Showing posts with label American röte grütze. Show all posts
Showing posts with label American röte grütze. Show all posts

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Cheap Chinese

What do you do with one pork chop?   This was my quandry.  It was a meaty boneless chop, and I decided to make an Asian dish.  Didn't get around to cooking the rice until late, but I did fry up two  pieces of bacon and scramble an egg.  I had a few chicken scraps that I had leftover from a rotisserie chicken, what our supermarket calls Five Buck Cluck, because on Thursday, it's reduced to $5.00.  
We had some mushrooms, celery, various kinds of onions, and I bought some green beans for 99 cents a pound, the remainder of which will be used tomorrow.  Cooked up the rice and started sauteing.    And slicing and chopping.  Started to smell really good.  Added some sesame oil.  Parboiled the beans, yada, yada.  Made a nice salad of romaine and oranges.   Concocted some broth from the pork chop frying and the bottom of the chicken container.  Thickened with a bit of cornstarch.  Added a dash of Chinese hot pepper sauce and some soy.  Final touch was the bacon, egg and a few sliced almonds.  Yum!  Enough left for lunch. 


I saved a few mushrooms to put into the Swiss steak tomorrow.   We do eat well, but I am finding it difficult to buy a week's groceries for under $100.00.  We are all stocked up on frozen items now, and have some meat in the freezer.  Plenty of pasta and canned soups.   Company coming for a week the first of the month, so some extras have been purchased.  Still . . 


Round steak on sale for $3.39  per pound.  I  pound it, flour it, and saute it in some canola oil.  Add an onion, the mushrooms (remember the mushrooms), an 8 oz. can of tomato sauce, some dried marjoram, and plenty of salt and pepper.  We'll have asparagus, green beans, mashed potatoes and a salad.  Good deal on romaine today.  My sales slip said I saved $35.00.  Not too bad.  


It's a struggle, isn't it?  I spend a lot of time looking at the specials and planning menus.  Of course it pays off in the long run, but the effort isn't fun.   We splurged on fresh rhubarb.  I'm taking an upside down rhubarb cake to a party on Saturday, and we'll have some rhubarb cooked with strawberries, raspberries and cranberries.  


In Europe in the summer, esp. in Germany and Austria, there's a red fruit dessert called "rote gruetze" or red groats.  Very healthy and nutricous.  We never find red currants here, but we concoct our own take on the dessert and it's invariably delicious.  


I worked in the garden today.  Almost 80 degrees and a beautiful day.     The beds are ready for planting, and I'm doing just that tomorrow:  mesclun lettuces, spinach and dill.  The lilac that took a direct hit from a big oak during Hurricane Irene is looking pretty good.  My wild ginger is spreading and the heath has bloomed all winter, a first.  Crocus blooming and daffodils ready.  Forsythia coming soon.  I never remember a spring this early.  Somebody steals the suet out of the bird feeder every night.  Ants in the house.  Spring!  




The Cheeseparer


The orange cat constantly escapes but is pretty good about coming home soon. 

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Rethinking Diets

The weight loss has been minimal.  Probably too much wine and then there's the dark chocolate after dinner.  Significant Other has lost 5 pounds, but I'm only down 2.  We had steak (leftover) and eggs for breakfast with slices oranges and blueberries.  Truly delicious, but diet?  Who knows?  Ate the first lettuces from the garden that reseeded themselves this spring.  Do not decline what nature offers. Free lettuce?  Yes! 

I'm still not ready for the spray on "I can't believe it's not butter."  I sure as hell can believe it's not.  There is a time in life when one becomes too old to believe all the lies we hear daily. 


The sun rose bright and shiny this morning, for the first time in literally weeks.  Even bad news on the scale cannot impinge on my good mood.  We'll definitely go for a walk.  I have the season's first mosquito bite and am hoping it's not one of those toxic mosquitoes bearing awful diseases.  Sprayed myself thoroughly to work in the yard, but he found a spot under the watchband.  Go figure. 


We have yummy (for them) stuff to feed the Highland cattle.  No calves this spring.  Boo hoo!  I do believe the old cows "cowed" the young bulls.  


Here is a spring tonic:  find a friend with some rhubarb and bum a few sticks.  Chop up, cook with a little sugar, a very small amount of water, and any other red fruits you can find.  Strawberries and blueberries and even raspberries are on sale here this week.  A few frozen cranberries add pop.  Some grated orange rind does likewise.  Cook until all the fruits are soft and if you added too much water, thicken with a bit of cornstarch stirred into cold water and added to the fruit.  Let cool, chill and serve for dessert.  Good over cottage cheese.   A spoonful or two even works on shredded wheat.   Or on ice cream, but we're into low-fat frozen yogurt these days.  


Onward, 


The CheeseParer