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"Tell me, what is it you plan to do with your one wild and precious life?" ~ Mary Oliver

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homemade cheese crackers, (round three!) . . .

cheese stars for Anna

Here’s Round Three attempt to make cheese crackers for our granddaughter, A., who’s looking at exams soon at JHU where she is a sophomore. When she was a freshman, she told me that her favorite snack was Cheezit crackers. I sent her a bunch but this year, I saw Ree Drummond (Pioneer Woman) make homemade cheese crackers for her daughter, Paige, who’s a freshman at college. She made hers by cutting squares with a hole made in the middle with a skewer. My first attempt looked terrible but tasted good.

The second batch that I made this past weekend didn’t taste good because I used a different kind of cheese which was already grated (big mistake) and I added too much seasoning salt and cayenne pepper. They were so hot I didn’t use the other half batch of the dough.

This time, I went back to using 8 oz. of Vermont Cabot Seriously Sharp Cheddar Cheese in a block that I grated myself. A stick of very cold unsalted butter cut up, one cup flour, 1/2 teaspoon salt, 1/2 teaspoon seasoned Lawry’s garlic salt and a pinch of cayenne pepper and 2 tablespoons ice water are the rest of the ingredients for this recipe. The mixing is easy, but the rolling and cutting out takes a little care and time. (Plus I forgot to make a hole in the middle with a skewer this time but they turned out crisp enough.)

After the butter and cheese are mixed (pulse until grainy) in a Cuisinart, add one cup of flour and seasonings; process to mix and add 2 tablespoons of ice water. It will process into a ball of dough. Wrap the dough into plastic wrap and chill for an hour. Roll out half of the dough to 1/8 inch thick and cut in squares with a pizza cutter or with a star cookie cutter. Make a hole in the center with a skewer (if you remember) and bake at 350 degrees for 12 minutes plus or minus.

They’re tasty! The cheese tasted good and next time I’ll add a pinch more cayenne pepper, having put too much in the last time and too little this time.

The only problem with them is that you can’t eat just a couple. And soon, they’re all gone!

Once they are completely cooled, I’ll scoop them into ziploc bags and stash them into the freezer. Tomorrow, I’ll pack them frozen into a small priority mailing box and send the cheese crackers to A. at school. Hope she likes ’em!star stash

 

 

 

a rag doll for Christmas . . .

doll with new dressHere’s a photo of a “Waldorf”-type doll that we are giving to our five year old granddaughter for Christmas! (I don’t think she has access to this blog as yet so thought I’d post a sneak preview here.)

Made a couple of outfits for her today which entailed digging out my old sewing machine and learning all over again how to wind a bobbin and thread a sewing machine (Youtube was a lifesaver!) I had to use a magnifying glass and tweezers to thread the needle though.

It’s been over forty years since I did this for my daughters! Thank God our other granddaughter is at Johns Hopkins University! Yeah!

dress #2!

christmas plantings . . .

Caitlin's planter reduxSometimes I find myself holding on to things that were given to us at Christmas one year and refresh them with new plantings. Here’s a box with “Joy” that Caitlin and Tom gave us a few years ago (when we made the Judy Rodgers’ roast chicken with bread salad for Christmas Eve.) Here it is replanted with a few narcissus paperwhite bulbs.

And, at the Stop and Shop in Shrewsbury this afternoon, I happened upon a small poinsettia similar to those impressionistic ones that I posted the other day.little poinsettia in iron urn

a lovely poinsettia bloom. . .

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These are my favorite variety of poinsettias.

I don’t know if they have a name but they look like someone waved an impressionist magic wand over them. Kind of scarce too – so when I saw these at Stop & Shop this week, I had to get them!

They’re in a flower cutting basket that reflect in the mirror behind it.

Christmas must be approaching!

a ‘not-turkey’ dinner . . .

Dinner 4

Tonight I prepared a one-dish supper similar to Japanese Sukiyaki:

  1. Sauteed fresh scallions, garlic, spinach, bean sprouts and snow peas- added a little soy/mirin/dashi sauce; set aside.
  2. Soaked 2 packets of dried cellophane noodles until soft, cut into pieces and sauteed in clean pan with a little vegetable oil – added 1 tablespoon soy and mirin with a dab of sugar – mixed well and set it aside. dinner 1
  3. Marinated two thin-sliced ribeye pieces of beef in soy and mirin – heated grill on top of stove, seared over high heat, took off grill and added a little light brown sugar – then seared the other side of the beef until just cooked, rare to medium rare and removed to a cutting board. Dinner 2
  4. In skillet, mixed together the fried cellophane noodles with the vegetables and heated until steaming, then put into a shallow serving bowl.
  5. Sliced the rare ribeye into strips and placed on top of the vegetable noodle mixture.
  6. Served and ate with chopsticks along with a very cold beer.

“Not-turkey” never tasted so good!

 

a happy Thanksgiving . . .

Josie at our 9-foot teak doors

Josie at our 9-foot teak doors

josie whistling with our canaries . . .

. . . whistling with our canaries . . .

josie at ease and growing so fast!

at ease and growing so fast!

josie at the harpsichord

at the harpsichord

josie papa george 2

josie papa george

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

having fun with Papa George

a holiday salad, remembered . . .

peeled, seeded pink grapefruit, radicchio, dates and pistachio nuts. . . holiday salad

“the king and I” . . .

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When the Broadway revival of “The King & I” opened earlier this year, I noticed with some interest that it won four Tony awards: for best musical revival, best leading actress, best supporting actress and best costumes. Since it is one of the very few musicals that I grew up with, I thought it might be worthwhile to try and go see it. Soon after the Tonys, we got tickets for a show in November, six months ahead of time.

FullSizeRenderWell, this weekend, the time had come. It entailed a 4 1/2 hour bus ride to NYC at 8:30 a.m., getting a bite to eat and getting to Lincoln Center for the 2 p.m. matinee. Then, getting out around 5 p.m., looking for a taxi on a Saturday and getting to Port Authority bus station in time to make the long trek to gate 83 and the 6 p.m. bus back to Hartford via New Haven and New Britain, then transferring to a bus to Worcester due in at 10:30 p.m. If you’re reading this, your reaction might have been similar to mine – which was, “I sure hope this show is worth it!”

We arrived at the Vivian Beaumont Theatre where the cabbie dropped us off at the street level elevator that took us right up to the plaza entrance of the theatre. Inside was medium sized theater and our loge seats were located in the front row balcony center so close that we didn’t need the opera binoculars we had brought along. (Many thanks to George for treating us to these great seats too!) In fact, when the show began, the stage FLOOR extended out over the orchestra pit and it was like viewing a theatre in the round.inside the theater

I was relieved to see that Kelli O’Hara was singing the lead because she had won the Tony for leading lady. But as the orchestra played the overture, I realized for the first time that one of my all-time favorite songs from the movie “American President” (when Michael Douglas dances with Annette Bening) was originally part of the libretto for “The King and I” and called “I Have Dreamed.”

The entire cast performed at the same high level as Kelli O’Hara; the sets were incredibly beautiful and the energy of the entire ensemble was one of relaxed joy and pleasure in performing this wonderful show for the audience. Especially impressive was the “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” ballet featuring little Eliza running away from the evil Simon LaGree – hopping gracefully on one foot. It was truly wonderful.

So, was it worth it? You betcha! And we found a taxi back to the bus station by walking two blocks so that we could catch one of the cabs going downtown around 5:10 p.m. We sat in traffic for over 20 minutes but made it just in time to board our 6 p.m. bus.

And this morning, I discovered a recording of “I Have Dreamed” arranged by John Williams which he conducted and recorded with the Boston Pops Orchestra. I made copies of it to play in our cars and gave one to Caitlin for her trip home.

Sigh. Life is (so) good!

homemade cheezit crackers! . . .

DSCN8716Nobody in their right mind would make cheezit crackers from scratch, right? Wrong. Only someone whose granddaughter loves Cheezit crackers and then saw a cooking show where a Mom made them for her away-at-college freshman daughter would take it on. It looked easy enough online.

But there were pitfalls along the way. The dough, made with high quality grated cheddar cheese, unsalted butter, flour, spices and ice water needed to be blended in a food processor and then chilled for half an hour. That was the easy part, believe it or not. The process for rolling out and then cutting squares of uniformly thick/thin dough was more challenging. Making a hole in the middle with a skewer wasn’t hard. But then getting the little critters off the mat and on to a cookie sheet so they didn’t touch was, well, haphazardly successful.

The first batch was unacceptable because I hadn’t used a ruler to make the straight lines so that the crackers were uniformly SQUARE. They looked terrible, to be honest, but they tasted great! It must have been the Lawry’s garlic salt and pinch of cayenne that I added that gave the crackers a little kick!

The second batch was mildly more successful from an appearance point of view. I rolled out the dough and with a ruler, cut the dough with an antique crimp-edged rolling tool. That made the edges look nice but they still stuck to the sili mat when I went to line them up onto the baking sheets. This time, they didn’t stick together and they also tasted good – very cheesy, crunchy and with a bite at the end. I let them cool and then put them in plastic containers along with other goodies (dry roasted, unsalted nuts, dried fruit, giant Hershey bars, green tea and chai teabags) already packed into a USPS carton.

As I was making them, I swore to myself that this was the only time I’d go to this much trouble for so little return. After tasting them after they came out of the oven, I wasn’t so sure. Honestly, they taste so much better than Cheezits from the grocery store. I think I might make cheese straws with them the next time and forego the itty-bitty tiny squares. Or make bigger square crackers. Who knows? The aroma in our kitchen was heavenly when all was said and done!

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intermittent fasting . . . and homemade vegetable soup!

Now that I have been on a water fast for almost 3 days, I decided to try intermittent fasting as a possible new lifestyle to “have our cake and eat it too,” a way to eat what we love and yet watch our weight and our health.

It’s not that onerous: 5 days of regular eating (yay!) and 2 separate days of “fast” days – limited to 500 calories a day. After I started toting up the calorie count for sample 500 calorie day menus as a guide for myself, I rediscovered that homemade vegetable soup is one of the most nourishing, taste-filled and satisfying meal that only contains about 80-100 calories per cup. Even if you have a large bowl of it, it wouldn’t exceed 150 calories.

simmering vegetable soup before cabbage is added. . .

simmering vegetable soup before cabbage is added. . .

So this morning, I set about making a large pot of soup that would be healthy, tasty and appetizing. I have made vegetable soup often in the past with a beef shin bone to add flavor so am used to making big pots of vegetable soup, especially when it’s snowing hard outside or one of us feels like we are coming down with a cold or flu.

Today’s ingredients included a whole vidalia onion chopped, 4 stalks of celery, 6 carrots, 3 small summer squash (peeled and chopped,) low-sodium chicken broth, no-sodium beef bouillion, a packet of Lipton’s onion soup, a can of Del Monte no-salt diced tomatoes and distilled water to fill my very large soup pot.cabbage and farfalline

After it simmered down for an hour or so, I added a whole small cabbage sliced thin and a cup of tiny farfallini egg noodles to thicken the broth. I tasted it when setting the soup to simmer to see how the broth mixture was coming along, fearing that perhaps the Lipton’s onion packet might make it too salty. Thankfully, it was mild and tasted like a sweet vegetable broth. That might be due to the size of my pot and the amount of water (more than half) that makes up the soup stock.

Townhouse low-fat crackers and some blue cheese spread on top might be a nice accompaniment to eat along with a cup of homemade vegetable soup. All told, the count for soup, crackers and cheese would still be less than 200 calories per meal! Leaving another 300 calories left in the 500 calorie fasting day quota!

A soft-boiled egg and tomato juice for breakfast, vegetable soup, crackers and cheese for lunch and a romaine caesar salad with four medium size shrimp (only 23 calories!) for dinner comes within the 500 calorie limit. It hardly tastes, nor feels like “fasting” to me!  Given my nature, what works for me is to experiment with these 500 calorie menus comprised of food that we already like to eat but in smaller portions.

During my research, I was flabbergasted to discover that one packet of ramen (Sapporo Ichiban) was a whopping 463 calories and 63 grams of carbs, just by its boring self! I had thought maybe a noodle dish with baby spinach and shrimp might work but apparently not. Boring as it sounds, looking up what the calorie/carb counts are for food we like has been an eye-opening exercise. I’m going to continue to fashion 500 calorie menus for myself so as to make the 2 days off a week easier to take. Who knows, maybe we’ll even come to enjoy them as much as the other 5 days of the week!

After we had it for lunch, this large pot of vegetable soup yielded 6 individual servings and 3 additional quart size containers for sharing, all stored in the freezer. I guess I won’t have to make another batch anytime soon! Homemade vegetable soup is healthy, nourishing, tasty and economical to make in abundance.

Meanwhile, back to knitting a Noro yarn tunic for myself and taking care of some business this week in New Hampshire on Wednesday.

Bon Appetit on a smaller and more manageable scale!