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What Are You Eating Today?

I ate the last bowl of this week's chili. I'm glad I didn't make a double batch because it wasn't as good as all my chili pots before now. Good enough to eat and enjoy with a salad and not waste it.

But now I'm kind of discombobulated as to what the next big pot will be. I happen, for various reasons, have way more ingredients at hand than I'm used to. I'm one of those people that you can't give a bunch of choices to! I'll be here all day trying to decide! Not kidding. :rofl:

One of the extra ingredients is five pounds of fresh chicken breast. I usually keep about one pound of rotisserie chicken that the store pulled off the bone and put into a container for me, and only when I know I'm going to be making something with chicken. I don't know what I was thinking. I was momentarily so chicken-stupid that it took me a while to remember I can just freeze it all. Derp. After hours of googling for chicken recipes. :rofl:

Also about 5,000 onions. I was sick of the store running out of sweet onions at the last minute and not giving me a suitable substitution option. So I ordered 6 fresh sweet onions, 4 yellow onions, and 2 red onions (online cart mishap doubled the quantity I intended) as well as a 3 lb bag of sweet onions and a 3 lb bag of yellow onions. And of course that's the order when the store had every kind of onion in existence in stock.

So, yeah, I see some baked onions in my future, and possibly some baked onion rings, but onions keep so I don't have to cook them all in one week.

Then some stuff I don't typically buy, like almonds, pepitas, walnuts, and dried cranberries. Oh, and frozen blueberries, cream cheese, fresh kale, and lemons. All stuff I can do plenty with in short order provided someone comes over to help make decisions. I know exactly who to talk to - my cousin. She excels in the leadership and organizational skills that I lack, and she always helps when I ask. :love_heart:

I am going to attempt to make a Queso dip today. Using this method a friend has shared.

So I dice a tomato and a small amount of onion (about 1/4) and cook until soft. Add a few tablespoons of salsa whatever spice level you like, turn temperature down then put about 1/2 container cream cheese and 1/2 container of sour cream and some grated cheese and heat until melted. Usually some salt and pepper. Maybe a tiny sprinkle of cumin and paprika.
Just... NOM.
 
A few years ago I bought an Indian cookbook to get deeper into Indian food. I found that many of the dishes were too complex for the time I have to cook with two kids, but Dal is about perfect for my vegetarian diet. Lentils spiced in any way you like, basically. After ordering Dal from our local Indian place a number of times I think I've mastered the dish now. Last night I did the following:

- Cooked red lentils - maybe about 0.75 cups dry
- 2 tbsp store-bought Garam Masala
- 2 tbsp Turmeric
- 3 tbsp Sriracha
- 1 tsp Garlic Powder
- 1 tsp Smoked Paprika
- Salt to taste

All of the proportions are only rough as I didn't actually measure any of it. This was the best Dal I've made to date. And that's really the secret of most high quality restaurants. These places could make a dish like the above, but they're usually trying to save on seasoning costs. So I can make myself a Dal that's better than any Indian place in our city in about 30 minutes by using a little extra seasoning.

Many of the recipes in the cookbook include actual vegetables in the Dal, but I'm typically using it for protein so am keeping it simple.
 
That looks really good.

I'll be eating chicken for a while. My health care insurance said "talk to a dietician and we'll give you $25 in grocery money through instacart." I thought, I would actually love to talk to a dietician for free! So I did, two appts now, and the rewards weren't too much of a pain to claim.

So I bought a bunch of chicken. The offered special prices for a few things and one of them was fresh chicken breasts, 5lb tray, freezer bags, and a few other things like some seasonings. Delivered

I've had two phone appts with a dietician, who is really chill and supportive, and both times I got the giant tray of chicken. I put each breast in a small zipper bag and then put four each into four freezer bags. I can eat them one by one and I'll be eating chicken for a while.

Feel free to share your favorite chicken recipe! :biggrina:
 
Saw this on facebook and I'm going to make it later today. No complete recipe, but enough info to play with and find a good recipe.

Cooked egg mayo:

4 boiled eggs with soft or medium yolk
Place in a food processor or blender together with
  • a dash of olive oil
  • half a lemon
  • 2 cloves of garlic
  • 1 dash of mustard, salt, pepper
and beat until creamy.
 
Saw this on facebook and I'm going to make it later today. No complete recipe, but enough info to play with and find a good recipe.

Cooked egg mayo:

4 boiled eggs with soft or medium yolk
Place in a food processor or blender together with
  • a dash of olive oil
  • half a lemon
  • 2 cloves of garlic
  • 1 dash of mustard, salt, pepper
and beat until creamy.
Sounds tempting. Let us know how it turns out.
 
Saw this on facebook and I'm going to make it later today. No complete recipe, but enough info to play with and find a good recipe.

Cooked egg mayo:

4 boiled eggs with soft or medium yolk
Place in a food processor or blender together with
  • a dash of olive oil
  • half a lemon
  • 2 cloves of garlic
  • 1 dash of mustard, salt, pepper
and beat until creamy.
Sounds tempting. Let us know how it turns out.
I thought I could make it without the recipe and ended up forgetting the lemon, but I can add that later. But it's really good. Doesn't taste like mayo as much as it tastes like deviled eggs or egg salad, but yeah, it's pretty good as I made it. I could eat it with a spoon!
 
Saw this on facebook and I'm going to make it later today. No complete recipe, but enough info to play with and find a good recipe.

Cooked egg mayo:

4 boiled eggs with soft or medium yolk
Place in a food processor or blender together with
  • a dash of olive oil
  • half a lemon
  • 2 cloves of garlic
  • 1 dash of mustard, salt, pepper
and beat until creamy.
Sounds tempting. Let us know how it turns out.
I thought I could make it without the recipe and ended up forgetting the lemon, but I can add that later. But it's really good. Doesn't taste like mayo as much as it tastes like deviled eggs or egg salad, but yeah, it's pretty good as I made it. I could eat it with a spoon!
This would probably be great on a BLT. Egg yolk is great on just about anything, except the front of my shirt. I quit regular mayo when I quit deli meat when I had my first colonoscopy. And after my vegan stint, mayo was just gross to look at. Actually, I was a Miracle Whip kid but we don't need to go there. I know that's a sensitive topic for some.
 
Just made some chicken mushroom coconut milk soup. It's richer than I normally make my soups, so a lot more calories, I'm sure, but so worth it. I only make these decadent soups and stews once in a blue moon. Plus I'm going to freeze most of this pot so I won't be eating rich mushroom soup every day.

chicken_mushroom_coconut-milk_soup.jpg

I used way more chicken than I needed. I was going to save some out for something else, but as I was dumping in into the soup, the whole container just seemed to be a good amount.

So now have three frozen chicken breasts thawing and I will cook and shred those tomorrow, then later or next day make something a bit healthier but recipe undecided at the moment. Gotta get a few groceries anyway. I was mad at myself for not having any spinach in the freezer. I usually have tons.

Anyway, turned out even better than I'd hoped. I looked over several recipes but I have no idea which one I ended up using, probably none of them. I was planning on making a roux but wasn't feeling it so I just relied on the aquafaba. Oh, yeah, I also added a whole, undrained can of chickpeas. Typically I drain them but wanted the water to help with thickening in lieu of the roux.
 
I'm on clear liquids all day in preparation for a procedure tomorrow morning, so this is my dinner for today.

Straight broth is really gross to me, so I sauteed up some onions, garlic, and radishes, added Mrs. Dash and some Italian seasonings. When they became soft and lovely, I added some soy sauce, water, and beef broth base. I let it simmer on low for about 20 minutes, then let it cool while I cleaned up the kitchen. Poured it through a strainer and placed the onions and radishes in the fridge to eat tomorrow with some rice or I might put it in the next soup or something. It was SO tempting seeing those radishes soften and onions turn translucent.

I had strained a couple cans of tomatoes for the juice. Not very appetizing to drink so I mixed it into the beef broth and made it even tastier. I started to buy some apple juice and popsicles and stuff, but I had plenty for today. I have a bunch of jello, so that will be my dessert.

Can't wait for tomorrow noon-ish when my niece will pick me up and take me to taco bell or something. My system's like, it's way too clean in here. Let's go to McDonald's! I actually don't like McDonald's that much, but after a liquid fast, anything sounds good. :)

436546836_795452925334868_8452844037561251949_n.jpg
 
I make this comfort food with eggs, polenta, sweet corn, onions or spring onions and whatever happens to be in the fridge.

Fry it in a little olive oil. Depending what's in it, it comes out as patties or else you have to stir it and it looks like scrambled eggs, and you eat it with a spoon.

So I made it up and put it in the fridge for the polenta to absorb the liquid. 8 hours later I added bacon and cooked some up for dinner.

Sitting in front of the TV with my bowl, my spoon and my glass of wine I remember I put tuna in the original mix.

I want to say "interesting" but I also want to say "won't be making THAT mistake again."
 
I made some souped up baked tomatoes for Christmas, and they ended up sticking in our rotation:

- Cut desired number of Roma Tomatoes in Half, place in a 9 inch glass dish
- Rub each of them with garlic paste, drizzle with fish sauce and balsamic vinegar
- Season with salt/pepper/dried Cilantro and anything else you want
- Bake for 20 minutes at 425

Only about 5 minutes to prepare and they make a great side.

I also made a caramelized onion / carrot dish that turned out pretty well, and did us for both family dinners.

I tweaked this a bit yesterday and threw some chopped Portobello mushrooms into the dish with the tomatoes to marinate.

I also baked the dish for 25 minutes at 400 and that seemed to cook the tomatoes a bit more evenly.
 
I learned something new today (thanks to The Flavor Bible): asparagus pairs well with eggs

I was looking up how to season some asparagus, and the book recommended putting it in an omelet. Coincidentally, I was planning on making eggs too so ended up with the following:

- fried a quarter of an onion for about 10 minutes
- chopped three cloves of garlic and fried for a little under a minute on medium low
- added two chopped roma tomatoes, two cups of steamed asparagus, and eight whisked eggs, so the egg would finish cooking the garlic via poaching
- seasoned with salt, pepper, and dill weed

The four year old devoured it which is usually the sign I'm looking for.
 
I learned something new today (thanks to The Flavor Bible): asparagus pairs well with eggs

I was looking up how to season some asparagus, and the book recommended putting it in an omelet. Coincidentally, I was planning on making eggs too so ended up with the following:
Ooh, that sounds good.
 
I learned something new today (thanks to The Flavor Bible): asparagus pairs well with eggs

I was looking up how to season some asparagus, and the book recommended putting it in an omelet. Coincidentally, I was planning on making eggs too so ended up with the following:

- fried a quarter of an onion for about 10 minutes
- chopped three cloves of garlic and fried for a little under a minute on medium low
- added two chopped roma tomatoes, two cups of steamed asparagus, and eight whisked eggs, so the egg would finish cooking the garlic via poaching
- seasoned with salt, pepper, and dill weed

The four year old devoured it which is usually the sign I'm looking for.
I don’t mind grilled asparagus with my eggs Benedict.
 
Big day so it’s pizza night. We have a few meals that are super quick and easy. I buy 4 mini pizza bases, spread some tomato paste, pepperoni and cheese. Add a baguette of garlic bread and that’s a substantial dinner for two or three. Takes 5 minutes to prepare, and 12 minutes to cook. If I have more time I add things like mushrooms, chopped roast pork etc, but not tonight!
 
I make this comfort food with eggs, polenta, sweet corn, onions or spring onions and whatever happens to be in the fridge.

Fry it in a little olive oil. Depending what's in it, it comes out as patties or else you have to stir it and it looks like scrambled eggs, and you eat it with a spoon.

So I made it up and put it in the fridge for the polenta to absorb the liquid. 8 hours later I added bacon and cooked some up for dinner.

Sitting in front of the TV with my bowl, my spoon and my glass of wine I remember I put tuna in the original mix.

I want to say "interesting" but I also want to say "won't be making THAT mistake again."
Comfort food is soup on a coldish day, which is today. Lots of grains, adding freekeh this time, and legumes. Also adding Brussels sprouts this time and a bag of mixed veggies and using chicken bone broth for stock. Now I need a good bread. Maybe tomorrow is bread day.
 
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