Skip to content

Archive for

Soups On

My Memorial Day was less crowded than planned because three of the younger guests were suffering from strep throat. Their mother was relieved they all came down with it within 12 hrs. It meant fewer trips to the doctor and a quicker return to normal schedules, but she was concerned about what to feed them that is nourishing, filling and easy to swallow. When I suggested soup, since one size fits all, she reminded me that it’s 90 degrees outside. I suddenly realized that, aside from Vichyssoise, Madrilene, Gazpachio and a brief interest in Tortilla Soup a few years ago, soup isn’t considered a summer food in the United States. In fact, soup, generally, doesn’t figure prominently in our menu choices as an entrée at any season, except as a hearty dinner on a cold winter night. But why, if it’s filling and nourishing served hot in winter, shouldn’t it be just as nutritious and satisfying chilled in summer? Read more

It’s Memorial Day – Lets go outside

This year is flying by!  We’re up to the holiday that starts summer
and prompts chefs in the Frost Belt to dust off their grills. Not a bad time,
either, for those who can cook out all year to give their equipment a check-up.
Truth is backyard grills should be cleaned before and after each use the same
as indoor ones are Read more

Here’s to the Sub Team

In my last blog, I gave an example of a subject which I explore further under The Ds, in The Plan included in this Blog, showing how using substitute ingredients can simplify a recipe and/or make it economically feasible. In my book, Dinners With Joy, dinnerswithjoy.com, I give alternative solutions for all recipes using pork or shellfish for those on religiously restrictive diets.  There’s an industry built around providing people with food allergies and medical problems optional dietary products so they might enjoy an unimpaired lifestyle. Read more

Happy Mothers’ Day

Boy! This holiday would have snuck up on me, had it not been for my neighbor’s kids, Mark 12, and Mia 14, who asked my help. Traditionally, their Mother never worked in the kitchen on this day. They made breakfast with their Father, went to the Garden Center, got the outside of the house ready for summer and opened the grilling season with a cook out. This year, their Father is deployed with the Air Force and they want to try to keep things normal, which includes making a “really special” breakfast and dinner for their Mother. Of course I would help them, but it wouldn’t be easy with their limited resources ($20.00) ages and lack of kitchen experience. Their condition to me was that they had to pay for the food and make the meals, and no chicken or hamburger. Mine to them was that I had to do the shopping, not a cousin who had offered. My condition to myself was to keep them safe. Read more