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Sunday Dinner

Many, many moons ago, the husband I and moved our then only child to Idaho. Husband had lived there when he was younger, and as luck would have it, his mom was still living there.

It was there, in the little two bedroom home we rented that I discovered the secret to making great tasting fried rice.

Growing up in San Francisco, I was spoiled with really great food. Not just Chinese, but every kind of food you can imagine. Luckily enough, most of these places were truly authentic and when we would go elsewhere, we sometimes found ourselves disappointed.

Most of the time I was able to duplicate the taste of food I cooked myself. The one thing I could never get right, was fried rice.

We would go to Kim Ling on Mission Street. My most favorite thing in the world to eat there was the barbecue pork fried rice. I was a very picky eater as a kid, so me finding something that I wouldn’t consider punishment to eat daily was a small feat.

At the time, we had been married for around 4 years. Husband worked evenings at a beer plant across town. We has one car.

Twin Falls is a pretty good sizes city, so often, I’d be loading the baby up in the night to go pick up the old man.

I tried my best to make food that wasn’t only nutritious, but that was tasty.

On the side, I delivered newspapers in our neighborhood. Naturally, I got the paper. One day, in the food section was a recipe for fried rice. I didn’t know what some of the stuff was or even looked like, but I made my way to the store to get what was needed.

That night, I made the greatest pot of fried rice I had ever made. It was perfection. It tasted like HOME.

The secret I had been missing ginger, but more than that SESAME OIL! Where had this been my entire life?? It was an life changing experience.

I tried to save the recipe and may have for a while, but these days, I just wing it.

Keep in mind, for this, I dont really measure, except for the ginger.

Ingredients:

5 slices thick cut bacon, chopped

3 green onions, chopped

Garlic, as many cloves as you feel the need to add, diced

1/2 tsp ginger

1 egg, whisked

Cooked rice (I cooked 2 cups of rice)

Sesame oil

Soy sauce

Here’s what I did:

You’ll need a big pan.

Fry the bacon, after a few minutes, add in green onion, garlic, ginger l, sesame oil and egg. Cook for another minute, stirring

Add the rice and mix everything well.

Add the soy sauce to taste. I always add a little bit more sesame oil.

Serve warm.

We had this Friday evening with Spicy Korean Style Pork Medallions, which everyone said were great.

I hope you enjoy it! Let me know if you give it a try!

Wednesday Wonders

Wednesday Wonders

Its Wednesday again!

It’s been absolutely crazy at home!

My garden is flourishing and before long, we’ll be eating home grown fresh vegetables!

I’m very excited. My bell peppers finally got planted and they’re already sprouting.

My daughter was amazed at my corn.

Since she has a lot of extracurriculars, or at least a lot of stuff going on for them, I decided that since I was already going to be outside watering and tending the vegetables, I’d just go ahead and take over feeding the animals. Right now its just the three goats, but we have a chicken coop that only needs a run and then we’ll also have chickens.

As far as the ‘side hustle’, I made my first sale in the Etsy shop! So I’m hopeful that’ll pick up soon. I went a little crazy when I got to go to a Joann’s, but I found some really great charms for stitch markers.

The shop in town where I sell finished items is going pretty well. Last time I was in there, the two blankets were gone, so that’s hopeful. I finished a baby blanket this morning that I’ll bring to the shop today or tomorrow. It’s in school colors, whichbare blue and white. A lot of the logos I see also have grey, so I added that in there too.

While that is washed and dried, I picked up my raised waffled square blanket. I haven’t touched it in quite a while and I need to get it done sooner rather than later.

My wonder for today is my husband. Yesterday, the first day he was going to be getting home before dark had set in, he had to pull over and call the police. He called me and told me that, then he told me that there were 2 little girls playing on the highway with a dog. These were very young girls and who knows how many people drove past without stopping before my hubby got there. The girls were apparently at their grandma’s house and wanted to go home. The town they live in is 30 minutes from my house in the car.

So, kudos to my husband for being the person who was kind enough to stop and help get those kids somewhere safe.

Sunday Dinner, Uncategorized

Sunday Dinner

Here we are again and it’s time for dinner!Tonight, we took it easy and I had everyone make their own sandwiches.Because I don’t want to spend a month buying or making bread, I got some sub rolls, and decided to make some pasta salad.Since the husband and I are both overweight, we are trying to be careful with what we eat, I wanted it to be delicious and tasty.We spoke today about cutting out things like white bread and rice, etc.I have really been thinking about pasta salad, though, so I decided I’d make it with whole wheat pasta.Here’s what you’ll need:

1 package whole wheat rotini pasta

1/2 bunch asparagus chopped

3-4 green onions, chopped

Cherry tomatoes, halved

2 carrots chopped

3-4 cloves garlic, diced

6 leaves basil, chopped

1/2 C dressing

Here’s what I did:

Boil pasta according to package directions, drain and rinse with cool water. Set aside.

While pasta is cooking, heat up a little olive oil in a skillet, saute vegetables and garlic for a few minutes, season to your liking. I used fresh ground pepper, dried basil. Mix vegetables with pasta and add your dressing.

In addition, I really wanted some peaches and mangoes. So I grabbed a bunch of peaches and a mango. My daughter and I are the only ones that’ll eat the mangoes, so I just got one. I cut up the mango, 1 peach and a bunch of strawberries. Just mixed them up. I didn’t add any sugar or sauce.

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Sunday Dinner

Its Sunday again, and like usual, I took something out to cook and then fret about what I was actually going to make all day long.

I finally decided on Arroz con Pollo. I don’t exactly remember where I learned to make it, I think it was just a recipe I found somewhere.

It’s a great one pot dish and everyone loves it.

Here’s what you need:

Olive oil

1 package chicken thighs

Garlic powder, onion powder, salt and pepper to taste

1 onion, chopped

2 cups rice

2 tbsp chicken bullion

4 cups water

2 small tomatoes, chopped or 1 can chopped tomatoes, undrained

1 package Goya Sazon

Heat the oil in a large pot/Dutch oven. Brown the chicken. Usually, its 2 or 3 batches. Season the chicken to taste.

Remove chicken from the pot. Cook onions and rice, until onion is translucent. Add the bullion, stir well.

Add water, and stir, scraping the brown bits on the bottom. Add remaining ingredients and bring to a boil.

Add chicken back into pan, cover and lower heat to simmer for 20-25 minutes.

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Wednesday Wonders

It’s almost 6 AM.

I’ve been awake about 2 hours. I slept pretty well, but then I was exhausted. Monday, my husband left with his crew to a fire. The call came through after 5 pm, so it was all zoom, zoom, zoom, because they had to get the crew together and get all their equipment and be there by 10 that night.

I ended up having a panic attack, because it was dark, I couldn’t get GPS directions to where I was going and my husband was sending me text directions, in several texts. So, me driving in the dark, on a road I might have been on once… not the best. I took the last turn because I freaked out because there was someone behind me and I didn’t know what I was supposed to do. Luckily, I turned the right way. I cried driving home in the dark, and just drove. Thankfully I arrived at a point where I knew how to get home. I did not buy myself a bag of donuts to comfort myself. I did go to the store though and bought paint. And a bag of Sour Patch Kids (that I didn’t end up eating until the next day).

With me being upset, I came home, said good night and went to bed. It was late already, well past my usual time of going to bed, so I fell asleep. For about 2 hours. I had gotten a text telling me they had arrived and were bedding down for the night an hour before. I was still raging, so I left it unread.

I stayed awake for awhile. I woke up later than usual for doing my morning chores and had a hard time getting myself going.

I had some extra work to do, though. Monday morning, I spoke with the owner of Blue Pond Boutique in Taylor, AZ and we came to an agreement for rent and space size for me to start selling. My husband made me a beautiful table that afternoon (he was a busy bee that day).

My job was to paint it, which is why at 9 pm Monday night, with a tear streaked face and a terrible attitude, I went to Walmart.

A shout out to Younique for their waterproof black mascara! That’s some magic right there! I LOVE mascara, it is the one thing that is consistently part of my makeup routine and this is the real deal, y’all!

I did my normal stuff and was chomping at the bit to get to painting. I chose Waverly chalk paints in Agave and Crimson. The agave color was just about perfect in the bottle. The Crimson I lightened up with some white to make a pink.

So, I did a coat of each color and jeez! All I could think was it was a Barbie Dream House nightmare or something. Very, very garish. I did not want to have to start over again so I waited for the paint to dry. For the next coat, I lighted the crimson up more, and added some white to lighten up the agave a bit. I then painted over the first coat. Not meticulously, to try and cover it up, but to sort of try to give it a faded kind of look. Like parts were lighter. It ended up looking pretty cool. And not really something that screams me. I’m more of a blue or purple person, and have been shying away from pink practically my entire existence.

Once everything was dry, I applied a light layer of the Waverly wax for chalk paint. So it has a nice sheen to it. After a few hours, we brought it back into the work shop. I’m really glad I did all the work outside, even though as soon as I started working I was set upon by a gang of ants and flies and a few bees.

Last night, I tried arranging my items on it to see how it would look. And man, theres a lot of stuff I made! Almost the whole thing was covered.

Today, I’ll go back into town and set up my space and breathe a small sigh of relief. And this afternoon, hopefully, I’ll get to hang out with a great bunch of ladies and their kids.

Tomorrow, I’ll get back to work.

Last night, I had a stroke of genius and today found exactly what I was looking for to make it work. Watch this space for some new stuff going into the shop!

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Sunday Dinner

I was going to start by saying, “I like to cook”, but honestly sometimes cooking is a pain.There are days when I take a specific thing out for dinner with the hope that my husband will grill it.There are days when the kids request something and I would rather repeat third grade with Miss Lacey than cook what they ask for. Heck, there are days I don’t even want to cook what I’ve been wanting to eat for dinner all day long.Then there are days like today. We have chicken breasts and chicken thighs. So we just had to decide how we wanted it cooked.All day long, I was thinking my husband would grill it. That totally would have happened if not for the fact that the wind was pretty bad.The fact that we spent the better part of the day digging holes (and falling in one), and dropping posts to replace the gate on the goat pen didn’t help matters any.I bought a box of Corn Flakes yesterday. We are talking Kellogg’s Corn Flakes. The almost $4 size box.I joked with my daughter that it was for cooking, as normally, whichever child is with me gets to choose the cereal. We get two bags, the Malt O Meal bags, and one has to be something that isnt rainbow fruit cereal. Yesterday there were two with me. My only stipulation was that we could not get the peanut butter cereal.When I got the cereal, I thought I’d use it to make fried chicken.Well… that’s what I made. Oven Fried Chicken. It was gooood!

Here’s what I used: (keep in mind I’m feeding 3 grown men, my 17.5 year old daughter and myself)

1 pack chicken drumsticks (there were 16 in the pack I made)

2.5-3 c Corn Flakes

1 c Flavored bread crumbs

Garlic Powder

Dried minced onion

Salt and pepper

A gallon sized freezer bag that you can close really well.

Heat oven to 400°

Prepare a 9×13″ pan by spraying with the cooking spray of your choice. Alternatively, you could also use butter, just melt it a little in the pan.

Place the Corn Flakes in the plastic bag. Crush the flakes. I used a rolling pin.

Add bread crumbs and seasonings. I don’t really measure, but I probably used about a tbsp of the onion and garlic and maybe a tsp of salt and pepper. Mix it all together

Crack the eggs into a bowl and mix them up. Dredge the chicken in the egg mix and then place in the bag with corn flakes mixture. I put about half in the bag then shook it up to coat the chicken pieces. Arrange chicken pieces in the pan. Repeat for remaining pieces. Cook chicken at 400° for 40 minutes, turn chicken and continue to cook for approximately 20-30 minutes.

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The Weekend

Its Saturday!

Saturday dawns much like any other day: I wake up early, sit on my butt for a bit, I make coffee and go outside. I get wet and complain to the dog about my hands being cold now. I come inside and pour some coffee. Then I sit down and wait for everyone else to get up.

Nothing to exciting. Plus, I get a chrome every morning. I mean so what if he runs off to the back of the property and then tries to sneak up on me two or fourteen times.

I have been getting some ideas lately though.

I have a lone dwarf plum tree in the back. Basically, it’s our mini orchard. There should be two apple trees and a plum tree, but one died and the other broke off at the dirt line. It gets pretty windy sometimes.

Anyway, we have had the tree back there for over a year now, and it’s just a bit taller than me and full of beautiful green leaves. That’s all there is though.

So I did some research and apparently not all dwarf plum trees are self fertile and more often than not, they should be planted at least in pairs. Whoops, probably should have read past the watering and planting instructions on the card it came with.

Reading that made me think about what my other plants might need. Then I saw something swoosh by me. It was a bee.

Of course, pollination! I realized I haven’t seen many bees around the property. Truthfully, we DON’T have a lot of flowers around, but there are some.

So, we bought some flowers yesterday. Petunias that can handle the sun a bit. I also bought a planter of Russian Sage, but that was more because I wanted to have some sage.

My raised bed in the back has now been fertilized, and planted fully. Theres barely a spot that shouldn’t have something growing soon and if there is, it’s probably where I put the cantaloupe seeds (they take some time)

To recap, my garden will hopefully soon have some green onions, okra, spinach, radishes (they’re my favorite. They grow quickly and help build confidence that you aren’t a murderer of epic proportions), bell peppers (hopefully) serrano peppers, more spinach, eggplant, tomatoes and green beans.

Whew! That’s a lot! I’m very excited to see what we can harvest.

The tomatoes, I purchased two tomato plants, a sort of cheat, I know, but its July, for goodness sake I gotta get busy on this stuff.

So, the flowers, we’ll see if they help. Down the road, though, I’d like to get a beehive on the property and be able to have them nearby, so they aren’t travelling too far. My husband agrees, but bees aren’t his top priority right now.

First is a gate for the goat pen. He has a garden gate on it now. Its worked fine, but they’ve all bit destroyed it and it’s being held together by various strands of hay twine, which we have in abundance.

The goats occasionally got out and wreaked havoc on my plants. One day I went out and found stuff had been pulled from.the ground, only to hear, “Oh yeah, the goats got out.” Well, thanks.

So he and my son have constructed a new door. Its wood and heavy, which is what he wanted. It’ll probably go in today, but first we have to figure out how to do it without the goats escaping and eating all my vegetables.

We have an idea, but who knows if it will hold long enough to get everything done.

I guess we’ll find out.

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I Made a Thing

Ever since we moved out of the city, to a sort of rural area in Northern Arizona, we have managed to make a lot of things. Mostly sheds, for animals, wood, hay storage, etc.

Walking the property is exciting, as there is always something we didn’t know we had back there, thanks to wind and rain.

There’s a LOT of stuff out here that we can repurpose. One of those things that have been used the most was a set of shelves the previous owners had installed in one of the back rooms.We wanted to use it for a bedroom and the occupant didn’t want the shelves, though I’m sure they regretted it later. We have used the shelves they made for a bunch of stuff.My first creation was for a wood holder for in the house. We had installed a woodstove and needed something to store the wood in the house. It still is one of my proudest crafts.Today, though, I was inspired by watching the Raney family on Homestead Rescue. They repurpose the crap out of all kinds of stuff. We have been watching almost all day yesterday and today and I just decided I was going to make something.

One thing we are really making a go of, is growing our own vegetables. I have a raised bed in the yard. Its yields are low, but theres something. My husband made me another raised bed from an old metal sink and some 2x4s. Things sprouted in there, but Podkayne, my cat, keeps plopping her ass in it, so I think she has eaten everything that’s come out so far.I have been thinking, specifically about 4 pots in the front yard. I think they were trees at one time, but by the time we moved in, they were basically four pots of dirt. I made a half hearted attempt at planting stuff in them, but I kept forgetting them. Now I have a lot of time and have been vigilant with watering and feeding the plants. At first, I thought I’d plant something in the pots. Then I thought, well, we need to move them, why not build a little table for them. So that’s what I did.

I found one of those shelves that I was talking about and four pieces of wood posts that were basically the same size. I have a drill, bits and a ridiculous amount of screws in an old Folgers coffee can (its metal, if that gives you a hint). I almost thought it would be too small and briefly considered not doing it, but I REALLY wanted to make something. I did require some assistance with drilling a few of the screws, but I figured out the design and assembled it.This picture here, with the yellow string… I needed to measure the distance between the two legs on the short sides and found using the tape measure in that space way too fiddly. I cut a length of cotton yarn and then stretched it out and measured that.

It’s now at home, up against the front of the house, and I managed to get all four pots on it. On the table, they’re just about the same height as my sink garden bed, so it’s almost perfect. Now, we just need those veggies to grow!

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What Happened?

Well, Saturday is gone. That was pretty quick.I did spend most of the day knitting. It was very productive. I was also looking into tables I can use to set up my section at Blue Pond Boutique.Mostly, though, I was being distracted. Kids were playing video games. Oddly enough, they figured out a schedule and stuck to it for the most part, so that one of them wasn’t playing all day. And they all played Assassin’s Creed. Just three different versions.I made more washcloths. Crazy Eights washcloth from Simply Notable, is perfect. I love it and the pattern is easy to follow and memorize. I did modify it a bit, casting on 14 stitches and doing 7 short rows. 9 wedges seemed to bring it to the correct size to close it so it lays flat. And their Vimeo was perfection, even if the wind made my connection sketchy.As I was working on the last one (I did one 16 stitch cast on, and three 14 stitch cast on and used up one whole ball of cotton and had a bunch left over of the second ball!) I started thinking about a crochet version. So I went hunting.Ravelry has a LOT of dishcloth/washcloth patterns. I had to whittle it down considerably to see if I could find what I was looking for. So far, I have not, though there are some amazing patterns.What I am looking for is one that’s constructed in the same way as the Crazy Eights dishcloth.I did, however, find one that’s crochet and similar to the Almost Lost Dishcloth pattern that I did last week!The Circle Point Washcloth by Glamour-4-You is perfect! Working in the back loop makes it bumpy enough to be able to wash something, and the points make it look adorable. I started one last night and was interrupted by a phone call from the husband-man-person.I also attempted to make one on my own, with the parameters I was looking for. So far so good, though I’ve only done 2 wedges, I think.I went ahead and bought some more lobster clasps to make more crochet stitch markers. Most of what is in the shop is for knitting needles up to US 10.5, with two of the crochet sets being virtually identical, so I think the rest of the charms I have I’ll add the lobster clasps. Also, I fell in love with these blue teardrop type charms! I love blues and purples and have been looking for something different from what I have been using.

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A Hidden Pattern

When I was a newer knitter, I bought a bunch of yarn at a Goodwill. Pretty often. On \none of my forays, I got a cone of cotton yarn. Peaches & Creme yarn. At some point, I looked into the underside of the cone and found a piece of paper. I took it out and found a washcloth pattern! It was handwritten in beautiful script. I knit it up to see if it was actually workable.

It was!

I can no longer find the piece of paper I originally got the pattern from, but I did manage to type it up. It’s available for download on Ravelry. But I thought I’d add it to the blog as well, and maybe get into the habit of having free patterns regularly.

So, here it is:

Supplies needed:

Worsted weight cotton yarn, approximately 50-60 g

Size US 7 needles

Yarn Needle to weave in ends.

Pattern:

First stitch is slipped purl wise

Cast on 5 stitches

Row 1: sl1, bring yarn to back, knit across

Row 2: sl1, yarn back, k1, yo, k to end of the row.

Repeat row 2 until you have 52 stitches on your needle

Decreases:sl1, yarn back, k2tog, yo, k2tog, k to end of row.

Repeat this until you have 5 stitches remaining on your needle.

K across

Cast off, weave in ends.

And there you go.The ones I have been making lately are only 40 stitches across, but they’re pretty good sized.

My hand fits in the main part of the cloth at this size. They’re that small because I used leftovers from making Almost Lost Washcloths from Simply Notable and I wouldn’t have had enough to get yo 52 stitches and made it down to 5.

I’ll be making more of all the washcloths in the next few days, so you’ll hear about it, I’m sure.