You are so organized! The recipes I save are over the place. I am going to try to duplicate it. Big learning curve coming up, I'm not familiar with using a database. I don't use processed products but rarely. Never have. That Minimalist Baker web site you recommended is a good one. I would like to recommend a recipe I tried this week. It uses a yam, but I think a winter squash would work fine. It's from Ina Garten's micro Thanksgiving https://barefootcontessa.com/recipes/chipotle-smashed-sweet-potatoes-1 Chipotle Smashed Sweet Potatoes. I used one potato and left out the dairy products. Next time I will add cubed cooked seasonally appropriate vegetables as a topping. That last photo of Ruby is a winner. What an expression.
I use MS One Note for my database and take screen grabs to insert into the database. I can then browse through as I am deciding on the week's menus. It's quite easy to use. I looked at your recommendation - is it very spicy as we tend not to use chillies and I think maple syrup is used more widely in the US. I think I would leave out the cream too. They say dogs don't have expressions but I think that is from someone who has never had a dog. She was preparing to drop the ball over the back of the sofa and then run round to retrieve it - that is if no-one else will join in the game.
Regional cooking is so very interesting. Long time residents of the Southwest US tend to grow old on chili-the-dish and chile-the-vegetable. Maple sugar which is found in northeast US and adjoining Canada shows the origin of the recipe writer. We would use brown sugar. Curry houses and fish-and-chips shops are practically non-existent here. I had my first curry at Star of Bombay in Notting Hill when I was in my fifties.
I love coleslaw, could eat it by the bucket! Good vegetarian dishes should leave a meat eater not realising there wasn't any meat on their plate! Happy recipe hunting.
I wish I was more experimental with our food choices. I could do without red meat. My husband would feel like something was missing from dinner. Your sweet Ruby is always an uplifting sight to see. She looks so intense in that last picture, full of fun. I had a cousin that drove a train for a living. He did it for years. There are train tracks all around our town. It is said that 80+/- go through town every day. We live a short 1.5miles from one set of tracks. At night I can sometimes hear the trains going through town. They have to blow their horn at each intersection with a street...that is a lot of tooting.
Martyn used to be like your husband, Lisa but now he says that he doesn’t miss red meat at all. Martyn’s uncle was a train driver and like many little boys he wanted to be one. This is the nearest he’s got. Ruby is always full of mischief
I like the idea of collecting those favourite recipes on a data base Sue. We have not eliminated red meat entirely from our diets but are eating very little of it. Funnily enough we had a quorn based shepherd's pie last night with a sweet potato topping. There was enough left over for a light lunch today 😄 More encouraging news yesterday on the vaccine front.
I just hope that I don’t lose the whole thing, Anna. We started by just cutting back and then decided to cut it out completely. We’ve never tried Quorn , I use pulses and quinoa as protein and we still eat fish, poultry and dairy. We did try dairy free cheese but weren’t impressed. Yes the vaccine news seems to keep getting better.
I'm another coleslaw fan, absolutely love it and yours looks delicious. I like to grate kohl rabi into a coleslaw for a change, tastes very similar to cabbage.
I am amazed at all the flowers you were able to find at this time of year. The news about Covid vaccines does look good. They are still working out the details on who and when, but we are in the high-risk category based on age, so hopefully it will be sooner rather than later for us.
Those recipes look great, looking at all your dishes has me feeling hungry. I loved your photos, you do have a lot in bloom. I'm smiling re Martyn crashing his train!xxx
Nice way to organize recipes. That is one of the reasons I made a family cookbook, so I could find my recipes. Sound like you are dug in for the winter. Stay warm and safe.
I do love to collect recipes, Sue.I watch cooking more often on TV or YouTube. I think chef Jamie Oliver has a lot of interesting vegetable recipes. Your Ruby is a cute one.
Thank you for visiting and leaving a comment - it is great to hear from you and know that there are people out there actually reading what I write! Come back soon. (By the way any comments just to promote a commercial site, or any comments not directly linked to the theme of my blog, will be deleted) I am getting quite a lot of spam. It is not published and is just deleted. I have stopped sifting through it and just delete any that ends up in my spam folder in one go so I am sorry if one of your messages is deleted accidentally. Comments to posts over five days old are all moderated.
You are so organized! The recipes I save are over the place. I am going to try to duplicate it. Big learning curve coming up, I'm not familiar with using a database.
ReplyDeleteI don't use processed products but rarely. Never have. That Minimalist Baker web site you recommended is a good one. I would like to recommend a recipe I tried this week. It uses a yam, but I think a winter squash would work fine. It's from Ina Garten's micro Thanksgiving https://barefootcontessa.com/recipes/chipotle-smashed-sweet-potatoes-1
Chipotle Smashed Sweet Potatoes. I used one potato and left out the dairy products. Next time I will add cubed cooked seasonally appropriate vegetables as a topping.
That last photo of Ruby is a winner. What an expression.
I use MS One Note for my database and take screen grabs to insert into the database. I can then browse through as I am deciding on the week's menus. It's quite easy to use. I looked at your recommendation - is it very spicy as we tend not to use chillies and I think maple syrup is used more widely in the US. I think I would leave out the cream too.
ReplyDeleteThey say dogs don't have expressions but I think that is from someone who has never had a dog. She was preparing to drop the ball over the back of the sofa and then run round to retrieve it - that is if no-one else will join in the game.
Regional cooking is so very interesting. Long time residents of the Southwest US tend to grow old on chili-the-dish and chile-the-vegetable. Maple sugar which is found in northeast US and adjoining Canada shows the origin of the recipe writer. We would use brown sugar. Curry houses and fish-and-chips shops are practically non-existent here. I had my first curry at Star of Bombay in Notting Hill when I was in my fifties.
DeleteI love coleslaw, could eat it by the bucket! Good vegetarian dishes should leave a meat eater not realising there wasn't any meat on their plate! Happy recipe hunting.
ReplyDeleteWe don’t miss the red meat, Deborah. If anything we have more varied meals now than we ever did.
DeleteI wish I was more experimental with our food choices. I could do without red meat. My husband would feel like something was missing from dinner. Your sweet Ruby is always an uplifting sight to see. She looks so intense in that last picture, full of fun. I had a cousin that drove a train for a living. He did it for years. There are train tracks all around our town. It is said that 80+/- go through town every day. We live a short 1.5miles from one set of tracks. At night I can sometimes hear the trains going through town. They have to blow their horn at each intersection with a street...that is a lot of tooting.
ReplyDelete
DeleteMartyn used to be like your husband, Lisa but now he says that he doesn’t miss red meat at all. Martyn’s uncle was a train driver and like many little boys he wanted to be one. This is the nearest he’s got. Ruby is always full of mischief
I like the idea of collecting those favourite recipes on a data base Sue. We have not eliminated red meat entirely from our diets but are eating very little of it. Funnily enough we had a quorn based shepherd's pie last night with a sweet potato topping. There was enough left over for a light lunch today 😄 More encouraging news yesterday on the vaccine front.
ReplyDeleteI just hope that I don’t lose the whole thing, Anna. We started by just cutting back and then decided to cut it out completely. We’ve never tried Quorn , I use pulses and quinoa as protein and we still eat fish, poultry and dairy. We did try dairy free cheese but weren’t impressed. Yes the vaccine news seems to keep getting better.
DeleteI'm another coleslaw fan, absolutely love it and yours looks delicious. I like to grate kohl rabi into a coleslaw for a change, tastes very similar to cabbage.
ReplyDeleteRuby is a sweetheart! Karen :)
I’ve had grated kohlrabi on ours too. Karen but we only grew one or two roots. Ruby thinks everyone she meets loves her.
DeleteI am amazed at all the flowers you were able to find at this time of year. The news about Covid vaccines does look good. They are still working out the details on who and when, but we are in the high-risk category based on age, so hopefully it will be sooner rather than later for us.
ReplyDeleteWe too should be amongst the first to be vaccinated, Dave.
DeleteThose recipes look great, looking at all your dishes has me feeling hungry. I loved your photos, you do have a lot in bloom. I'm smiling re Martyn crashing his train!xxx
ReplyDeleteI wouldn’t want, Martyn to drive a real train, Dina. That would be no laughing matter!
DeleteNice way to organize recipes. That is one of the reasons I made a family cookbook, so I could find my recipes. Sound like you are dug in for the winter. Stay warm and safe.
ReplyDeleteWe’re hoping that we may be able to do some gardening before spring, Bonnie.
DeleteI do love to collect recipes, Sue.I watch cooking more often on TV or YouTube. I think chef Jamie Oliver has a lot of interesting vegetable recipes.
ReplyDeleteYour Ruby is a cute one.