway while working through my email. Life is good.

52 down; 253 to go

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Day 78 - More Politics, Less Cooking

Attended the Atascadero City Council meeting last night to make a pitch for working with the City on lowering the population of stray/feral cats through an aggressive spay/neuter program. We were very well received, got some money for spay/neuter assistance, and followed up today by receiving a (pre-scheduled) Spay Day Proclamation from the Council and a chance to talk with them further. Yeah! This is all very good. Everyone at NCHS, staff, Board and volunteers alike, is feeling very heartened by this development.

Otherwise, I've been working on preparations for our (NCHS/AFAR) annual membership luncheon next Saturday. Work, work, work.

I'm working on making a pot roast, but I'm not at all sure it will be eatable. It's another one of those long stories. I'll be able to tell you more tomorrow.

Tuesday, February 09, 2010

Day 77 - What It Takes

No cooking today, just politics. Some days, that's what it takes. I'll tell you all about it later.

Monday, February 08, 2010

Day 76 - Cheese and Pasta Gratin

Cheese and Pasta Gratin - pg. 272

Fine. Call it what you want. It's still mac and cheese. I made this one with whole wheat pasta. The cheese was mostly Swiss madrigal with some gruyere. It was a bit of work, but will easily give us 2 dinners. Plus, it tasted really good! Excellent heart-of-winter comfort food. I found the first seriously debatable issue in TAOSF in this recipe, however. Calls for 3/4 pound dry pasta which is WAY too much. I put about 1/3 of the cooked yield in a freezer container for later resurrection in another meal.

As long as I had the oven on, I quartered a bunch of brussels sprouts and roasted them. Tossed with a dressing of my own invention. I'm really developing a love for oven-roasted vegetables. Guess I've eaten steamed veggies for just way too long.

Maizie is doing better today. I think the pain meds are doing her as much good as anything, breaking the cycle of bladder irritation that results from constantly trying to empty the bladder. Giving this cat oral liquid medication is a challenge. We're giving her 2 twice a day. So far, all three of us are still living and not too badly wounded. Well, maybe it's not quite that bad.

Otherwise, I'm easing myself back into NCHS work, after a few days of utter frustration and whining. And, I'm continuing to work on my friend's quilt. Gawd, I love to make stuff!

Tomorrow? More rain. I like the water, but the lack of sun is really making us lose warmth in the house as our solar mass cools off. Not pleasant.

51 down; 254 to go

Sunday, February 07, 2010

Day 75 - Croutons Again and Ms. Maizie

Yeah, we just did croutons again for dinner. Catalon toasts. Whatever. Call them what you will, they're still yummie. And easy. And fun. This morning I researched beef roasts. Different cuts of meat and how to best prepare them. I've gotten as far as understanding the explanations and directions.

I also, at long last, started a quilt I've promised to make for a friend. Today I cut out the blocks made from a childhood fabric of his, the cotton lining of a sleeping bag. I love the fabrics and colors for this project. The childhood fabric is screamin' lime green with big orange, white and black ladybugs. The new fabrics come from the sunny/floral/bright-pastel side of life in yellows, apricots, and yellowish-greens. I found a suite of fabrics that work perfectly at Keepsake Quilting, then added many more from my own stash. I like my quilts to be visual kaleidoscopes, very "scrappy."

The rest of the day was devoted to poor Maizie. We took her to the local emergency vet hospital. To make a long story short, we were very impressed with the vet we saw today -- he may become our new vet here in Atascadero. After a serious effort, he got a urine sample to culture and sent her home with pain medication to make her more comfortable. He did an ultrasound to rule out blockage and tumor. So, Maizie is pretty stoned and seriously not trusting us right now, but I'm much relieved that she's getting such good care.

I didn't get to see it all, but the Super Bowl was a great game. So glad New Orleans won. That city needs something to be proud of as they continue to recover from Katrina and Brownie-you're-doing-a-heck-of-a-job.

Saturday, February 06, 2010

Day 74 - Just Shoot Me

Croutons - pg. 58

I'm just miserable tonight. Husband is doing well, but our poor cat Maizie is not. After 4 or 5 days of slow but steady improvement, she is much worse tonight. We will take her into the emergency pet hospital tomorrow morning when the doctor who will be on duty then can do an ultrasound. She's been through so much the last 8 months or so. I feel so bad for her. She's a good cat and always a good patient. My heart is breaking.

The lack-of-principles nonsense I was whining about yesterday is still getting to me. I went to see "The Young Victoria" this afternoon just to lighten up. (When I obviously should have been home looking after my cat.) Afterwards, I looked up an experienced cat rescuer whom I trust and ran my concerns past her to see if she thought I was off track or not. Not. It makes me feel more secure in my own beliefs and principles, but still very sad that a volunteer or 2 are verging on making big trouble for NCHS/AFAR. Sigh. I'm having problems leaving it behind and moving on to other things. No doubt concern for hubby and kitty are impacting my outlook. Constant cold and cloudy skies and rain probably aren't helping.

But, ya gotta eat. Moving on to the bread chapter in Part I: Starting From Scratch, I realized that Alice first discusses croutons! I know these croutons! She talks about them in the sense of Catalon toasts, the most famous of Barcelona tapas. Heck, we ate a LOT of those while we were in Spain this fall. At the request of hubby, I made pate de haba gruesa con menta, fresh mint and bean pate, this morning, substituting canned fava beans for fresh which made the pate beige instead of white. Authentic stuff nonetheless. Rather than making finished toasts/croutons for just the 2 of us, I made plain garlic and olive oil toasts and laid out a variety of toppings for build-your-own. Smoked salmon, prosciutto, gruyere, tapenade, the bean pate, herb butter, and some lightly dressed spicy greens. Heavy on the proteins, but it was what was in the house and easy to put on the table. Tasty and very easy. I can knock another "recipe" in TAOSF off my list.

I've just finished Michael Pollan's "The Omnivore's Dilemma." I enjoyed Part I about industrial food and corn. It was very informative and gives me one more reason to learn to cook from scratch in a locavore sort of way, using the freshest, highest quality ingredients possible. Although, remember, I am not a purist. I lean more and more toward organic, free-range, grass-fed and all that, but those categories of food don't control my diet. Yet. Honestly, I found the rest of the book increasingly self-indulgent. I shlogged through it, though.

If the dilemma is to eat crap or good food, I will eat good food as much as possible. I hope this means that my diet will be increasingly good and decreasingly crap with time. Today I honestly can't remember when I last ate at McDonald's. But if the dilemma is meat or not, it will be meat. I feel no need to kill, pluck and clean my own chicken to earn the right to eat it. I do have serious concerns about how food animals and food-producing animals are treated during their lives, what they eat, and how they are slaughtered. That's as far as I will go.

I've been reading several blog entries wherein other omnivores talk about facing their dilemmas. I've come to the conclusion that my farm-oriented northern-Wisconsin upbringing of the 1950s has probably spared me a lot of the current angst, even as I guide my cooking and eating back toward my roots. We always ate seasonally then because that's what was available. We ate locally for the same reasons. All my family were farmers, hunters, fishers, cheese-makers, and feed-mill operators. As a child I saw curing cow-hides and headless chickens left outside to bleed out. Watched my grandmother prepare the chicken and my father make cheese at a small local dairy. Ate my aunt and uncle's canned venison and gravy. I've always known where food comes from and how we get it. Myself, I've grown fruits and vegetables, fished and, yes, even hunted.

So, for me, it will be easy to get back to my roots, I think. I love our local farmers' markets. I'm enjoying cooking things from scratch using the best ingredients I can find and afford. I'd rather eat at a good restaurant once a week than at McDonald's 3 or 4 times. I'm developing a love of all this good food and, quite frankly, a distaste for industrial crap. I study food labels. I'm throwing out crap from the pantry and frig that just doesn't work for me anymore.

Food is important. It's an important part of life, socially and aesthetically as well as practically. It's worth my time and effort. That's what I've decided. I can eat meat with a clear conscious, but I can only eat quality food without wincing. Does this mean I'll never eat another quarter-pounder? Unlikely. I will. But right now, a slab of home-baked bread spread with a pate of fava beans (preferably fresh), goat cheese (preferably local) and mint leaves (maybe home-grown?) sounds far more appealing. I am one happy omnivore.

50 recipes down; 255 to go -- This feels like a milestone!

Friday, February 05, 2010

Day 73 - Scones and Whine

Scones - pg. 275

And I do mean whine.

Maizie and Randy are both continuing on the road to recovery. It was rather a hectic morning for me getting all my morning chores accomplished and helping both of them, too. Another day on which I came, yet again, to grips with the fact that I was never, ever cut out for motherhood. Or anything that remotely resembles it.

Meanwhile, I had to waste hours of my time and lots of my energy trying to explain to 2 people who should know better why a no-kill private humane society should not ever accept support from nor lend support to a "pet store" that sells cats and dogs, kittens and puppies. Duh! You know what their argument is? "Times are tough, so throw out your principals and take free stuff anywhere you can get it." Which is partly how Hitler came to power. No wonder this country is going to hell. Don't people believe in anything any more? Are we all acting like politicians, selling out for a dollar at every moment? I'm pissed and disgusted. And people wonder why NCHS Board members aren't out there raising money every minute. It's because they have to waste their time dealing with crap like this. There. I've whined.

Now, on to the scones. My plan was to make TAOSF scones until I remembered an ancient box of scone mix in the pantry. I mean ancient. Guess what? Ancient boxes of baking mixes need to go to the garbage can. That's where all of mine are now. The new scones made from the ancient baking mix were beyond horrible, they were basically inedible.

So, Randy suggested lunch at Fig. Yippee! We hadn't been there for too long. We both had cassoulet and shared a piece of coconut cream pie. And we shared a table with a young man and woman who lunched on gorgeous Fig salads. We also shared a good conversation about issues raised in Michael Polin's "Omnivore's Dilemma." Fig is always good for the best in food and conversation.

This afternoon I was going to go to a movie, and to a reception and talk at the San Luis Obispo Art Center, but everything that's gone on in the last 2 days just had me worn out. So I took a nap instead. And woke up with a new attitude. Naps are good for attitude adjustment. Not to mention that I'm probably not yet totally over my own cold.

With a new attitude, I looked up cassoulet in Martha Stewart's Cooking School. I gotta do this. There's a place in NY that ships a cassoulet kit with all the correct ingredients. Pricey, but mouth-watering. After that, it would be fun to make a locavore version.

And then I made TAOSF scones. Pretty easy and quick. Delicious. Made with unbleached flour and heavy cream. I've eaten 2. So far. I can make more.

That's how I killed a day. Other than conquering scones, I did nothing even remotely constructive which just drives me crazy. I'm hoping for better tomorrow.

49 recipes constructed; 256 still in the dreaming stage

Thursday, February 04, 2010

Day 72 - What A Day!

Herb Butter - pg. 48

Maizie the cat is doing better. Not well, but better. Not peeing all over the place, just in the litter box, so I know she's feeling better.

Randy had his knee surgery. All went well. He's high maintenance today, which is to be expected. He's maintained me under similar circumstances. I'm happy to be able to do the same for him.

I've done about a jillion and a half household and personal maintenance chores today, and done my best to stay on top of emails. While waiting to take Randy to the surgery center I caught up on household chores -- tried to clear my weekend calendar for him.

I feel like a juggler in a circus.

Nonetheless, my commitment to the cooking project continues. I managed to make Herb Butter today. Haven't used it, but I made it. This closes out the Four Essential Sauces chapter in Part I. Yippee! So, I got SOMETHING accomplished today other than basic life maintenance. Not enough, but something.

48 recipes completed; 257 to go

Wednesday, February 03, 2010

Day 71 - Brussels Sprouts

Pan-Fried Lamb Chops - p.120
Sauteed Brussels Sprouts with Bacon and Onions - p. 295

Yes, I know. There has been a gap. House guest. Cold. General headless-chickenitis. Poor Maizie Jane Valentine is now suffering from a urinary tract infection. There has been lots of housework to accomplish. Lots of NCHS work to accomplish. Lots of emails. Randy is having knee surgery tomorrow (at last), so I'm trying to prepare a bit for that by otherwise clearing my calendar for the weekend. I think it's called life. I haven't cooked. Or at very least haven't cooked much. A couple grilled cheese sandwiches a la TAOSF sans laminated sage leaves.

You know what? Yesterday I was running errands late into the early evening. I knew that Randy wouldn't be home for dinner. I hadn't eaten much all day. I tried to talk myself into stopping somewhere for a bite, and failed. I'd rather wait until I'm home and eat my own cooking. How weird is that?

Lamb chops. No one really talks about what to do with lamb chops other than grill them. This is February. Not prime grilling season. So, I pan-seared them and finished them in the oven (since they were about 7/8" thick). Nice change from pork chops, but I guess I actually prefer pork chops. I'm not counting this as a new recipe, just another protein that can be pan-fried.

We bought a small mountain of brussels sprouts at the Farmers' Market Saturday. They are at the height of their season here, massively plentiful and really inexpensive. Cheap, actually. They keep well. We love them. Tonight they were boiled, then sauteed with bacon and onions. Very rich. Very depth-of-winter. And it IS the depth of winter here. We're only getting up into the high 50s. Pity, isn't it?

Tomorrow is nick tuck day for Randy's right knee. Poor baby. And Randy will be in sad shape, too. Think good thoughts about Maizie; she's a pretty miserable kitty right now. We're waiting for those antibiotics to do their job.

47 recipes completed; 258 to go