Category Archives: Eating

Chomp it up.

The leftovers have left the building

We went to my brother’s house for Thanksgiving, and my sister-in-law came to our house to make dinner for my in-laws. (Long story). So we had a lovely Thanksgiving meal that we didn’t have to make, and then we came home to leftovers which we turned into meals for the rest of the weekend. I highly recommend this holiday tactic.

Now that we’re out of turkey, though, we have to cook again. Here’s what we’ll be eating this week.

Monday: Chili
Rockford made a huge pot of chili yesterday. We’ll be finishing it off tonight.
Tuesday: Chicken sausages and roasted vegetables
This one was on our eMeals menu for last week. We have roasted sausages and veggies relatively often, but we don’t always use butternut squash and Brussels sprouts.
Wednesday: Butternut squash Thai curry
Apparently it’s butternut week over here. This one’s from Chrissy Teigen’s website.
Thursday: Slow cooker chicken thighs
I’m not a big fan of chicken thighs, but other people currently dining at our table are.
Friday: Sandwiches
We’re having extended family over for a game night. I’m putting out deli meats and cheese, sandwich rolls, so on, and so forth.

Find more menu plans at OrgJunkie.com!

Trying to get my menu-planning act together

I feel like I’ve been feeding my family nothing but sandwiches lately. That’s not exactly accurate, but I’m trying to be more purposeful with our menu plans. For this week, anyway. Here’s what we’ll be having.

Monday: Tacos

I found some deeply discounted Frontera taco seasoning, and it was delicious.

Tuesday: Chicken marsala
I haven’t been cooking much lately, because our schedules have been all over the place. I’ll actually be home long enough to make a whole meal tomorrow, though. I’m pretty excited.

Wednesday: Sandwiches / potluck
We’re having a potluck at the last meeting of my writing class. The rest of the fam is having sandwiches.

Thursday: Chicken curry
This’ll be in the Crockpot, which barely feels like cooking at all.

Friday: Spaghetti and meatballs
I gave my brother a bag of frozen meatballs, and my nephews really liked them. So I’m going to make a bunch of extra meatballs for my guys.

First bite

We were at Forbidden City, the culinary capital of my childhood. I was around 12 years old. I’d just finished a bowl of steaming hot Sizzling Rice Soup — the only vehicle through which I’d willingly eat vegetables — and was about to tuck into a plate of Mongolian beef. Despite years of effort on my dad’s part, I’d been ordering nothing but Sizzling Rice Soup, Mongolian beef and Red Pop at Forbidden City for about a decade.

Dad usually had either mu shu pork (my brother, step-siblings and I always crowed in horror when he applied the “poison sauce”), the palace beef (“It’s almost just like Mongolian beef!” he’d tell me. “Just try a bite!”) or the Mandarin Jumbo Shrimp. That visit, it was the shrimp.

I don’t know what was different about that day. Was I hungrier? Was I maturing? Was I just trying to prove that I really didn’t like anything?

I suspect it was the latter, and the first taste of Mandarin Jumbo Shrimp proved me wrong. The shrimp was crisp and juicy, coated in a sweet and tangy sauce with a little bit of heat. It was heavenly. I almost wanted to try something else, just to find out if everything on the table was as revolutionary as the Mandarin Jumbo Shrimp.

I did not try anything else on the table. I don’t know if I even admitted that the shrimp was delicious. I went back to the Mongolian beef that night, but that single bite of Mandarin Jumbo Shrimp had changed the way I looked at food.