Showing posts with label food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label food. Show all posts

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Family...

This is a copy of the blog post that was chosen from blogforfamilydinner.com.  



Dinner at home, a simple statement but loaded with complication. At least that seems to be how America sees dinner at home. We would rather go out and grab something, anything, than to go home and cook a meal. I know because I have fallen into that deep dark pit myself. Let me explain….
I work full time, in food service. I am a food service manager for a private school; we produce about 400 lunches a day. We do a lot of from scratch, healthy cooking for our students. I am surrounded with food….shopping, ordering, getting menus together, logistics, personnel, and cooking. This is my day life, so when I go home I get to do it all again. I am exhausted just like every other family cook.
This new year, I am taking the pledge, family dinners it is! I use a menu mailer to help me not think. I shop once a week, keeping only items in the fridge for that week. We have downsized our fridge; freezer on the top, fridge on the bottom. It is small and we only buy what we can use in a week. That commercial about throwing away half your grocery cart, is all too true. So nip it in the bud….more about that in another post.
I have two teenage daughters, 16 and 18. I also have a 20 year old son that works evenings and is unable to join us nightly, but that is not an excuse for the rest of us. It is so important that we eat together; it is when the girls talk to my husband and me. They tell us about their day, what happened, how a certain class went and what they did during lunch. They open up without even being aware of it. They fight me on the making of dinner and cleaning up, but once we get into it, they are on board. This is precious, precious time and it will set up traditions for their own families.
I believe in eating a home cooked meal more times then most. I think that we are cheating our children when we don’t shop, plan and prepare family meals. We have a generation who has no idea how to feed themselves. They have no idea what half the produce is in the bins, how to plan a meal with whole grains, beans, or real meat. They don’t understand the different cuts of roast beef, how to cook a whole chicken or the difference between pork tenderloin or a pork loin. They have no clue how to take a tough piece of beef into a luscious stew.
We need to change that for our children and our grandchildren. We need to cook again. We need to model behaviors that will benefit them for a lifetime. And in the process, they will learn how to shop, plan, prepare, cook, eat, clean up for themselves. Cooking and eating dinner together will build confidence in our children, and ourselves. Cooking at home will keep us healthier. Cook for our family, cook for our selves, cook for the future.
Rachael Warrington is a Food Service Manager at a school in Kansas and the mother of three. Her blog is Headcook and BottleWasher.
She writes: “It was not until I was 40 that I realized what I wanted to be when I grew up: A Foodie.  I love to read about food, cook food and of course eat food.  I am a wife and mother and that is the most important thing to me.  We own a small farm with several kinds of animals and we grow heirloom tomatoes for market.  We try to live our lives with integrity toward the earth.  We cherish each other most of the time, and we face the outside world together.  We are a family first.”

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Food....

I had a groupon coupon for IL Pointe Cafe and it had to be used before the end of the month. So off we went last night.  We checked out the menu online and found several options that sounded good.  This restaurant has had several names, but seems to be owned by the same group of people.  The menu is Mediterranean, including some Italian, which is in the Mediterranean.
The restaurant has had a major face lift, it was pretty and my favorite part quiet.  No blaring music, it was low opera that was restful.  It was early and there was only one other couple seated.  The manager waited on us and he was very pleasant.  He would have looked great in black slacks and a white shirt instead of jeans and a blue pullover.
We ordered a bowl of the tomato soup to share.  It was fantastic!!!!  Creamy, peppery and a great tomato flavor.  We polished that off in no time.
Kent ordered the beef kabobs and I ordered the lamb kabobs both meals came with a fattoush salad, homus (their spelling) and warm soft pita.  The homus had a garlic pesto that was unbelievably yummy. I took pictures with my phone so they a bit dark, but I think you get the idea.


I would recommend this restaurant to everyone.  It is quiet, great food, serene atmosphere.  We will be going back!!

Monday, October 10, 2011

Starting Over

One thing about our lives is that we can start over anytime we choose.  We can pick any point in our lives and declare to ourselves and or others that we are starting over.  Each time we choose this we try to get a little closer to our goal.  We do not have to live in the rut we may find ourselves, we can climb out and, start over.  So I am starting over....

I love food, I love the way it taste, the way I can play with it, and the political side of food.  I know everyone shyes away from the political side of anything.  If everyone can play nice and use kindness and respect we will tackle some of the political sides of food.  If you  can't play nice, you will be banned.  It is my blog and I get to set the rules.  MMMHHHUUUUU...




I have just finished reading Judith Jones book "The Tenth Muse".  I loved the book and could not put it down.  I was a bit stunned at how fascinating the book was.  It was filled with my cooking heroes and and introduced a couple of new ones.  I am just now learning about Edna Lewis, Marion Cunningham (not that MC) and am so sad that I did not learn about them until they have past.  So into my Amazon Cart is two new books to learn about these Ladies of Food.  I may not agree with them politically, but then I can look beyond that and read about their food adventures.
Judith Jones is the amazing lady who found James Bread and Julie Child and so many after that.  It really is a great book by an amazing lady and her interesting life.

She also has a section of the book for her favorite recipes.  I will be the first to say there are several I will never try.  There are just certain things I can not eat no matter how French they may sound.  But there are several I will try.  I will post them as I go through them.