Thursday, December 30, 2010
Santa's Lap of Luxury
Paul gave me an ereader, which I really like. I downloaded "Huckleberry Finn" for free and read it in the dark!
I felt a little bad about missing Christmas Eve services at our church. I was also surprised that the hotel/timeshares were completely full on such a big holiday. Then I took a longer look at the other guests. They were probably not Christians, so it was just another weekend to them! I forget how small my little world is, sometimes. I need to get out more! I was interested in the very modest swimsuits the Muslim women were wearing. Kind of like a wetsuit with a dress over it. The headpiece even had a bump-out for the wearer's hair bun.
This posh place had 3, count them 3, waterparks in it. (More in the summer.) Big waterparks, with scary slides and tube rides. I seriously thought I would die. Paul says you could hear me scream and say"OH DEAR" all the way down. There was also mini-golf and laser tag and arcades. Paul and I endured a 2 hour sales presentation for the time shares to get a $150 gift card. The guys used it to go skiing. I have a bum knee, so I try to avoid skiing. Sadly, I had to stay alone in the posh suite, soak in the hot tub, read magazines and work on a quilt. It was rough.
We're going to have a quiet New Year's Eve. Appetizers and movies in our pajama pants, fire in the fireplace... I am glad to say that Nick turned down an invitation from a buddy to stay home with us! With Nate going to college next year, I am relishing every minute of family time.
Here is a party dip recipe that was new to me. Have you ever had that appetizer where you spread cream cheese on Buddig lunch meat, wrap a pickle in it, then slice it? I like that, but spreading the cream cheese is a pain. This recipe has the same flavor, but without the hassle!(Now how much would you pay?)
Wrapped Pickle Dip
1 (8oz) pkg cream cheese, softened
1/3 cup real mayonaise
1 pkg Buddig corned beef
1 pkg Buddig beef
Pickles to taste
Crackers (Wheat thins are good)
Mix cream cheese and mayo. Chop meat into small squares and add to mixture. Dice pickles and add to your taste. Add pickle juice to make it easier to spread. Or just use pickle relish! Serve with crackers.
Happy New Year!
Thursday, December 23, 2010
Mama, Mama, Holiday Drama
Yesterday was the Christmas program at preschool. Now they are all tucked up in their house with their parents and I can work on MY family's Christmas.When I mentioned how behind on preparations I was, Mr. Ose said, "Maybe you should learn to multi-task". He is definitely getting coal in his stocking. He was kidding, he knew I was already multi-tasking my little heart out. Next year will be easier, first year is the hardest, (I keep telling myself). Really, we just have to buy stuff. Gifts, food, etc. Teenage boys are hard to buy for. It's amazing how much of this is Mama-driven, at least at our house.
At least I don't have to make up a menu. That may be the reason that traditions are born, so that you don't have to make everything up from scratch every year. (Mothers are geniuses!) We will have rib roast, mashed potatoes, broccoli, carrots, jello for Nick, Yorkshire pudding, and gravy. We will have English "crackers", party favors that look like wrapped tubes from toilet paper. Inside the tubes there is a small firework that goes "POP" when you pull on it, a tissue paper hat, a corny joke and a small, cracker-jacky prize. (I mean the kind of prize you USED to get in Cracker Jack, not the piece of paper you get nowadays). Lucy dog is so afraid of the small pop sound the crackers make that she hides in the basement anytime we sit at the dining room table, in case it is Christmas Eve. She comes up later, looking for fatty bits from the roast.
The roast is a BIG DEAL. It is expensive, the best price this year is from Cub, $6 a pound. I rarely buy meat that expensive. I would hate to ruin it. Ruining, to me, is well done. I like my steaks on the rare side of medium rare. I do not want to overcook this roast. My friend Mary gave me this recipe she got from County Market. She said it is foolproof. As I am a fool, it is exactly what I need! I'm going to try it, while still hovering over the oven with thermometer in hand.
I wish you a Merry Christmas,
Kellet
Prime Rib
This recipe works for ANY size rib roast.
DO NOT open oven door at all during the cooking time.
Preheat oven to 375
Roast should be placed in a shallow pan on a rack, do not cover.
Season with Salt and pepper
Bake for 1 hour.
Turn oven off for at least 2 hours, but not more than 4 hours.
DO NOT OPEN THE OVEN DOOR DURING THIS TIME.
Turn oven back on to 375 and cook for another 45 minutes.
Remove from oven and let set for 15 minutes before carving.
Roast will be medium rare from end to end.
Thursday, December 2, 2010
Madness
I got the nicest note from the nicest person telling me she missed the blog, and could I write some more? That was just what I needed to get me going. I have been noticing blog-worthy things lately, so maybe it'll be ok. Here is a Christmas item I thought was a little crazy:





Jessica Simpson and Martha Stewart Wake Up Black Friday Shoppers for Macy's
I herewith declare myself the winner of the "Ugliest Thing" contest for the year, as nobody else entered. I purchased the following Halloween decoration for a nickle at a garage sale this last summer. I hung it in the kitchen just until I could take a picture of it to show you. IT'S STILL THERE! The family has begged me to take it down, so now I can. Somebody went to a lot of trouble to crochet 2 ghosts, a pumpkin-headed ghost and 3 bats. They even covered the hanging hardware with yarn! As hideous as this is, it was almost overtaken this last weekend by a purse made from a whole (deceased) armadillo! If I had a photo of that you would be amazed. I saw it in an antique shop in Duluth, but did not have my camera.

Have I given you my recipe for cornflake chicken? I'm pretty sure Martha wouldn't be caught dead making it, but my family loves it!
Cornflake Chicken
Boneless, skinless chicken (I use thighs)
Salad dressing (the guys like ranch, I like french, use whatever you have, or want to use up)
Crushed corn flakes.
Cover a baking sheet with foil, or this will be a pain to scrub off. Coat the chicken in the salad dressing, then in the crushed corn flakes. Crush more corn flakes if you need to. Bake at 350 degrees until the chicken is done, maybe half an hour. Nice and crunchy, not as good as leftovers, because it gets soggy.
Tuesday, July 13, 2010
Celebrate with Bacon!


You try to weave the bacon so it looks like a turtle shell. Frankly, it looked better when they did it, take a look here. I think they used more bacon than I did. Next time I will put the cheese inside the burger (like a juicy Lucy) because much of it melted and slid off. So sad. A waste of cheese!

I saw on another site a recipe for bacon vodka. Hmmm.... I may have to try it!





The food at the party was terrific. Dave cooked a pig, they had hot German potato salad and everybody brought a dish to share. Hot German potato salad is so good, it has bacon in it, too, so it was a very bacony weekend. Here is my favorite recipe for Hot German Potato Salad. (I got it from a hot German!)
Hot German Potato Salad
5 lbs red potatoes
1 lb bacon
2 onions, chopped
2 cups water
1 cup flour
1 2/3 cups white vinegar
1 2/3 cups sugar
Salt and pepper to taste
Cook, peel and slice potatoes. Cook bacon until crisp, cool, crumble and set aside. Cook onions in bacon fat until transparent. Scoop them out and let them rest with the bacon. Mix 2 cups water and one cup flour until smooth and cook it in the hot bacon fat until it gets thick. (It's German Roux!) While it's cooking, mix vinegar and sugar and bring to a boil. Once the roux is thick, add the vinegar mixture a bit at a time, stirring to keep it smooth. Add the bacon and onions and simmer until thickened. Mix with cooked potatoes and add salt and pepper.
Friday, June 18, 2010
Bejeweled, Vajazzled and Bewildered
I bought a game called "Keepsake" for $5. It took 3 disks to install and large amounts of memory, but it was months of fun for me. (If I had more than an hour a week to play it I probably would have finished it sooner.) It had terrific graphics and an interesting story about a young woman trying to solve a mystery in an abandoned school of magic. Apparently you can play it more than once, but I don't know why you'd want to.
Have you heard of "Vajazzling"? This has become a topic of interest since Jenny Love-Hewitt (star of "Ghost Whisperer") brought it up on a talk show. She has a new book out in which she tells of cheering herself up after a bad breakup by decorating her "lady parts" with stick-on rhinestones. It seems her body really is a wonderland!


Back to "Vajazzling". The word is a combination of "Bedazzling" (a craft in which rhinestones are attached to fabric) and vagina, which is misleading, since the rhinestones are not actually anywhere near that particular lady part. I had to look this up since I could not believe that it would be possible to install these in or on a vah-jayjay. (That's a reference from "Grey's Anatomy", aren't I the pop culture queen?)
Indeed, the jewels are installed in the groin area. If you would like to see this, click here for a link to see a reporter having it done. My big problem with this would be the preparation of the site to be decorated. One must have a "Brazilian" bikini wax for vajazzling to work. Brazilian means completely bare. Waxing means ripping out. Um, no thank you.
The only thing "Brazilian" I'm interested in would be the Caipirinha, the national cocktail of Brazil. This is made by mixing lemon or lime juice, sugar, ice and cachaca, the Brazilian national liquor. Rum or vodka may be substituted (with vodka it is a "caiproska") although I'm told it is not the same. We are basically talking a vodka-lemonade here. I'm in! I also like brazil nuts, come to think of it.
You may be hearing more about vajazzling in the next few days, as Kathy Griffin has had it done. The new season of her show is starting and as a way of generating hype she is having a pap smear done poolside. I think the vajazzling is to make it interesting for the gynecologist.
Today's recipe is for bejeweled pork. Pomegranate seeds really are jewel-like, but are only available here in the northland for 1 month a year. The rest of the time try grapes or fresh currents.
Bejeweled Pork Medallions
1 pork tenderloin (1 1/4 lbs) boneless pork chops are also good
butter and olive oil to prevent sticking
salt and pepper to taste
3/4 cup pomegranate juice
1/2 cup chicken stock
2 tbs ketchup
1/4 cup dried cherries or cranberries
1 cup small grapes or 1/2 cup pomegranate seeds
chopped chives for garnish
Slice the tenderloin into 1 inch slices and saute on high (in the butter/oil) until almost done (still pink inside, they will finish cooking while resting) don't over cook the nice pork. Keep meat warm while making sauce.
Put juice and stock in the pan you used to cook the pork with the pork juices. Reduce liquid for 4-5 minutes. Add ketchup and dried fruit. Put pork on plates, drizzle sauce over meat, sprinkle grapes/pomegranate seeds over sauce and garnish with chopped chives. Serves 4
Monday, June 7, 2010
Vinnie's Party/Grand old day

See the smile on Vinnie? He was smiling like that all day! He was so happy and so full of promise that it almost hurt to look at him. Do you have younger relatives that you love like that?
The whole day was full of love and no drama. Since my Nate will graduate next year, I was taking careful notes of all the nice touches at this party, like photos of Vinnie on the water bottles, School color M&M's, the computer slide show. I asked Nate what ideas he thought we could use. "Plastic silverware would be good", he said! Party planning is not his thing.



This is a picture of one of the street bands, they had a ghost thing going on. The people watching was amazing. Am I the only person in America without a tattoo? I seem to be the only woman who didn't think high heels were needed to walk for miles down Grand Avenue!
There was good food (but so expensive) at Grand Old Day. Gyros are always tasty. I made these last week and the kids loved them, although they wouldn't use the tzatziki sauce.
Chicken Gyros
Ingredients:
For the tzatziki sauce:
16 oz. plain yogurt (not nonfat, if possible)
1/2 hothouse cucumber or 1 regular cucumber, peeled and seeded
2-3 cloves garlic, pressed through a garlic press (or finely minced)
Salt and pepper
For the chicken:
4 cloves garlic, smashed
Juice of 1 lemon
2 tsp. red wine vinegar
2 tbsp. extra virgin olive oil
2 heaping tbsp. plain yogurt
1 tbsp. dried oregano
Salt and pepper
1 1/4 lbs. chicken pieces (I used boneless, skinless chicken breasts)
To assemble:
Pita bread
Fresh tomatoes, seeded and diced
Red onion, sliced thin
Directions:
To make the tzatziki sauce, strain the yogurt using cheesecloth over a bowl. Let strain for several hours or overnight, if possible, to remove as much moisture as possible. You can skip this step, especially if you use greek-style yogurt, or if you don't mind the sauce a little runny.
Shred the cucumber. Wrap in a towel a squeeze to remove as much water as possible. Mix together the strained yogurt, shredded cucumber, garlic, salt and pepper to taste. Refrigerate for at least 30 minutes before serving to allow the flavors to meld.
To prepare the chicken, combine the garlic, lemon juice, red wine vinegar, olive oil, yogurt, oregano, and salt and pepper to taste in a medium bowl. Whisk together until mixed well. Add the chicken pieces to the bowl and mix well to coat. Cover and refrigerate for about 1 hour.
Cook the chicken as desired, either in the skillet or with the broiler. (I butterflied the chicken breasts and then cooked them under the broiler.) Once the chicken is completely cooked through, transfer to a plate and let rest for 5 minutes. Cut into strips.
Heat pitas. Top with chicken, tzatziki sauce, diced tomatoes and sliced onions. Serve immediately.
Wednesday, May 26, 2010
Fishing Opener



Al's Mom's pickled Northern
1 1/4 cup salt
3/4 gallon water
Cut fish in pieces (an inch or two square) (recipe does not specify amount of fish, but I'd say one or two big ones) and soak in salt water in refrigerator for 48 hours.
Drain and rinse fish.
Put in non-metal container and cover with white vinegar. Let sit in this in refrigerator for another48 hours.
2 cups sugar
2 cups white vinegar
2 cups White Satin wine (I don't know this wine, but with that much sugar and vinegar I think any white wine will do.)
2-3 large onions, sliced
1 green pepper, sliced (optional)
1 box pickling spice
extra bay leaves, if you have them
Dissolve sugar in vinegar, add other ingredients and drained fish. Wait 4 days to eat this. Keep refrigerated. Keeps 6-8 weeks.
Wednesday, May 5, 2010
Color me RED!
A. Oh, look, that nice lady is trying to show us that she is wearing the same T-shirt! Must be a fan of musical theater...
B. Oh my God, a crazy woman is chasing me across a parking lot, trying to show me her breasts! Run for your life!
Yes, well, I was going for "A", but the answer is apparently "B". I was at the grocery store and saw a woman with her husband in the parking lot. She was wearing her "Wicked" t-shirt and so was I. I made the above motion so as to (wordlessly) point out our shared taste in clothing and entertainment. The problem is, she didn't see me, only her husband did, and he had NO IDEA what I was doing. From the appalled and terrified look on his face, he thought I was coming on to him and (insanely) pointing out my rack.
When I realized this, I tried harder to get him to understand my innocent intentions, but he, um, started running. I didn't want to leave him with the wrong impression, so I yelled, "We are wearing the same t-shirt!", except he and I were not clad alike, so it didn't help. I slunk into the store, blushing from head to toe.
Sadly, this is not even my MOST embarrassing moment. I'll tell you that another time.
Blushing Breasts (Tandoori)
1 cup plain yogurt, divided
1/4 tsp ground cloves
1 tsp salt
1/2 tablespoon cinnamon
1 small jalapeno
6 cloves garlic
a little red food coloring
1 inch chunk of fresh ginger
1 small onion, roughly chopped
Puree 1/2 the yogurt and the rest in a blender, add the rest of the yogurt. Use this as a marinade for 2 lbs of chicken breasts. Marinate overnight. Grill until chicken is done.
Friday, April 2, 2010
Brilliant!

My children eat them once, maybe twice a year. The rest of the time they eat the low-sugar, whole grain cereal I usually buy. I'm not too worried about it. Nick thanked me twice!

This week we killed the flies we mated last week. Hmmm. I did feel kinda bad about this. I wanted to just let them go, but this is really frowned upon. We also looked at some flies with glow-in-the-dark bits. By next week our orphaned larva should be adults and we will see what kind of mutants we made.
Happy Easter!
Here is a Jamie recipe. Good and easy! This is nice on salad or on other vegetables, such as asparagus.
Jamie's Vinaigrette
1 Tbls mustard (maybe not the bright yellow kind, try dijon)
4 Tbls vinegar (not plain white or cider, use balsamic or wine vinegar, maybe an herbal kind)
1-2 cloves finely chopped garlic
8 Tbls Extra virgin olive oil (EVOO to you Rachel fans)
Salt and pepper
I put this in a jar and shake it up just before serving. Brilliant!
Friday, March 12, 2010
Laughter is in my DNA

Geneticists have absolutely NO sense of humor. Especially about sex.
Isn't that just wrong?
My genetics prof was not amused when I suggested that we turn down the lights and play soft music to encourage the mating of yeast strains. Also no yuks to me comparing the mixing of mating strains in agar (petri dish gelatin) to jello wrestling. It's tough room. The kids really don't know what to make of me either. This week I wrote a song about chromosomes swapping bits of themselves to the tune of "Petticoat Junction". Sadly, I'm the only person in the class who has ever heard of "Petticoat Junction" including the prof. Sigh.
In my textbook ($179, gulp. IMHO, you pay 179 bucks for a book, Ranger better come with it, know what I mean?) the geneticists describe the "TATA box" in which transcription begins.
"TATA box". Where I come from, the only reason to use "TATA" and "box" in the same sentence is when ordering porn on pay-per-view! (Please note that I detest pornography.)
"Tata box" is the most obliviously filthy name given out since my mother decided to shorten my baby nickname of "Miss Muffet" (because of the frilly dresses) to "Muff" when I was in high school. Yep. Not. A. Good. Nickname.
This recipe is for yeast raised waffles. Mix the batter the night before so the yeast has time to get busy. Don't worry that anything is having sex in your batter, though. That yeast is only one mating strain and isn't interested in each other (Yeast don't swing that way). It will reproduce asexually by splitting itself in half. All those bubbles, though? Yeast farts!
Yeast raised Waffles
1/2 cup warm water
2 1/4 tsp yeast (1 pkg)
2 cups milk
1/2 cup butter
1 tsp salt
1 tsp sugar
2 cups flour
2 eggs
1/4 tsp baking powder
At least 8 hours before serving (up to 2 days ahead, supposedly) sprinkle yeast over water in mixing bowl. Let stand 5 minutes. Nuke milk to 100 degrees F. (body temperature). Melt butter and whisk with milk, salt, sugar, and flour into yeast mixture until lumps disappear. Cover bowl with plastic wrap and leave at room temp for 8 hours or so. Whisk eggs and baking powder into batter. It will be thin. Cover and chill in refrigerator until ready to make waffles. Use 1/2 - 2/3 cup batter per waffle. Makes about 8. While batter keeps a couple days in refrig, waffles are best eaten at once. These are delicate and delicious.
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
Buy a Lottery!
I was so happy that I decided to try tracking down my chemistry credits again. This time Macalester did find my records! They are sending out my transcript this week.
This was such an unusual run of luck for me that I ran right out and bought a powerball ticket! I never win such things so I only spent a buck, but it seemed like a good idea.
I promised you Martha's Banana cake recipe, so here it is.
Banana Cake
Mix together:
1 box yellow cake mix
1 cup water
1/2 cup oil
2 eggs
1 tsp baking soda
2-4 mashed, ripe bananas
bake at 350 degrees for 30-35 minutes. Cool.
Frosting:
1 small box instant banana pudding
1 1/4 cups cold milk
Mix until thickened, then fold in 8oz cool whip.
Frost cake, store in refrigerator.
Friday, February 12, 2010
Eat My Dust!
I have a midterm on Monday, so I'll be studying all weekend. Also, my midterm powerpoint for my other class is due Sunday. That is an education class on Native Americans. My subject is "The Significance of the Star Quilt in Native American Life". This was interesting to put together.

How's it going at my church? Somebody is giving my boss a hard time about wanting to retire. They are very interested in who will take over for her, and not in a good way. I can't help thinking that they are horrified that I might apply. I don't know what they have against me, but the boss will always do the right thing for the school. The kids are what matters. I can't worry about it too much, all my brain cells are busy with gene deletion mapping. Not enough room for paranoia. (It is not paranoia, however, if people really ARE out to get you!)
I'm trying to make room in my head for Valentine's Day. How does that kissing thing go? Can't remember. I have filled that space with the mnemonic for the names of the scientists who discovered bacterial sex acts. (Their names are Tatum and Lederberg. To remember that I think of Ron White, the "Call me tater salad" smutty comedian- in lederhosen. On an iceberg, and then I laugh. This probably won't go over well at the test.)
Today's recipe is for Edible Dusting Powder. It's a Valentine's day treat. I have not tried this out, (yet) so don't blame me if your skin is all dyed red on Monday. (Just wear a turtleneck!)
Edible Dusting Powder
2 Tbls powdered sugar
10 red or pink PixyStix (you know, powdered candy in a straw?)
Sift together a few times until it is all mixed and fine. Apply with a cotton ball or new powderpuff. Don't forget your cleavage.
Friday, January 29, 2010
Church Treats and Oddities
I'm also worried about a possible backstabbing/power grab at my church. Yes, my church! Since this is also where I work, it is very disturbing. People are up to something sneaky and I don't like it. It looks like it will be a real treat. On the other hand, it is good to know who your enemies are. I'll let you know how it turns out.
My side of the family got together a couple of weeks ago to celebrate Christmas. It was nice, low key, we had a good chance to catch up. I did remember to take pictures of more than just the two youngest members of the family, but I can't help it, they are just too cute!



I've seen a couple of funny things in the ads in the Sunday paper lately. The first is this new make-up from L'Oreal. It comes with it's own paint roller! Paul always says that women who wear to much makeup are "troweling it on". This is pretty close to troweling, I think. None of my friends wear much makeup, (or if they do, it is so skillfully applied that it doesn't LOOK like they are wearing much.) It just seems a little crazy to me.


I will leave you with a recipe from a nice church in Church's Ferry, North Dakota. These are Paul's favorite cookies.
Church's Ferry Oatmeal Chocolate Chip Cookies
1 cup shortening
3/4 cup brown sugar
3/4 cup white sugar
2 eggs
1 tsp hot water
1 1/2 cups flour
1 tsp baking soda
1 tsp salt
2 cups "quick" oatmeal
1 small pkg chocolate chips
Cream shortening and sugars, add eggs and water, then all the dry ingredients together. Mix in chocolate chips and drop by rounded Tbls onto cookie sheets. Bake at 375 until brown around the edges.
Monday, January 18, 2010
One fish, two fish, red fish, EEEWW fish!


I'm back at school. This semester/trimester will be a killer. I am taking Genetics, which meets 4 days a week, so close to the time I get out of preschool that I leave there 5 minutes early and then run all the way across campus. It's been 25 years since I took a science class, so I'm playing catch-up, big time! Can't wait for the part where we breed fruit flies, maybe I'll catch some of the ones from home and breed a prettier bug. That'll shake them up!
I have a good fish recipe for you. It comes from Paul's Grandma Emily, who was a terrific cook. She made this with lake trout, but we are all out of lakers, so salmon works great. I'm sure any fish would be fine.
Baked Fish Fillets
1 lb fish fillets
1 Tbls lemon juice
1/4 tsp paprika
1 Tbls butter or margarine
1 Tbls flour
dash of salt and pepper
1/2 cup milk
1/4 cup buttered bread crumbs
1 Tbls chopped parsley (optional garnish)
Cut fish into serving sized pieces. Place in greased, foiled shallow baking dish. Sprinkle with lemon juice, paprika, salt and pepper. In saucepan, melt butter, blend in flour and a dash of salt and pepper. Add milk slowly, cook and stir until thick and bubbly. Pour white sauce over fish. Sprinkle with bread crumbs. Bake at 350 degrees for 35 minutes until fish flakes easily. Garnish with parsley if desired.
Friday, January 8, 2010
Of Mice and Men




I wanted to give you the recipe for the banana cake, but frankly, it wasn't all that. My friend Martha (not Stewart) has promised to give me her recipe which really can't be beat. I'll pass that along later. I don't have any mouse recipes, so I will give you a manly one.
A note on the Redneck Coq au Vin recipe: When I have made this before, I have omitted the lemon pepper because I didn't have it. It turns out lemon pepper has lots of salt in it and made the dish too salty, I think. I suggest you just put in some black pepper and call it good.
Manly Meatloaf (My mother-in-law's recipe)
2 lbs ground beef
2 eggs
1 envelope dry onion soup mix
1/2 cup water
1 1/2 cups crushed crackers (MIL uses saltines)
Mix, shape in a loaf, bake (with potatoes and carrots maybe) for 1 1/2 hours at 350 degrees.