Category Archives: National Blog Posting Month

Sunday Night Dinner with a side of twang

Years ago when we were traveling, we collapsed on our hotel bed and turned on the Food Network, as one does. This was before the current era, when there’s a 100 percent chance of Guy Fieri yelling at you any time you flip to the channel. On this particular evening, we were not taken aback by Guy’s elaborated-spiked coiffure but rather by country music legend Garth Brooks surreptitiously chowing down on a platter of peanut butter balls. His wife — country singer, cookbook author and, we were surprised to learn, television personality — Trisha Yearwood had whipped up a batch for him for Father’s Day and was sharing how they were made with the late-night TV viewers of America.

I believe that was the last time I thought about Trisha Yearwood until yesterday, when I was trying to decide what to have for Sunday Night Dinner with the family and I stumbled upon one of her recipes. It sounded good and, most important, simple, and so I entrusted our Sunday Night Dinner’s main event to country music singer, cookbook author and television personality Trisha Yearwood.

The recipe in question is Yearwood’s Slow Cooker Pork Loin. (If you, like me, are not certain what the difference is between a pork loin and a pork tenderloin, TheKitchn.com has a very helpful guide on that very subject.) Anyway, I doubled the amount of seasoning, and I wish I’d used twice as much again because it could’ve used a little more oomph. It was tender, tasty and plentiful, though, so it’s staying in the Sunday Night Dinner file.

We also had Roasted Sweet Potato, Wild Rice and Arugula Salad, because a farmer gave me a bag of arugula in the parking lot where I was waiting to pick Pete up from school. This kind of thing happens in our town, and I think the world would be a better place if it happened everywhere. I had sweet potatoes on hand and I love wild rice, so I was pretty optimistic when the Googles-That-Be led me to this Pinch of Yum recipe. The salad is tossed with a lemony-garlicky dressing that was bright and lovely. I’ll make this one again.

No one handed me portobello mushroom caps, sadly, but I also made some of those as a main dish for my vegetarian sister-in-law and an extra side for the fungi-lovers among us. I marinated the mushroom caps in soy sauce, vinegar, garlic and olive oil for about 15 minutes and then roasted them. They were, I am told, perfectly acceptable.

This was a very nice Sunday Night Dinner. It was simple and filling, and we have plenty left over for lunches for part of the week. Thanks for not leading us astray, Trisha Yearwood.

Five huge properties for sale in the United States

One of my favorite pastimes is looking at real estate on the internet. It’s both a hobby and an addiction. I hurt my shoulder raking leaves today, so I’m going to be phoning it in with this, a list of:

Ginormous Houses You Can Buy For Less Than $200,000 in the United States

Cullman, Alabama


1465 Orchard Drive Northeast looks like it needs all the work, but it’s more than 11,000 square feet and it comes with a pool and an indoor fire pit. What even is that? It used to be “The Larkwood Club.” It’s on 4+ acres and includes 85 parking spaces. This would be an excellent location for an expansive hippie compound.

Mobile, Alabama


1004 Government Street also looks like it needs a bit of work, but it’s a 5,700-square-foot beauty that was built in 1896.

Screven, Georgia


The master bedroom at 319 S. Forks Road looks like it might be bigger than my entire house. The 5,284-square-foot house is on 9 acres and looks like a barn, which is only one thing that would make it an excellent place for you if you’re looking for a horse ranch.

Superior, Wisconsin


I have always wanted to live in a church, and 1831 E. 4th Street is amazing. BRB, moving to Wisconsin.

Dakota, Minnesota


You know what else would make an awesome house? An elementary school! Or maybe it would be creepy. How about you buy 220 Golden Rule Road and let me know. It’s 15,200 square feet and includes a gymnasium, and the Mississippi River is right across the road.

Baby’s first existential crisis

The author as a young philosopher, probably 1982.
When I was very, very small, my family lived in what felt like a big, rambling house out in the country. The house was on a corner. Across one street there was a sugar beet field, and across the other was a little corner store where my mom worked for a while.

In the back yard there was a swing set that had an exhilarating tilt when you were too enthusiastic on the swings and an expansive garden where the sunflowers towered above my head and I ate my first bite of raw garlic. There was a playhouse on the other side of the garden, and that’s where my cat Rainbow had her kittens. A small boy ran screaming “Creatures! There are creatures in there!” when he discovered them. I don’t remember who the small boy was or why he was in my playhouse.

Across the garden was my best friend’s house, and the neighbor on the other side had raised boxes in his side yard where he raised snapping turtles. They were terrifying and thus magnetic. My first school was just down the street. My best friend and I once ventured into the fields beyond the school and found a huge beaver dam that we revisited again and again until the deep snows kept us away.

There wasn’t a garage on the property when my parents first bought the house, but my dad wanted one. So he and his brothers built one because that’s the kind of thing they did back then. I remember the day the concrete was poured. My dad held me at an awkward angle and I hovered over wet concrete and pressed my hand into the corner. Someone — probably my mom — carved my name and the date next to it.

Later, after the concrete was dry and the walls were up and the doors were installed and shelves lined the walls, my dad was working on something in the garage and I was in there with him, not being particularly helpful. I don’t know what I was planning, but it involved climbing the metal shelves against the wall. They sat in the corner above my handprint, and they were one million feet tall. Dad worked, and I climbed. I reached the top and cut my hand on a sharp edge.

It hurt, but not enough to make me cry. But then I looked at the small wound, and I was mortified.

I’m not sure where I got the impression that the inside of a people was roughly the color, texture and density of bologna — which is probably why I have never been able to eat bologna — but I was mortified to discover that the inside of my hand was decidedly un-bolognaish.

I wailed, and I launched myself from the top of those metal shelves. My dad stopped what he was doing and came to help. I’m pretty sure he thought I was overreacting, but that’s just because he thought I was crying about a cut when actually I was enduring my first deep existential crisis.

If we weren’t all bologna, what of my other assumptions were wrong?

A lot of them, as it turned out. A few years later my mom packed my baby brother and I up and moved us back to her childhood home. She sold my playhouse to one of her friends, and quite a long time later my dad sold the house altogether.

I drove past the house a few years ago, and it looked exactly like and not at all like I’d remembered it. The tree I rode my Big Wheel around was still in the front yard, and the turtle boxes next door were still there. The swing set was gone, though, and the rough pink-and-grey siding was gone.

I’ll bet my handprint and my name are still in the corner of the garage, though. I’d like to go inside and look at it some day.