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The No Grocery Store Challenge Day 15: The Lunch Crisis (and a plug for paper)

This post, and all posts until I get caught up are made possible by this

My trusty Moleskine notebook.  I’ve carried one of these EVERYWHERE for the last 15 years.  I know it’s old school, but for me sometimes its easier to just write things down.  Yes, I have a smartphone.  Yes, I have a netbook. Yes, I have a tablet.  But more than that I have a love of well crafted papers, the weight of a pen, and cursive writing.  So for as long as there will be Moleskine notebooks, there will be one on my person at all times.

***Now, back to our regularly scheduled programing.***

Two weeks in and I’ve hit my first crisis.  No bread for Lil Dude’s lunch.  I had made some as usual then my husband, the starch whore, sliced it up and served it with dinner.

Now I know that’s commonplace in most homes, but  I was not raised in a “Bread home.”  Vietnamese people don’t eat bread with dinner.  They have bread.  Thanks to the French, they have great bread.  And they use it for sandwiches.  It’s not served with dinner, especially if there’s already another starch on the table.  And, surprise, there usually is.  D was raised in a Welsh/French Canadian home so there was always bread at every meal.  So for 12 years now we’ve been having the bread argument.  If he wants bread for dinner he has to say something in advance and I’ll grab him dinner bread, but stay out of my sandwich bread.  It’s for sandwiches.  And discovering I’m out of sandwich bread when I go to make a sandwich because he needed toast to go with his pasta (the most mind boggling of combinations in my world, by the way) makes me somewhat homicidal.  Apparently not homicial enough because he’s still here and I was still without sandwich bread.

In addition to there being no bread there were no frozen chicken nuggets, corndogs or fish sticks to fall back on.  Nor were there any tortillas for quesadillas.  And, because you’re never going to have a lunch crisis when you’re actually running ahead of schedule I didn’t have time to make pasta either.  At this point I’m staring at a can of black beans and thinking “yeah, he’ll eat those without cheese or tortillas.”  When the reality is that black beans are simply a carrier vehicle for shredded cheddar, and only when wrapped in a flour tortilla as far as he’s concerned.  At this time it also occurred to me that I spent at least 5 years of my life living on the same bologna sandwiches every day because that’s what mom made for lunch.  Chicken Nuggets didn’t even exist when I was Lil Dude’s age.  Corn Dogs were carnival food until the Der Weinerschnitzel came to town. Vietnamese moms do not buy fishsticks because they buy real fish, so those were not part of our world.  And pasta was the only dinner that never had any leftovers.

All of which lead me to one conclusion-someone in this house was spoiled when it came to lunches.

Me.

Open the box, throw it in the toaster oven, set the timer, dump it in the thermos and out the door.  Fun stuff he’ll eat with minimal effort on my part.  But the reality is, making a lunch from scratch isn’t much harder.  And even if my corndogs are organic and vegetarian, it’ s still a corndog.  Sweet corn batter deep fried and on a stick made only slightly more healthy with a tofu dog is still junk.  It’s still overly processed.  It’s still creating a fondness for fast food.  And it needs to stop in this house.

But I’m still without a lunch and we’re still late.  One deep breath and a look into the cupboard later, we had lunch.

Those organic crackers left over from Disneyland with sun-butter and honey with a CSA apple and dried mango.  The Convenience gods saved me this time.  And my homicidal ranting must have improved because I haven’t seen one slice of bread hit the dinner table in a week.  But now we’re out of crackers.  Thanks to Stef at The Cupcake Project, that’s about to change as well.

Home Made “Ritz” Crackers

  • 2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 3 tsp baking powder
  • 1 tbsp sugar
  • 1/2 tsp + another 1/2 tsp salt for topping
  • 6 tbsp cold unsalted butter + 3 tbsp unsalted butter, melted
  • 2 tbsp vegetable oil
  • 2/3 cup water
  1. Preheat oven to 400 F.
  2. Put the flour, baking powder, sugar, and 1/2 tsp of salt in the food processor.
  3. Pulse to combine.
  4. Add cold butter a few small pats at a time, and pulse to combine.
  5. Add vegetable oil.  Pulse to combine.
  6. Add water a little bit at a time.  Pulse to combine after each addition.  The dough should start to form a ball.
  7. Roll dough out as thin as you can.  Mine ended up being all different thicknesses.  Don’t sweat it.  They are homemade!  If you are really concerned, Jeffrey had luck using a pasta maker to make the dough all one thickness – great idea!
  8. Use cookie cutters to cut the dough out.  You can make them Ritz-shaped or any shape that you like.
  9. Poke holes in the dough in the Ritz pattern or any pattern you like (smiley faces would be fun!).  Keep in mind that the holes are not just decorative; they help the crackers to bake correctly – so be sure to poke some
  10. Bake the crackers on a parchment- or Silpat-lined baking sheet for ten minutes or until the crackers just begin to brown.
  11. While the crackers are baking, melt the remaining butter and mix in the remaining salt (Some people said that my crackers weren’t salty enough.  Add more or less salt to your taste.)
  12. As soon as you remove the crackers from the oven, brush them with the salty butter
  13. Cool and eat!

Read more: http://www.cupcakeproject.com/2011/03/homemade-ritz-crackers-recipe.html#ixzz1pAiHqY5Y

 

No Grocery Store Challenge Day 14: The OTHER dish best served cold

Humble Pie

I unpacked my CSA Box yesterday and at the bottom, under a head of lettuce, a bunch of spinach, and a bunch of collard greens was a 1/2 filled pint basket of Strawberries.  7 berries to be exact.

After a quick run to the side of the house to make sure my strawberries weren’t also in need of picking I had to call the farm and figure out what exactly was going on.  Turns out that a farm in Oxnard they exchange produce with has strawberries coming in due to the winterless winter so they sent some up.  As my CSA had run out of the promised avocados, they gave the shorted boxes strawberries.  7 little strawberries.  Just enough for Lil’ Dude’s lunch tomorrow.

So, I’m still right.  WE (the SF Bay area) do not get strawberries until April.  But, thanks to global warming and Southern California winters with an average temp of 70, you can get organic strawberries in March.

And that should scare us.

The No Grocery Store Challenge Day 10: Crust-less Quiche

Crustless Quiche

Looks good, don’t it?!

Back on day 8 I mentioned that I was going to use the spinach in my box for my crust-less quiche.  This is one of my favorite meals to make, and one of the family’s favorite meals to eat.  It’s takes a whopping 3 minutes to prepare, 30 minutes to cook and it is so forgiving of under measuring and over cooking I’m often reluctant to give measurements because they truly don’t matter.  As for ingredients, I can almost guarantee that you will have on hand what it takes to make a crustless quiche at all times.  You can make it this in a pie pan, a round cake pan, or a muffin pan (which is great for kids lunches).  You can have it for breakfast, brunch, lunch or dinner, and it’s the perfect way to clean out your fridge so nothing goes to waste.  By not having a crust, you save a gazillion grams of fat, a ton of work, and you can make this gluten free simply by choosing to use a gluten free flour.  This also freezes well, both sliced or as muffins.

Crust-less Quiche

  • 2-4 eggs, beaten*
  • 1c dairy**
  • 1c flour***
  • 1-2c chopped meat, chopped veggies or both****
  • 1c shredded cheese (optional)*****
  • Salt, pepper…whatever your favorite seasoning is******
  1. Preheat oven to 425 degrees
  2. Dump everything in a bowl and mix well
  3. Bake30-35 minutes in a pie (or similar) dish
Too easy, right?  
*:You can use as little as two eggs in this dish.  I use 4 because it’s more forgiving of my over measuring of veggies.  But if you’re just doing eggs and cheese you can get away with two eggs.
**: 1 c dairy can be 1c milk, cottage cheese, yogurt, sour cream, cream cheese or any combination of the aforementioned.  I make this frequently with the remnants of all/most of these things combined together and it’s great.  Honestly, if you have dairy to use up before it goes bad this is a great recipe.
***: I use whole spelt flour.  I have used Gluten free flour/baking mix and it worked just fine.
****: I say 1-2c, but it’s probably closer to 3 and entirely up to you.  Last night I used a bunch of spinach the size of my head, two big fist-fulls of some diced procuittio we had in the freezer and 1/2 a bag of shredded cheddar.  If you use frozen spinach, let it defrost and dump the whole big bag (liquid and all) straight in.  I usually make this quiche when i notice my fridge is being overrun by leftovers or I need to burn through my CSA box.  If you’re using a lot of “wet” veggies-veggies that release a lot of water when they cook like mushrooms or summer squash-cook or blanch them first to get some of that water out.  I frequently saute my veggies with onion and reserve the liquid that cooks off to add to the quiche if it’s looking to thick when I’ve combined everything.
*****:  Cheese is optional…just not in this house.  Lil Dude loves just cheese (for cheesey pie) and he loves it in our “Green Eggs and Ham muffins” (spinach, cheese and diced ham crustless quiche baked in a muffin tin.)  And don’t limit yourself to shredded cheddar.  Feta, olives, spinach and sun dried tomatoes make a yummy Greek pie.  Swiss, bacon and onion make the classic Quiche Lorraine (I add mushrooms.) You get the point.
******:Don’t limit yourself to dry seasonings either.  Pesto makes a great quiche (and is the secret ingredient in my Green Eggs and Ham version.)  So do salsa and marinara.  You can get real creative and use up your home made sour cream dips to get the dairy and the seasoning in one shot. Tzatziki is another option.  I wouldn’t use any dips with mayo.  Just sour cream ones.

The No Grocery Store Challenge Day 9: Today…

(Collective groan in 3…2…)

…The milkman cometh

(…1.)

My weekly Dairy Delivery

(Admit it.  You would have said the same thing.)

Years ago I lived in Windsor, U.K. for 3 months.  I was there for work and my office was a tiny basement room in a business building that was once a brothel across from the famous Windsor Castle.  Every day I was there I could count on 3 things.   (1) The tourists would line up in front of my window to watch the changing of the guard march past and into the castle grounds.  (2) Exactly 2 minutes after the first audible notes from a guardsman’s bagpipe one of the office girls would bring me a cup of tea. (3) The milk in my tea had been delivered that morning by the milkman.  Of these 3 sure things, I was most enchanted by the milkman.

The kitchen fridge in our building (Castle Hill House, which housed 10 companies) was about the same size as the one I had in my college dorm room and it didn’t need to be much bigger.  If the office girls brought lunch, they brought it in insulated bags which they kept upstairs at their desk.  And the milkman delivered just enough milk to get us through the day. I was usually in the building first so I could touch base with my home office in California so I’d pick up the tiny wire basket set on the stairs to the front door and take it down stairs with me.  Every day there would be one pint bottle of lowfat and one half-pint bottle of whole (cream top) milk each with their shiny foil tops.  Some mornings the milk might even be warm-a testament to its freshness.

Just a block away, across the High Street and half way down Peascod was one of the UK’s largest retailer’s, Marks and Spencer.  The entire back half of the store was foodstuffs; an amazing gleaming tribute to all things mass produced and individually wrapped.  I,and many other office folk, frequently made lunch of their handy, inexpensive sandwiches.  (Unlike packaged sandwiches  in the US, a packaged sandwich from M&S is made fresh and delivered that day.)  You could get it all there, including milk in coated paper cartons.  Shelf stable milk that would be good for the next year in your cupboard at that.  Curious about why they didn’t just grab the milk down the street to ensure there was always some on hand Cass, the building manager said to me (in her thick brogue) “Would you drink that stuff?!  That’s not right that UTH milk.  Think about it.  What do you have to do to milk to make it so it stays drinkable in a BOX you leave on a SHELF?!  I’ll take mine as close to straight from the cow as possible, thank you.  And our milk just can’t compare to the cold stuff either.  Joey!  Run down to the M-n-S and grab us a bit of the cold milk so she can try it against the dairy’s milk.  You’ll see…there’s no compare.”

Cass was right.  And two and a half months later I was back in a country that had long since shunned the milkman and back to ultra pasturized and homogenized milk.  And milk was never quite the same after that.

Until I walked into my first Whole Foods 6 months later and found Strauss milk in glass bottles.  Local, fresh and with the cream floating on the top I was thrilled!  But, man, did I suck at remembering to bring the bottles back to the store for my $1.50 deposit refund.  So buying in paper or plastic containers just became easier.  And the quality suffered again.  Then I saw a truck rumble past my house with the words BAY AREA MILKMAN on the side.  Turns out Strauss was more than happy to allow this mom and pop operation buy directly from them and provide them with pick ups multiple times a week so they could provide a home delivery service.  I had been asked to pick up milk for Lil Dude’s preschool every week and that wasn’t really working with my schedule, or the kids rate of consumption.  So I hired the Milkman to deliver to the school.  Now every Thursday at school the kids wait for the arrival of the milkman to bring their milk.  And if the teachers need more milk, he carries extra in the truck.    Then when the challenge idea came up, I hired him to deliver to the house.  Best move I’ve ever made.  I’m actually saving money by NOT running to Whole foods once a week for milk and getting sucked into buying 10 other things I didn’t really need.  Add learning to make my own yogurt and creme fraiche (fancy sour cream) and the savings just keep coming!

“I’ll take mine as close to straight from the cow as possible, thank you.”  Cheers, Cass.

No Grocery Store Challenge Day 8: Grocery Day!

Yay!  Groceries!  And without leaving the house.

This big beautiful box of goodness was on my doorstep by breakfast thanks to the wonderful folks at Capay Organic.   Unlike most CSAs where you need to pick up your box from a drop house their CSA, Farm Fresh To You, delivers to your door.  But that wasn’t the deciding factor in choosing them.  In the summer we grow most of our own vegetables and I needed a CSA which would allow me to switch to a “fruit only” option. As the mother of a son, it helped that the farm and CSA were run by the family MATRIARCH until she lost her battle with breast cancer in 2009 and is now run by her sons.

But maybe I should back up.

CSA stands for Community Supported Agriculture.  There are a few different CSA models but one thing is consistent, you’re buying direct from the farmer the freshest seasonal offerings they have.  You can also go visit your food.  Concerned about E-Coli in your salad?  You should be.  You should also be able to hop in the car and drive out to the farm to learn more.  Quality of your carrots not so great?  You should be able to call the farmer and let him or her know there’s a problem.  Want your food organic AND affordable?  Cut out the middle men (the grocery store, the distributor) and it’s amazing how much cheaper your food is.  Want your food fresh?  My food goes from the field to my box to my door.  No warehouses.  No forced ripening in ethylene gas chambers. Picture it; picked that morning, put into my box then driven to my door.  It’s only fresher when I grow it.

Having cancelled last week’s delivery because of our trip, we were running a bit low on fresh veggies.  I was down to a handful of carrots after making split pea soup last night.

So.  What’s in the box?

4 Fuji Apples

4 Navel Oranges

3 large bunches Bok Choy

1.5lbs Pearl Potatoes

3 bunches Broccoli

2 large Leeks

1 bunch Spinach

1 bunch Leaf Lettuce

1 bunch Radishes

3 small heads Endive

Cost: $31.50 including delivery

The dairy comes tomorrow and I will need to make a trip to the farmer’s market this week for celery, walnuts, and cabbage.  But then I’m done shopping for the week.   The Bok Choy will become a stir fry.  We ate 1 bunch of broccoli tonight and we’ll have the other two next week.  The spinach is going into my crustless quiche.  The endive will get braised (with pancetta!) and served with polenta.  The leeks I could cook with the potatoes for soup, but will likely go into Welsh Chicken…see how easy it is to plan around what you get instead of what you want?  As a cook, I love the Iron Chef-like challenge of the CSA.

Next: Battle Orange (cause, boy, do I have a LOT of oranges.)

No Grocery Store Challenge Day 7: Yeast Failures


Yeast Failure #3

 

The first thing I ever tried to cook on my own was Jello.

Who can tell me what’s wrong with that sentence?

That’s right, you don’t cook Jello.  You dissolve it in hot water, cool it with cold water then stick it in the fridge to set up.  There is no cooking involved.  Needless to say, cooking Jello does not produce the anticipated results.  Moreover, being an inattentive cook while cooking jello will screw up your mom’s pot and get you in trouble.  FURTHERMORE, it will put you right off of cooking for a very long time.

Then, came my first solo apartment and my first home without cable TV since I was 4 years old.  I was in my 20′s and  (1) had very little cash, (2) was frequently hung over on Saturday mornings and (3) in need of an inexpensive hobby that didn’t involve alcohol (see #2.)  The thing about being hung over on a Saturday AM in an apartment with no cable is that you’re pretty much left with public television (unless you are under the age of 10 and can stand the Saturday AM cartoon marathon.)  In the bay area that is KQED and on Saturday mornings in 1994 it was back to back cooking shows from the time you staggered into the living room until you’d emptied that 12-cup coffee pot.  Thanks to an endless stream of Jacques Pepin, Julia Child, Martin YanLidia Bastianich and about a dozen more talented chefs, I picked up a new hobby and some new skills.  I learned how to chop without loosing a digit.  I learned how to poach a fish.  I learned how to braise, roast, julienne, chiffonade, spin a thread, whip a stiff peak, whip a soft peak, the difference between barbequeing and grilling and how to cut a mango…among other things. Net-net: I learned how to cook.

I will toot my own horn here and say that I am an excellent cook.  I am afraid of no ingredient, cuisine, technique, dietary restriction or kitchen appliance.  I have a juicer, a stand mixer, a food processor, a yogurt incubator, a dehydrator, a crock pot, a deep fryer, an oven that has regular and convection settings, a tagine, and a burr grinder.  All of which help me make the most amazing creations.

And then there’s the bread machine.

Now, I had borrowed a friend’s years ago and it was fine.  Then we bought the one we have and used it for a while no problem.  But now that I actually NEED this thing to work.  I can’t make a decent loaf of bread consistently to save my life.  Three of the last five loaves have gone straight to the trash bin because they collapsed to the point of being concave and were insanely dense.  The one pictured above is 1/2 the height it should be and tastes like dirt.  I think it’s the flour.  The last 3 loaves were made with Organic wheat bread flour from Whole Foods.  But I’m thinking the bin may have been mislabeled.  Bread Machine peeps, chime in.  I’m getting desperate.

So, until I can get to a co-op to replace the flour Lil Dude will have to get used to Mommy’s special cider bread.  This is the quickest bread on the planet and one of my go to breads for soup night.   Thankfully, Lil Dude loves it even if I can’t use his dinosaur sammie cutter on it.

Cider Bread

  • 3c Flour ( I use whole spelt)
  • 1T Baking Powder
  • 2T Sugar
  • 1t Salt
  • 1 12oz-ish bottle of hard cider
  • 2T Honey
  • 2T melted butter
  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees
  2. In a large bowl combine the first four ingredients
  3. Add the cider and honey and mix well
  4. In a standard loaf pan pour 1T melted butter and coat the bottom of the pan
  5. Pour in the batter
  6. Top with the remaining 1T of melted butter.  DO NOT COMBINE
  7. Bake 50 minutes

Want it vegan?  Substitute the honey for agave nectar and the butter for your favorite butter substitute (we like Earth Balance Organic.)  Reminding you of Beer Bread?  That’s cause it is.  But I can’t do wheat, so I use cider.  But if beer is what you have on hand, go for it!

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