It was a busy month in my kitchen. Winter is usually my best time for cooking, as the cold weather keeps me inside more. Here's a bit of what was going on last month:
Breakfasts:
- Huevos Rancheros, of a sort: Eggs poached with lemon vinegar, served with salsa, avocado, cheese, bacon, sliced tomatoes, and sour cream.
- Fruit salad (above) and French toast
- Pancakes with our home-canned strawberry syrup
- Fried eggs on English muffins, with avocado, sliced tomato, ham and sour cream. I learned this month that avocado can be frozen, so I now have some in my freezer that will make future meals easier.
- Oatmeal with West Virginia maple syrup.
- Homemade granola with fruit.
Our favorite dinners this month:
- Lentil-Sweet Potato Soup. Sounds strange but it was fantastic!
- Hearty penne pasta bake. I made a large batch of this and froze 4 8x8 aluminum pansful for days I have little time to cook.
- Pan-fried fresh trout, which was a gift from a friend who is a great fisherman, butternut squash I prepared and froze last month and a tossed salad. The squash was from last year's garden, and we had it stored in a cool dry place. We had a bushel and a half, and I knew it would go bad before we could use it all. A trick I learned online was to prick the squash skin with a fork and microwave it for 5 minutes or so. This softens it enough to make peeling easy. If you have ever peeled a butternut, you know how hard that is!
- Catfish fingers that were given to us, which I served with roasted red potatoes, and an apple, cranberry, celery and lettuce salad.
- Sloppy Joes: I froze this last fall when I needed to use up some ground venison. Served on toasted buns, with potato salad. I use my vintage chopper to make this salad so easy.
Other things from the cellar: grape juice, tomato juice, and apple cider; zucchini "pineapple" and canned pears for fruit salads, jams and jellies, pickles, pasta sauce, and salsa.
Baking: I didn't do much baking in March. I only made 2 quick breads: banana chocolate chip, and butternut chocolate chip with Hickory nuts (the last of these nuts sadly). Note to self: wait for the bread to cool before slicing, or the chocolate will smear!
Our chickens are laying well, 6 eggs a day from 8 hens. Our eggs probably cost more than even the expensive store ones if we figured up the cost of feed! But no matter, I like having my own eggs..
Garden: I planted peas, chard, spinach, potatoes and carrots. Lettuce, radishes and onions are up and growing well. Leeks are mulched and thriving.
A local high school show choir does an annual strawberry fundraiser, so I bought a flat of beautiful berries. I froze them, some for jam later on and some to eat in fruit salads, etc.
Foraging: my husband has been out looking for mollymoochers (morels to the rest of the world) and has been pretty lucky. We have had a couple meals with them, along with the dandelion greens I picked.
Such deliciousness. You can read about how I fixed both of these Spring treats in yesterday's post.
Linking to Sherry's Pickings. Go see what other folks have been cooking up!
That's about it for March, I think. I wonder what April will bring?
Lots of good meals!
ReplyDeleteI do like to cook!
DeleteThat all sounds and looks so delicious! I had mashed potatoes. Ingo made it with liver and apples, which I will never try. So just the mash. You left my mouth watering.
ReplyDeleteI could seriously live on mashed potatoes, I think. I live liver but never had it fixed with apples. I might have to find a recipe for that!
DeleteThis all looks fantastic (especially your breakfasts!) And what a great tip on the butternut squash. I have huge trouble with that one and it's required for one of my favorite soups. I'm always afraid I'll end up with one finger less when I approach it with a knife! Thanks!
ReplyDeleteWe like having a big breakfast, and since we don't usually eat until 10 or so, it's really brunch. We generally eat 2 meals a day.
DeleteWow! For us it is more like, “Shall we have fish sticks or chicken fingers tonight?”
ReplyDeleteLol, neither of those are ever in our freezer! I wouldn't mind something that easy to fix, though.
DeleteThat's some good eating at your house!
ReplyDeleteThanks, June! I am an old-time cook, can you tell?
Delete...you sure are a busy bee!
ReplyDeleteYou've been busy!
ReplyDeleteI like having my own eggs also! We have 9 hens and a rooster. And that lentil sweet potato soup does sound good, thanks!
ReplyDeleteI want some morels! The chocolate chip bread looks great.
ReplyDeleteSince retiring I am also eating breakfast around 10 and having two meals a day. I like it ! I also just bought a large batch of those fundraising strawberries and put most of them in the freezer.
ReplyDeleteSounds like a great month! How marvellous to have fresh fish gifted to you. I am envious :) Yay for choc chip bread! Thanks for joining in with us at IMK this month, and have a great April and Easter.
ReplyDeletesherry
I love the look of your fruit salad. I don't like any kind of melon so making your own is definitely the way to get a combination that you can actually enjoy!
ReplyDeleteI remember foraging for morels with my grandparents. My grandmother used to dip them in egg and flour and fry them. They were wonderful. Now they're almost a delicacy in some fine-dining restaurants.
ReplyDeleteMy aunt used to make the zucchini pineapple, too. My dad used to say, "I don't get it. Just buy pineapple!" LOL
I can't wait for us to get out in the garden here, but it's still pretty cold!
ReplyDeleteYou've prepared so many different dishes that I am amazed. The Lentil/Sweet potato soup sounds really tasty.
ReplyDeleteI wish I had access to those strawberries. It will be months before we see any (local) ones.
I am not a cook by choice, although I have been cooking, baking and preserving for many decades now. Your list is amazing; you can feed me anytime.
ReplyDeleteBest meal I have had this week was butternut squash ravioli. In a restaurant. Hardly ever happens.
Your food sounds good ...
ReplyDeleteWishing you happy April days.
All the best Jan