Cooking For One or Two: Cooking from Down South

My sister Jennifer Sanchez is going to become a regular contributor to Nana’s Whimsies, offering us her unique perspective on cooking for one or two.
cooking for one
          Many years ago, thirteen to be exact, I was met with the challenge of cooking for one. For nearly all of my adult life I had cooked for a family and suddenly this changed. It took a long time to adjust to cooking for one but over many years I believe I have this down pat.
          When I was first single I knew a couple of things. One, I was never going to be the person who ate a bowl of cereal or a bowl of popcorn for dinner. The second thing I figured out quickly was dining on a Lean Cuisine after a long day at work wasn’t going to work for me. I thought surely if I ate it with a glass of wine, that would pull it up a notch. Blah, yuck, gross.
          On occasion I’ll post on Nana’s Whimsies and give you ideas for cooking for one or two. Yummy dinners that are as satisfying as cooking for a family.
          I love to watch Food Network. And I love to read new recipes. One thing I most alwaysjennifer do is cut the recipe in half and sometimes in thirds. I always find that it works perfectly that way.
          Be forewarned, I make a few changes to every new recipe I try. For example, this recipe called for melted butter in the sauce. I’ve never added butter, so I can’t tell you if it’s better that way. Paula Deen would say it is better that way!
Caroline Style Barbecue Chicken,  courtesy of Food Network Magazine
Ingredients
¼ cup yellow mustard
1/8 cup apple cider vinegar
1/8 cup packed light brown sugar
¾ tsp of mustard powder
1 tsp hot sauce
¼ tsp of Worcestershire sauce.
Process
Whisk all ingredients in a bowl and prepare a bone in chicken breast to grill. Sprinkle some olive oil over the breast and season with garlic salt and course pepper. Let the chicken breast sit in the sauce for approx 10 minutes.
Grill the chicken, basting with the mustard sauce during grilling.
Jen's dinner
          I think chicken can be tricky to get done on the grill so if the meat has nice grill marks but the outside seems to be close to burning, turn off one side of the grill and let the meat finish cooking from the heat of the grill. In the winter I’ve made this in the oven as well and it is equally as good.
I served it this night with steamed broccoli (steamed in the microwave or baked in a hot oven in the winter) with a little of the mustard sauce sprinkled on top of that. I made an artichoke as well.

 

Sharing Space

jen austinBill and I began thinking of buying a house in the Phoenix area as far back as 2007. But it was my sister Jen who convinced us that the time to act was upon us in 2010. She called me up one day and said, “We are crazy if we don’t take advantage of the housing market in Phoenix and buy something. Let’s go in together.”

Hmmmm. The idea had some merit. In fact, after talking about it some more, we all decided it was a heck of a good idea. And so here we are.

While Bill and I are retired and therefore are able to spend the winter here, Jen has one of those inconvenient things called a job and, while she visits as often as she can, mostly she makes her share of the house payment and wishes she were here. It won’t always be this way.

I will admit that in the back of my mind, I have wondered how it would work if we all lived here. We tease Bill about his sister wives, but we don’t want to actually face that scenario! The answer to the question, of course, is that we don’t really know. But one thing I have witnessed is that when we have been together in this house, we get along just fine. The house, though small, is divided. If you go down one hallway, you are in the McLain wing. If you go down the other hallway, you are in the Sanchez wing. Doesn’t that sound like Downton Abbey? Never mind that the house is a mere 1,300 square feet or so. And there is no downstairs for the ladies’ maids and/or Bill’s valet. Rats. I will simply have to continue to dress myself.

Jen and I are no strangers to sharing space. That is true of all of the Gloor siblings. There are four of us, and the boy didn’t come until the end. We grew up in a house that probably wasn’t as large as our Arizona house – maybe 1,100 square feet or so. We had three bedrooms, and one bathroom. Yes, it’s true. We had a solitary bathroom in which we all had to get ready each day. And you know what? I never remember there being a problem. But it’s probably why you don’t see any of us spending a lot of time in a bathroom primping even today.

new house kitchen south west

This is the kitchen area. The little table which seated six was in that small area by the window.

A few years ago, Jen was visiting Columbus with a couple of her friends. They pulled up in front of our old house to see how it looked, and the current homeowner noticed she had a stalker. Since it was Columbus, instead of calling the police, she came out and asked if she could help them. Jen explained that she had grown up in that house and was just looking. The woman invited Jennie into the house.

Well, it was a blast from the past, that’s for sure. Jen’s take: “How in the world did the six of us ever live in such a small house? And how did Mom make

Here is the living room in which every important photo was taken.

Here is the living room in which every important photo was taken.

dinner in that tiny little kitchen? And most of all, how come I remember it being so much bigger?”

For many of my formative years, there was a double bed (not a queen-sized), and a single bed in one bedroom, in which three of us slept. The second bedroom had one bed and the inhabitant of that room changed. For a bit it was my baby brother’s nursery. When he was old enough to get out of his crib, I recall that he slept in the same room with Jen and I for a short time while Bec enjoyed her own bedroom as a teenager. I don’t think that lasted long. Once Bec left for college, Dave got his own bedroom.

So do you see the common denominator? Jen and I shared a bedroom for much of our lives, and for the bulk of the time we shared one bed. I, in fact, shared a bedroom with someone until I finally had my own apartment in Leadville when I was 22. Never spent a night without someone in a bed next to mine. I had a roommate in the dorm and again in the sorority house. Funny. I never gave it a second thought.

While all of our grandkids live in homes considerably larger than the one in which I grew up, it’s strange in this day and age that each of the three households with kids involves bedroom sharing. But the reality is if you ask the kids if they mind sharing a bedroom, they will all enthusiastically proclaim they don’t mind a bit. In fact, it makes them happy. That might change when they’re teenagers but for the time being, they are content with the arrangements.

Now, don’t get me wrong. I’m not considering sharing a bedroom again with Jen. I’m perfectly content with my current roommate. We’re used to hearing each other snore. It’s just fun to reminisce about sharing space.

And, of course, since Easter is upon us, I’m also thinking about sharing food. Generally, whether we eat breakfast, brunch or an afternoon dinner, there is ham involved. It’s springtime after all. Ham is not my favorite food, but I enjoy it once or so a year at Easter. I buy a spiral-cut ham at Costco or the grocery store and make my own glaze.

Orange Glazed Ham

Ingredients

1/2 c. frozen orange juice concentrate, thawed

1/4 c. bourbon

3 T. Dijon mustard

6 lb. ham

whole cloves

Process

Preheat oven to 350. In medium bowl, combine orange juice concentrate, brown sugar, bourbon and mustard. Mix well and set aside. Push cloves into the ham and then pour orange juice mixture over the meat. Cover with aluminum foil, tenting it in the center so it doesn’t touch the ham. Bake at 350 for two hours, basting with the pan juices every 30 minutes. Let stand, covered, 10 minutes before serving.

Nana’s Notes: The cloves aren’t mandatory of course. I like to use them because I think they pretty it up and because my mother used them. If I’m serving the ham at a brunch, I put it out with small rolls and condiments. Yum.

A Matter of Time

20140329_192334Bill and I were driving down Brown Road in Mesa on Saturday. As we passed Red Mountain High School, we noticed they were hosting their annual Red Mountain High School Mountain Lion Carnival.

Time travel flashback, BIG TIME.

I made Bill stop the car so that we could take a look-see. It wasn’t hard to convince him, as this is the man who decided we should attend a circus in Honfleur, France, when we were there in 2008. This man likes to be entertained.

Here’s where the flashback came in. Every year at the end of July, my home town – being the county seat – hosts the Platte County Fair. When I was growing up, it was a big deal for the whole county, as there typically wasn’t a lot to do.

So every year when the fair was in town, my mom and dad would take all of their kids to the fair.

Here were the rules:

We only went at night because, well for heaven’s sake, the lights are so pretty. There’s nothing like the lights of a ferris wheel in the dark.

Mom WOULD NOT BE ACCOMPANYING US on the rides. No way, Jose. Wasn’t going to happen. If we needed an escort, it might be Dad, but more than likely would be Bec.

The only games we could play were those that were not games of chance. In other words, no tossing balls at milk cans, only picking up ducks that have numbers on their butt that correlate with some sort of prize. It didn’t matter if the prize was only a pencil. If Dad was going to fork over a quarter, his kids were going to have something to show for it.

Man we loved the Platte County Fair.

Well, most of the Gloor kids anyway. Three-fourths of them.

Now let me just tell you a bit about the Gloor kids. While Bec – then and now – would not hesitate to bungee jump from Mount Everest, the rest of us are big fat chickens. Still, Jen and I would swallow hard and ride the tilt-a-whirl or the ferris wheel, despite the apparent GRAVE danger. We were game as long as we didn’t go upside down. We trusted in God and Mom to keep us safe.

Then there was Dave. I don’t think he even rode the merry-go-round because the horses might somehow become unattached and fall off the platform. As for anything that left the ground, it was a no-go. “It’s just a matter of time,” he would say, as he still does. A matter of time to what? Why, plummet, of course.

Bill and I wandered a bit around the carnival Saturday, not chancing any of the rides ourselves. Neither Bill nor I would even consider considering riding this danger trap…

image

Much prettier in the dark (yes, we went back to see the lights at night)….

20140329_192528

The tilt-a-whirl always made me throw up. That, too, was a no-go….

20140329_124645-1

But the people-watching was great. In particular, I found the people staffing the booths – the carnies – to be fascinating. I can’t imagine their life. While they get to see a lot of the United States, judging from the looks of it, dental benefits aren’t part of their comprehensive benefits package.

Now that wasn’t very nice. I’m sure they don’t envy my life either. Probably never yearned to be a corporate communicator when they grew up, even if it allowed me to keep my teeth. You don’t really need teeth to eat cotton candy.

I just have to tell one more tale on my brother. He won’t mind because he tells it himself.

Once when the fair was in town, my mother somehow roped my father into taking my brother – who admittedly was fairly young at the time – to the fair during the afternoon. Hardly anyone was there so they had the rides mostly to themselves. Somehow my father was able to persuade my brother to ride the BABY roller coaster. Well, Friends, once the BABY roller coaster got going, my brother was so frightened that he screamed each time he would pass by my father, “Make them stop this this ride.” You know, the BABY roller coaster. Finally, my father gave in and talked the ride operator into stopping the ride so that his son could disembark. I’m sure the operator was thrilled. I know my dad was.

But, after all, it was just a matter of time.

Here is a picture of the baby roller coaster at this weekend’s carnival….

20140329_124459

Perhaps the one at our County Fair was scarier……

 

This week I’m going to show you how you can cook an entire meal — from appetizers to dessert — on the grill. Being able to cook on the grill is critical in Arizona, especially in the spring and summer when it is really too hot to fire up the oven.

We’ll start with an appetizer — one that happens to be one of my husband’s favorites.

20140330_172738Grilled Chicken Livers Wrapped in Bacon

Ingredients

12 fresh chicken livers, halved

1 t. seasoned salt

12 slices of bacon, cut in half

Process

Preheat your grill.

Sprinkle each ½ chicken liver with seasoned salt to taste. Wrap ½ slice bacon around each chicken piece and fasten with a toothpick. Place on grill. Grill for 5 to 7 minutes. Turn pieces over and grill another 5 to 7 minutes, or until livers are cooked through and no longer pink inside. Serve hot.

Nana’s Notes: While these were on the grill, Bill said to me, “Chicken livers wrapped in bacon really are my favorite appetizer.” Shame on me for taking 21-1/2 years to make them for him. They were simple and so delicious. They are now my favorite appetizer too.

 

Two Miles High

thumbv23638Between my freshman and sophomore years of college, my parents moved to Leadville, Colorado. My dad had sold the bakery in Nebraska and bought another one in Leadville. Living in the mountains of Colorado had been a lifelong dream of both Dad and Mom.

It hadn’t, however, been a lifelong dream for me. I was perking along happily at the University of Nebraska when they announced they were going to leave. So long, farewell, auf wiedersehen, goodbye.

Whaaaaat?

So I scrambled to find an aunt and uncle that would allow me to use their address as my home address so I could continue to pay in-state tuition at NU (not kosher then; not kosher now; sorry state of Nebraska).  I drove out with my family to Leadville when they moved all their things from what had been home for almost all of their lives. Dad was the only one who had seen the bakery and the town. The rest of the family was moving sight unseen.

It was the first week in June, and as we came down the pass from Dillon to Leadville, it was snowing. I will never forget that. Snowing in June. I had a bad feeling.

We drove past the molybdenum mine outside of town (which employed probably 95 percent of the working population). The mine had taken over the mountain and pretty much destroyed the landscape (as mines do). It was not very pretty. My bad feeling grew.

We pulled into the town of Leadville, and it seriously might as well havethumbv3694 been 1890 instead of 1974. Though fairly close to Aspen as the crow flies (though a difficult drive over a serious mountain pass to get there), unlike that ritzy mountain town, Leadville’s founding fathers had done very little to spruce the town up. They were likely too busy working in the mine. Leadville was not a tourist community. It was a mining town.

I eventually saw the prettiness in the Mosquito Range surrounding the town and even in the town itself. But it was a big leap from what I was used to in Columbus, Nebraska.

It was a mining town.

I know I keep saying that, but mining truly defined the town. And the people.

I lasted one more year in Nebraska before following my family to Leadville. I lived in Leadville for a year or so before moving to Boulder and completing my education at the University of Colorado. That year in Leadville is one I seriously will never forget. I have been talking about Arizona being the Wild, Wild West. Let me just tell you that the residents of Leadville still had gunfights.

The folks that worked in the mine made pretty good money. It was Union work. Hard work which you couldn’t pay me enough to do, but really good cash. They got paid every two weeks.

Here’s how it went down, at least for many of the Leadville residents.

They would get their paychecks Friday afternoon and make their way to the Safeway (where I spent a year working). They would cash their checks at the service desk, and then buy their groceries for two weeks. They would proceed to the electric company, the bank that held their mortgage, the gas company, etc., and pay their bills with cash. They would then spend the rest of the night — well weekend really — getting drunk and into bar fights.

My mom and dad’s bakery was right on the main street across from the court house. Every other Friday on payday they would lay awake in bed and listen to the fighting going on across the street. Generally knife fights but there was the occasional gun fight.

And then Sunday morning the miners would go to church and Monday morning it was back to work and a normal life.

The mountains outside of town (and they really were walking distance) were dotted with old abandoned mines. At one time, Leadville had been second only to Denver in population because of the gold and (mostly) silver mining. Prior to moving to Leadville, I had never heard of Horace Tabor or his pitiful wife Baby Doe. The Unsinkable Molly Brown’s husband made his money from a mine outside of Leadville.

thumbv3700I loved taking a lunch out into these mountains and sunbathing next to an old mine shaft. Sunbathing season was limited because remember that snow in June?

I have mentioned before that my first taste of real Mexican food was in Leadville. It was at a restaurant called The Grill. I used to order two cheese and onion enchiladas with a fried egg on top. In 1974, the restaurant was kind of sketchy, bordering the unsafe neighborhood (as if our “safe neighborhood” across from the court house, where you had to literally dodge bullets, was so much better). Still, it was not a lovely restaurant but it had very good Mexican food. Thus began my love for Mexican food, the spicier the better.

I returned to Leadville recently and noticed the town leaders are making a concerted effort to clean up the town and attract tourists. The need for tourist dollars became critical when the Climax mine’s business plummeted in the 1990s. I was happy to see the improvement, but somewhat sad to see that The Grill had cleaned itself up and become just another Mexican restaurant. What’s the fun if you don’t have to worry about a potential stabbing?

Living in Leadville changed me in many ways, but not the least is in my food taste. I simply couldn’t live now without Mexican food. It’s one of the things I missed most when we were in Europe for three-and-a-half months. I probably eat Mexican food in some form or another three or four times a week both in Arizona and Colorado.

I recently had my brother over for dinner where I made pollo asado. What an absolutely delicious dish and so pretty to look at. Because the invitation was last minute, I didn’t have time to make the homemade refried beans I had been eager to try after watching a recent Pioneer Woman episode. So I Googled “refried beans canned pinto beans” and came up with what turned out to be a great recipe.

Pollo Asado, courtesy Ree Drummond and Food Networkpollo asado marinade

Ingredients

½ c. olive oil

½ c. orange juice (freshly squeezed if possible; save juiced orange halves)

¼ c. lemon juice (save the juiced fruit)

¼ c. lime juice (save the juiced fruit)

1 t. salt

1 t. black pepper

4 whole garlic cloves, peeled and smashed

16 whole chicken legs

2 whole onions, peeled and quartered

32 soft taco-size flour tortillas

Process

In a bowl, combine the olive oil, orange juice, lemon juice, lime juice, salt, pepper, and garlic cloves. Whisk together.

pollo asado mealPlace the chicken legs, juiced pieces of fruit and quartered onions in large plastic bags or a bowl. Pour the marinade over the top tossing to combine. Cover with plastic wrap (if using bowl) or seal the bag up and marinate for at least 2 hours. Several hours is better. Toss a few times during the marinating process.

Preheat a grill. Grill the chicken legs until cooked all the way through, turning occasionally so the chicken is cooked on all sides, 10 to 12 minutes.

Separate the tortillas into piles of 16, and then wrap each pile in foil and warm over the grill for 10 to 15 min.

Serve the chicken legs with the warm tortillas.

Quick and Easy Refried Beans, courtesy Allrecipes.com

Ingredients

2 T. canola oil

2 garlic cloves, peeled

2 15-oz cans pinto beans

1 t. cumin

1 t. chili powder

Salt to taste

½ lime, juiced

Process

Heat canola oil in a heavy skillet over medium heat. Cook garlic cloves in hot oil, turning once, until brown on both sides, 4-5 minutes. Smash garlic cloves in skillet with a fork.

Stir in pinto beans, cumin, chili powder, and salt into mashed garlic and cook until beans are thoroughly heated, about 5 minutes. Stir occasionally. Smash bean mixture with a potato masher to desired texture. Squeeze lime juice over smashed beans and stir until combined.

Nana’s Notes: I didn’t use chicken legs for the pollo asado; instead, I used boneless, skinless chicken thighs because I like to cut or tear up the meat and eat it inside the tortilla. Also, keep in mind that Ree Drummond cooks for a large number of people, so adjust your recipe accordingly. I made the same amount of marinade, but cut down on everything else. I marinaded the chicken for 2 hours, and it was absolutely delicious. As for the beans, they are so simple to make and I thought they were really tasty – better than store-bought refried beans. Finally, here in Arizona they have something new and awesome — uncooked tortillas that you simply cook in a fry pan or on a griddle for 30 – 60 seconds until they begin to bubble and brown. They are so simple and so delicious. I found them where they sell the canned biscuits and bread. I’m not sure if they sell them elsewhere. Hope so.

At Home in the Heart of Italy

DavidBill and I began talking about a long and adventurous trip to Italy in 2005. We had friends who had talked about living in France for six months when they retired. Doesn’t that sound lovely, I remember saying to Bill. Me, who gets homesick when I have a particularly long stay in the bathroom. But romance can overwhelm one, can’t it?

Anyhoo, for us, it wouldn’t – couldn’t – be France. The French are too scary and I simply can’t get a grasp of their language (too many silent letters). It would have to be Italy. And it would have to be somewhere in Tuscany.

We literally began planning that very day. Looking at our financial timeline, we figured I could retire at the end of 2007. We would leave for Italy shortly after. Of course, as we began putting plans on paper, we became a bit more practical. There was no way I could be away from home for six months. Too homesick. The exchange rate in 2007-2008 was horrendous, so we wouldn’t have been able to afford six months anyway.

We started thinking about whether or not we wanted to simply be in one place the whole time or travel around. We concluded that we couldn’t be in Europe for perhaps our last time without seeing some sights. Our compromise was that we would not have much of an agenda and we would spend a leisurely amount of time at each place we visited. Oh, and we would spend two full weeks in Rome and a month in one town in Tuscany.

Honing down the town we would stay was tricky. Originally we thought perhaps Lucca. We love that walled city near Pisa. But Bill began researching on Home Away and finally proposed the town of Certaldo.

Certaldo? Never heard of it.

It’s a 10 minute drive from San Gimignano (perhaps the prettiest town in Tuscany, but I say that about all of the towns). They have a historic center. There is a train station for day trips. It’s not too far from the reasonably sizeable community of Poggibonsi. Hmmm. This could work.

Well, I won’t go into details (if you want to know about our Tuscan escapades, click here and look at July 2008), but it did, indeed, work. It worked well. We stayed just outside the town, at the no-longer-used church of San Benedetto, specifically in Crackwhat had been the priest’s house. The church had a giant crack in it, and our landlord-for-the-month – Giovanni –suggested if we sit out on our patio next to the church, we do so on the far side. He was dead serious.

The house had apparently not been leased out to others for quite some time, and when Giovanni opened the doors, I kid you not. It had to have been over 100 degrees in the house. Every window was closed. The bricks had absorbed the sun for weeks. It was hot. And there was no air conditioning.

So much for my thoughts about cooking wonderful meals in my Tuscan kitchen, at least for awhile. Too darn hot. So I asked Giovanni if there was a grill we could use. He looked very puzzled, as he spoke very little English. I said, “You know, a grill – fire to cook on.” He pointed to the fireplace in the corner. Yes, that’s the answer. I will stoke up a fire in this house that is the home of the devil.

No matter. During our first run to Poggibonsi to get food, we found, after much searching, a tiny grill. Very tiny….

Grill

It is how we cooked most of our meals while in Tuscany.

Tuscany is a farming area, and though the crops are different, it reminded me a great deal of growing up in Nebraska. The crops of course are olives and grapes with a few fields of sunflowers thrown in just to move the scenery off the “gorgeous” mark to “full out spectacular.” Here is the scene we saw from our kitchen window every morning as we prepared our coffee….

Morning

It more than made up for the heat we experienced during the day. By the way, I sort of learned how to manage the heat a bit by opening up the windows in the morning and evening and closing up the windows and blinds during the day. It became bearable. And we were in Tuscany.

I began contemplating what I could post in the way of typical Tuscan food. The first thing that came to mind was wild boar – very typical of the Tuscan area of Italy, especially in pasta sauces. I had no interest, however, in chasing down a javalina (which is the desert version of wild boar), and even if I did, I was pretty sure that our homeowners’ association would prohibit the slaughter of animals in our backyard. At least I hope so. I will tell you, however, that wild boar is delicious.

But then I thought of another very typical Tuscan meal – bistecca fiorentina. These Tuscan steaks come from the area’s Chianina breed of cattle which are prized for their tenderness and flavor. They are basically a porterhouse steak on steroids, grilled so rare they practically jump when you put your fork into them, and finished with olive oil. They are, in a word, huge. And delicious. That’s two words.

The first time we ever ordered them, we had no clue how big they were. It was in Florence during that first trip we took to Italy, you know, the one where we shouldn’t have been let loose on our own. Up until that meal, we had made it a point to each order a pasta course and then split a meat course. We looked at the menu outside, all of course in Italian, and spotted the bistecca fiorentina. Boom.

As usual, we each ordered a pasta dish. This time, however, we decided to each order bistecca fiorentina. One for each of us. The waiter didn’t say a thing. Or maybe he did in Italian and we just didn’t understand him. Whatever.

Being particularly hungry, and our pasta being particularly delicious, we ate every bite. Soon after, the waiter approached us carrying two plates, each with a porterhouse steak so big it literally was hanging off the plate. Oh oh, I thought.

I think I ate a few bites, but Bill ate the whole thing. Turns out Italians would have shared one. Who knew?

During our time in Tuscany, we cooked bistecca fiorentina a couple of times. When you go to the market, you won’t find the meat sitting on Styrofoam plates wrapped in sterile plastic. You will find the different kinds of meat sitting loose in the showcase, and you point. The chickens will have their heads still intact. The bunnies, well, the same. The steaks are cut upon order. The butcher brings out a gigantic piece of beef from which he will cut the steaks. How many do you want, he will ask, wielding his giant meat cleaver. One…….WHAP.  Two……WHAP WHAP. That quickly. I wonder how many fingers are lost each year by butchers.

We cooked bistecca fiorentina on our little grill when Bec and Terry visited us at the priest’s home……

steaks 2

Bistecca all Fiorentina, by Michael Chiarello

Ingredients

2 2-lb. porterhouse steaks, about 2 inches thick

Grey sea salt

Coarse grind black pepper

Pure olive oil

Balsamic vinegar

Process

Let the steak rest outside the refrigerator for 30 minutes before cooking. Liberally season the steak with salt and pepper, coat with olive oil and press the seasoning into the meat. Grill the steaks for about 5 – 6 min. on each side for medium rare.Move the steaks every 2 min. or so for even cooking and a crispy exterior.

Allow the steaks to rest on a carving board for at least 5 minutes.

Cut the steaks away from the bone and carve into ½ inch slices. Drizzle a little bit of balsamic vinegar over the slices.

Nana’s Notes: I used one porterhouse steak for Bill and me. It didn’t even begin to compare to porterhouse cookedthe steaks we would get in Italy, at least size-wise. Perhaps if I had gone to a butcher. Also, no balsamic vinegar finish for us. Just a little more olive oil. The key is lots of salt. Absolutely heavenly.

By the way, as you can imagine, I could go on and on and on about our experiences in Tuscany. It KILLS me to stop.

Roamin’ through Rome

StPetersWe’ve been to Rome more than any other European city. Whenever I visit, it’s impossible for me not to think about the glorious movie Roman Holiday starring Audrey Hepburn and Gregory Peck. In that movie, Hepburn, playing a visiting princess, escapes her handlers, disguises herself as a civilian, meets up with Peck (with whom she of course falls in love), and sees the real Rome. Afterwards, Princess Ann (Hepburn) is asked which of the European cities that she visited was her favorite. She begins to answer in a politically correct way, and then, catching the eyes of Gregory Peck (who is as dreamy as they come), she says, “Rome….my favorite city was Rome.” Mine too, Audrey.

Rome is as different from Paris as Sonny was from Cher. Where Paris is quiet and romantic and people walk slow and hold hands and leisurely drink coffee at streetside cafes, the energy in Rome is practically tangible. The people walk with quick determination. The underground and buses are ridiculously crowded. Romans order espresso at stand-up bars and drink them down in one gulp, quickly, so they can get to their next destination. Scooters fly by noisily. People talk loudly and their hands are in constant motion. The atmosphere is vibrant. I loved Rome from the very first time I visited it.

Perhaps it’s the history. Maybe the amazing art intrigues me. The food, of course, is delicious. Maybe the multitude of churches appeals to my very Catholic self. I don’t know. I just know that I will never get tired of visiting Rome.

The first time we were there was during the trip about which I spoke yesterday. Remember I told you we were taking a train from Milan to Rome? The whole sleeping car fiasco? Well, here’s the continuation of the story, starring Bill McLain.

Neither of us slept too well once we got into our bunks on the sleeping car. It was somewhere around 750 degrees F. and we couldn’t get the air conditioner to work. We managed to get the tiny window open, well, a tiny bit. We slept fitfully until the train steward brought us coffee and brioche. I remember that because I had never had brioche before.

We got off the train around 9 o’clock in the morning in Rome, on a Wednesday. We were to attend an audience with the pope later that day, and Bill informed me we had to quickly pick up our tickets at a rectory somewhere near the American Catholic Church in Rome, St. Susanna. We had our luggage, which he planned on dropping off at our hotel prior to picking up our tickets. He, of course, had no clue where our hotel or the rectory or St. Susanna was located. But Bill McLain DOESN’T DO TAXIS. If God had meant us to take cabs, he wouldn’t have given us two perfectly good legs with which to walk. He had his handy dandy map, and off we went, on foot. Pulling suitcases over cobblestones. After a restless night on a train. In a strange city.

I will say this for Bill. He’s a very smart man with a very good sense of direction. And he’s lucky as hell. I won’t go into details, but we were able to find our hotel fairly easily, and then made our way with little trouble to the rectory, then on to the Vatican. All on foot. With the temperature easily in the 90s.

One more memory about that day. Before we left Milan, Heather had given me a picture of the Black Madonna of Poland she had gotten for her Bushia (her black MadonnaCatholic Polish grandmother) and asked me to have it blessed by Pope John Paul II when we attended the audience with him on Wednesday. I promised I would. Little did I know that the pope didn’t do his blessing until the end of the audience, nor that the day was going to be blistering and that we had no shade, nor that the audience went on literally for hours. After three hours of sitting in the burning hot sun, Bill pled with me to leave. “I promised Heather,” I said. I fulfilled my promise. Pope JPII said, “amen,” and Bill and I flew out of there like two jackrabbits.

When we visited Rome during our Big Adventure in 2008, we spent two full weeks. Heavenly. Using the wonderful website Home Away, Bill found an apartment on the edge of Rome but very near a metro line. The best part is that it was located in a neighborhood. As a result, while we weren’t walking distance to the Spanish Steps, we were able to get a feel for the real Rome. We could hear children playing in the courtyard in the evening and listen to the sound of television from open windows. We got to know our neighbors. While we couldn’t speak to them, they would smile and nod to us when we passed them on the way to their mailbox. I loved it.

Right across the street there was a restaurant where we ate nearly every breakfast and many of our dinners. The patrons lived where we lived. The same person, probably the owner, was there in the morning and at night, every single day.

Italians don’t go in big for breakfast. They will have their espresso or cappuccino and a donut or something else sweet. Save the appetite for a big afternoon meal. We had learned from our guidebook that donuts were called bomboloni. So the first morning Bill confidently ordered, “Uno macchiato, uno cappuccino, e due bomboloni.” We pointed to the sugar donuts sitting on the tray on top of a thick layer of sugar. Well, our friendly neighborhood proprietor laughed so hard you would have thought Bill was Don Rickles.  Once he stopped laughing, he said, “No bomboloni – CIAMBELLI.”

Bomboloni

Bomboloni

Ciambella

Ciambella

Well no matter what you call them, they were delicious. The donuts – er, I mean ciambelli – were coated with a layer of sugar so thick that you needed to lick it off your fingers. (Well, I did; Bill went to the bathroom and washed his hands. Meh.) But here’s what I finally figured out. Ciambelli are donuts, you know, with a hole. Bomboloni are filled donuts, you know, like bismarcks. So it would be like going into Dunkin Donuts, pointing to the glazed donut and saying you want one of those bismarcks. Not that funny, huh? But it certainly was for our friendly neighborhood proprietor. He eventually became our friend.

Bill’s nephew Father David, who at the time was studying in Rome, was our tour guide. Since he speaks English, Italian, and Latin, and was incredibly knowledgeable about all of the churches and all of the art in the churches, we couldn’t have been luckier. If you would like to read about our experiences in Rome, here’s a link. Go to June 2008. We were in Rome the last two weeks.

Spaghetti Carbonara is a typical Roman pasta dish. It’s believed to have been developed during World War II, perhaps as an answer to American troops’ nostalgia for bacon and eggs. There are many theories about its origin, but no questions at all about how delicious it is. My favorite recipe comes from Chef Marcella Hazen.

Spaghetti alla Carbonara, from Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking, by Marcella Hazan
carbonara

Ingredients

1/4 lb. pancetta
2 garlic cloves
1-1.2 T. extra-virgin olive oil
2 T. dry white wine
1 large egg
2 T. freshly grated Romano cheese
1/4 c. freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese
fresh ground black pepper
1 T. chopped flat-leaf parsley
1 lb. spaghetti

Process

Start by boiling a pot of water and then cooking your pasta according to the package. Time it so that everything else is prepared by the time the pasta is cooked.

Cut the pancetta into strips not quite 1/4 inch wide. Lightly crush the garlic with a knife handle, enough to split it and loosen the skin, which you will discard. Put the garlic and olive oil into a small sauté pan and turn on the heat to medium high. Sauté until the garlic becomes colored a deep gold and remove. Fry the pancetta until it starts to crisp at the edges. Add the wine and let it bubble for a minute or two and then turn off the heat.

Break the egg into big enough bowl to toss the pasta in. Beat it lightly with a fork, then add the two grated cheeses, a liberal grinding of pepper, and the chopped parsley. Mix thoroughly. Add cooked drained spaghetti to the bowl, and toss rapidly, coating the strands well. Add the entire contents of the bacon pan into the bowl, toss thoroughly again, and enjoy at once.

Nana’s Notes: I recently posted a blog about Bill’s inability to cook, or at least his lack of interest in cooking. In the blog I pointed out that he had surprised me by Bill cooksmaking onion rings. My niece Maggie reminded me via a comment that Bill does, indeed, make one meal. He makes a helluva Spaghetti alla Carbonara. I don’t know why he became the one who makes this meal, but it is so. And it is delicious. Last night we cut the recipe in half and it worked fine. Also, I didn’t have quite enough pancetta (I used what I had left over from the Bucatini Amatriciana), so we threw in a little bit of American bacon. The difference is that American bacon is smoked and pancetta is not. It tasted delicious. Spaghetti Carbonara is the only pasta dish, however, that I won’t eat left over. When it is reheated, the egg scrambles and the dish becomes nasty. My opinion, at least. No problem. We always eat it all.

Horsing Around in Northern Italy

Last week I wrote about Lent, and posted a photo of a piece of art depicting Christ’s crucifixion located at a church in Rome. To find the photo, it was necessary for me to peruse the blog I posted about our European travels that I started in 2008 during our three-month adventure. I got sucked in, and before I knew it, I had spent a couple of hours reading about our travels. I decided it might be fun to reminisce with you all a bit about some of our trips, and include food typical of the area about which I’m speaking. I know, I know…..I’m indulging myself.

CanalThe first time Bill and I visited Italy was around 1999. (I’m not dead certain of the year because in those days I kept a paper travel journal which is back in Denver. No help here in Arizona.) We had never traveled abroad without the crutch of our children with us. Our son Allen lived and traveled in Europe for about four years and our son Dave spent a semester studying in Edinburgh, Scotland, so they had given us a hand previously. This time we were mostly on our own.

We did, however, meet our daughter Heather in Milan, and spent a few days with her. I recall happily greeting her at the train station and then telling her that I needed to use the bathroom.  She got a funny look on her face and asked me if I had tissues with me. “I think so,” I said, wondering why she wanted to know. It didn’t take long before I realized the cause of her concern. When I opened the bathroom stall, not only was there no toilet paper, there was no toilet. There was a hole in the ground and a place to put my feet. We’re not in Kansas anymore, I thought.

After our visit with Heather, we headed for Rome and she moved on to Paris, where she was going to meet her Uncle Bruce. Bill had learned in his travel book that one option if you were moving from one point to another was to take an overnight train instead of renting a hotel room. He couldn’t get that notion out of his mind and was determined to take an overnight train and get a sleeping berth. Unfortunately, the earliest we could get a sleeping berth on the train from Milan to Rome was in Bologna.

Now, here’s the thing. We were total and complete neophytes. We didn’t know the customs. We didn’t speak the language. We didn’t know just how we were going to find out how to find our sleeping car in Milan, didn’t understand one thing about it. We pulled into the station, waited a few moments hoping against hope that a conductor would come get us. It was Italy folks. That was not going to happen, though we didn’t understand that yet. Newbies, donchaknow.

Finally Bill said he was going to find out what was happening. He DISEMBARKED the train, hoping to be able to locate someone to help him. He was gone for quite some time. Suddenly the train began to move. Within a minute, the train was heading south at full speed.

Oh My God. I was all alone. My husband was missing in action. I didn’t know details about our plans. I knew absolutely no Italian. I had no cell phone. Last I had seen of Bill, he had been on the platform looking for a helpful Italian. I’m not sure I have ever been so distraught.

Just as I was about to become quite hysterical (and wouldn’t a hysterical American woman have made the Italians happy?) I saw Bill coming down the aisle of the train. He had gotten the details about our sleeping berth and gotten back onto the train on a different car.

Since that time, we have visited Italy a number of times and are much more sophisticated travelers. I have learned that as long as you understand that you CAN’T UNDERSTAND Italian logic you’ll be fine. The Italians are generally eager to help.

When we spent over three months traveling in Europe in 2008, two of those months were spent in Italy. That time we arrived in the country by car, driving in from Austria. Our first stop was Padua, near Venice, in northern Italy. Padua is the location of the Basilica dedicated to my very favorite saint, Anthony of Padua. St. Anthony is the patron saint of lost items and Catholics ask his prayers to help them locate items they can’t find. I call upon him often, I’m afraid.

We bunked in Padua, but in addition, visited Verona, Trieste, and Venice, all by car. We had a Peugeot convertible that Bill (God bless him) drove 6,600 total miles in three months. Without a single scratch on the car. Driving in Italy. Just sayin….

Anyhoo, we had spent the past month or so in France, Germany, and Austria, but were eager to get to Italy because it is our favorite European country. Can’t help it. I love the scenery. I love the people. I love the churches. I love the art. I love the food. Mostly, I LOVE THE FOOD.

The first night in Padua, we went out to a local restaurant near our hotel. We were dining earlier than most (7 o’clock is unseemingly early in France and Italy) so we were nearly by ourselves in the restaurant. The waiter took us under his wing and began bringing us food, as so often happens in Italy. I mean food we haven’t ordered. They just want us to try things and they can’t help being hospitable and generous, especially when it comes to their food. He brought us risi e bisi as a first course, a specialty of the region — rice and fresh green peas. Bill had bucatini with duck and asparagus and I had tagliatelli with tomato, garlic and pecorino cheese. Bucatini is typical in the region. It is a long pasta with a hole running through it. Because of its hollow shape, the pasta is difficult to wrap neatly around your fork, and it sort of slaps you in the face as you eat it.

The most surprising thing to me was that prominent on the menu was horse meat – as an appetizer, as a sauce for pasta, as a main course. I didn’t realize horse was eaten anywhere. I passed, thank you very much, but to this day I regret that choice. I might not have liked it, but dang, I wish I knew what it tasted like.

The recipe I’m posting is Bucatini all’ Amatriciana. The sauce might be a bit more typical of Rome, but the bucatini pasta is very definitely typical of northern Italy. I am giving you Lidia Bastianich’s version, and it doesn’t contain horse.

Bucatini all’ Amatriciana (Bucatini with Pancetta, Tomato, and Onion), from Lidia’s Italian-American Kitchen cookbookbucatini with pancetta

Ingredients

One 35-oz. can Italian plum tomatoes (preferably San Marzano)

Salt

5 T. extra-virgin olive oil, or to taste

1 medium onion, sliced thin (about 2 cups)

Four ¼ in. slices pancetta (about 6 oz.), cut into 1-1/2 in julienne strips (about 1-1/2 c.)

½ t. crushed hot red pepper flakes

1 lb. bucatini or perciatelli pasta

1 c. grated Pecorino Romano cheese, plus more for passing

Process

Pass the tomatoes and their liquid through a food mill fitted with the fine disc. Set aside. Bring 6 qts. of salted water to a boil in an 8-qt. pot.

In a large skillet, heat 2 T of the olive oil over medium heat. Add the onion and cook, stirring, until wilted, about 4 min. Stir in the pancetta and cook 2 min. Add the red pepper flakes and the strained tomatoes and bring to a boil. Adjust the heat to a simmer, and season lightly with salt. Cook, stirring occasionally, until the sauce is thickened, about 20 minutes.

Meanwhile, stir the pasta into the boiling water and cook, stirring occasionally, until done, about 12 minutes.

Check the seasoning of the sauce adding salt if necessary (remember, the Pecorino is mildly salty).

Reserve about 1 c. of the pasta cooking water. Drain the pasta, return it to the pot, and pour in half the sauce. Bring the sauce and pasta to a boil and drizzle in the remaining 3 T. olive oil. Add some of the pasta cooking water if necessary to make enough of the sauce to coat the pasta lightly. Check the seasoning, adding salt if necessary. Remove the pan from the heat, stir in 1 c. grated cheese, and transfer to a large, heated serving platter or bowl. Spoon the remaining sauce over the top and pass additional grated cheese separately if you like.

Nana’s Notes: God bless Lidia. Seriously, she’s my favorite chef. I love her cooking. But not everyone lives in New York City with access to many ingredients. I didn’t find San Marzano tomatoes in my neighborhood grocery store here in Mesa. Also, I have no interest in passing anything through a food mill. I mean, really? So I bought canned crushed tomatoes. Also, the only pancetta I could find was thinly sliced, so that’s what I used. You know what? It was delicious even if Lidia would be horrified.

Furthermore, since I was only cooking for Bill and me, I cut the recipe in half. Worked fine.

I used bucatini, but you could also use spaghetti or linguine. Any long pasta.

It was scrumptious.

Smokin’………..

photo (96)When I grew up (I can almost hear a collective groan as I write these words), my siblings and I had many, many aunts and uncles. For reasons unknown to me, we always called them by their first names – never preceded by “Aunt” or “Uncle.” It was Cork and Jeep, and Elmer and Leona, Fani and Rollo, and so forth.

Conversely, every single one of my nieces and nephews calls us Aunt Kris and Uncle Bill. We never discussed this amongst ourselves. It’s just that from the time that Erik was old enough to talk, that’s what he called us, and the others all followed his lead. The same holds true for all of my siblings. They are Aunt Bec, Aunt Jen, and Uncle Dave (well, that has mostly just been shortened to Unk).

Now there might be some variations. Erik calls me Auntie. Maggie calls me Aunt. Not Aunt Kris. Just Aunt. BJ calls me Anti (as in anti-climactic, which this post introduction is swiftly becoming).

Anyway, that has nothing to do with my nephew Christopher’s ability to cook. It just is something that occurred to me as I thought about my nephews this week. Christopher, by the way, calls me Aunt Kris – no shortcuts.

My brother David is a baker, of course, and a decidedly good one at that. He is also, however, a wonderful cook. He would likely purport to be more of a griller, but he can cook up a good pot of pinto beans and great chili. But he is a master at the grill, learned, of course, from our dad.

And, of course, passed along to his son Christopher.

Both David and Christopher are patient grillers. So was my dad. I tend to always be in a hurry when I grill, so my food is either undercooked or burnt to a crisp. Sounds delicious, huh? Christopher, like his dad, likes to enjoy a cigar while he grills, which I think enhances patience. I just don’t think I’m willing to give that a try, however.

I remember being over at Christopher’s house one day, probably for one of their kids’ birthday celebrations (they have four beautiful children), and he was grilling chicken wings. They were full-size wings, not cut in pieces like most wings. And there were something like 287 wings. That might be a slight exaggeration – well it might be a big exaggeration, WHATEVER! – but my point is there were very many wings. The grill was full of the little devils. I recall that he just calmly stood by the grill carefully turning the wings to prevent them from burning. He had his can of beer at the ready, because he is his Poppo’s grandson after all, and he would throw some beer on the grill when the flames would get too hot. The cigar was in his mouth, because he is David’s son after all, and he just patiently babysat the wings until they were perfectly cooked.

Like Erik and Kate, Christopher and his sisters (for this young man has three sisters, poor dear; for whatever reason, God blessed each of the Gloor siblings with one boy apiece) only saw his Nana and Poppo a few times a year because his family lives in Arizona. I was interested to learn what he remembers about Nana’s cooking, as I was with all of the boys about whom I wrote this week.

He immediately responded that he remembers eating Nana’s artichokes. That made me laugh, because I, too, remember eating my mom’s artichokes. Now, she didn’t do anything particularly unusual in cooking them; it’s just that I’m not sure we had even heard of artichokes until sometime in the late 70s or early 80s. My dad’s sister Myrta introduced them to us. Mom would simply cook them in water to which she added nothing more than a clove of garlic. But they were scrumptious, dipped in melted butter. Yum. I wonder if Christopher makes them?

Anyhoo, Christopher was given a smoker about six months ago. It sat unused up until smokerabout a week-and-a-half ago, when he dove in feet first and smoked a pork butt. He planned to serve it at a birthday celebration for one of his kids, but the party had to be cancelled. It was apparently delicious and he plans on serving it to us this weekend at the rescheduled celebration.

I can’t wait! Seriously, my mouth is watering and it’s 6:30 in the morning.

Christopher’s Pulled Pork

Ingredients
10 lb. pork shoulder or butt, or 6 lbs. pork ribs
Dry Rub:
¼ c. paprika
1/8 c. fresh ground black pepper
1-2 T. garlic powder
1-2 T. onion powder
1 T. or more cayenne pepper
¼ c. coarse salt
¼ c. brown or white sugar

Process
Combine the ingredients for the dry rub, and massage the rub into the meat.

Place the pork shoulder, butt, or ribs in the smoker, and let cook for 6 hours. This is what it looked like after he removed it from the smoker:
post smoker

Wrap the meat in aluminum foil, and cook it in a 225 degree oven for another 7 hours.

Once cooked, pull the meat apart.
Pulled Pork

Nana’s Notes: Just so you know, Christopher awoke that morning at 4:30 in order to begin the process. That is dedication. Guess he will be doing that again this weekend. I’ll think of him as soon as I awake at around 8:30 Sunday morning.

His father tells me that the entire process takes about 5 cigars. Not sure how I feel about that. Well, yes I am. Yuck.

Son of a Gun We’ll Have Big Fun

IMG_0069Because my family owned its own business, my siblings and I began working at a young age in the bakery.

My sister Bec worked her entire life up until a couple of years ago when she finally retired. For most of her working life, she was a teacher. Teachers are at work early, and they aren’t finished working even when they get home late in the afternoon. Still, I’m pretty sure she put dinner on the table for her family every night. We weren’t the kind of family that would be satisfied with a sandwich for dinner.

Her husband loved to cook, but it was a hobby as opposed to a family duty. He used to tell me that he spent his day working on big projects where he never really saw a resulting product. He liked to cook because he could put ingredients together and then see a direct result from his efforts. That made sense to me.

Bec is a really good cook, though in a million years she won’t admit this fact. And though I suspect she – like I – did not directly teach her children to cook, they learned about good food and cooking through example, and perhaps osmosis.

Bec’s son Erik and his sister Kate saw their Nana and Poppo several times a year, even though they lived across the country. When the kids were growing up, the Borman family vacations largely involved either visiting family IN Colorado or entertaining family FROM Colorado. Erik was the first-born grandchild, son, nephew, etc., and had curly blond hair and sweet blue eyes and a smile that melted everyone’s heart. He had a special place in Nana and Poppo’s heart because he was their first grandchild. He, likewise, thought they walked on water.

He loved to help his Poppo bake, and thought his Nana made the best Swiss macaroni and cheese and mashed potatoes in the world. “They have these little pieces of potato in them,” he would excitedly explain, not understanding that others would say her potatoes were lumpy. Erik says he inherited his Nana’s mashed potato and gravy bowls, and he considers them prize possessions.

All this is to say that Erik became a good cook because he was surrounded by good cooks, and because good food is important to all of us, including him. While he likely didn’t cook while living at home, he began cooking as soon as he was on his own and had his own stove to cook on and clean.

Erik and his wife both work full-time, and they share the cooking duties. Both are health-conscious, and cook using healthy ingredients. One of Erik’s strengths, in fact, is that he can turn a generally-unhealthy entrée into something that won’t necessarily cause one to keel over you before the last bite.

Take his jumbalaya, for example. While most Cajun and Creole dishes are not particularly healthy, he does wonders with his take on the food. He substitutes turkey sausage, for example, for Andouille or smoked sausage. I have made both jumbalaya and gumbo, and I can tell you that I don’t have the patience to wait. Stirring, stirring, stirring. He does. Have the patience I mean.

Erik says he finds the process of cooking to be relaxing, but I think what he really enjoys is the social aspect of food. The gathering of family and friends over something you prepared with your own hands. I know what he means about enjoying the process. There is something wonderful about taking a variety of ingredients and putting them together to make something that tastes delicious. Our family enjoys gathering over a meal, and Erik can cook it for us any time he wants. And often does.

Erik’s JumbalayaIMG_0351
Ingredients
2 lbs. medium raw shrimp
1 lb. turkey kielbasa (Jennie-O or equivalent)
Vegetable/canola Oil
2 c. chopped onion
1 c. chopped green pepper
1 c. chopped celery
4 cloves garlic, minced
2 14-1/2 oz cans of crushed tomatoes
2 14-1/2 oz cans low-sodium chicken broth
2 8-oz cans tomato sauce
2-1/2 c. water
2 c. long-grain white rice (uncooked)
1 tsp dried thyme
1-1/2 tsp ground red pepper (less if you prefer little spice, 2+tsp if you prefer spicy)
1 t. chili powder
1/2 t. sugar

Process
Peel and devein the shrimp. Saute the shrimp in 3 tbs oil in a Dutch oven (medium heat). Stir continuously until all shrimp are pink. Remove shrimp (leave oil), cover and refrigerate. Slice kielbasa into ¼ inch pieces and half. Saute in remaining oil plus 1 tbs additional oil. Kielbasa is already cooked, so simply brown to add another flavor layer. Remove and set aside. In remaining oil, add the onion, green pepper & celery (known as the trinity in Creole cooking). Cook, stirring constantly for 5-7 minutes until your desired consistency. Mince garlic and add, stirring for 2-3 minutes to incorporate well. Add turkey kielbasa back to Dutch oven, and add the crushed tomatoes plus rest of the ingredients. Bring to a boil, then cover, reduce heat and simmer for 45-50 minutes until the rice is soft and most of the water/broth has been absorbed. Stir frequently. Add chilled shrimp and let simmer for an additional 10 minutes. Serve with fresh bread.

Mexican Grass Evolution

1544445_10201327337530908_210797430_nMom didn’t really teach any of her children to cook. Not really. Now, that isn’t to say we didn’t learn to cook from mom. But we learned by watching her, especially when we were older and had families of our own. I remember sitting at their breakfast bar when she and Dad lived in Dillon, CO, and watching her cook. But she never said, “Kris, you make this Vegetable Soup with Beef Shanks. I will tell you the ingredients and let you do it while I watch.” Or even when I was a high school girl, “Kris, since I have been at work and on my feet for, I don’t know, 10 or 12 hours, perhaps you could prepare some dinner so I don’t have to do it when I get home.” Didn’t happen.

I am not complaining. First of all, I had no interest in preparing dinner after I got home from school. After all, I had to call my friends and there were LPs to listen to. I might need to go have a Cherry Coke at Tooley’s Drug Store, or go to my BFF’s house and make prank phone calls. Busy, busy, busy.

But as I was thinking about my mom’s grandsons and their love for cooking, I realized that my son Court, though he is a very good cook, certainly didn’t learn to cook from me. At least not in any direct way. Just like Mom, I made dinner every night, but didn’t teach him a darn thing.

I said in yesterday’s post that BJ loved food from the time he was a small boy. Not Court. As a very small boy, his father and I would have to use trickery to get him to eat anything. We called the diced lettuce on tacos “Mexican grass” because he certainly wouldn’t have eaten it if he suspected it was a vegetable. There was a time in way younger years – 3 or 4 – when he practically lived off of hamburgers and grilled cheese sandwiches. I could make him happy by toasting two pieces of bread, laying a slice of American cheese between them, wrapping the sandwich in a napkin, and putting it in the microwave for 1 minute or so. Voila! Happy camper. Not cooking, however.

At some point, though, (and I really can’t remember when it was) he learned to enjoy food. So parents of small kids who won’t eat much, there’s hope. Things can change. He liked comfort foods such as meat loaf and porcupine meatballs and tacos. In fact, he once ate 13 tacos in one sitting when he was 16 or so.

The year he was turning 13, we happened to be in New York City on his birthday – the first time for Court and me. Bill and I decided to take him to a really nice steak house for his birthday dinner. He announced that he wanted to order lamb chops.

Now, growing up in Nebraska, I didn’t run into lamb chops. Lamb was not on many restaurant menus, which mostly featured steaks. My mom certainly never prepared lamb. I had literally never tasted it, never prepared it, never talked about it, never was curious about it. Yet, Court decided he wanted to try lamb.

“Really?” I asked him. “What if you don’t like it?”

“I will,” he said with certainty. And indeed he did. To this day, it would probably be his favorite meat. He requests it at every opportunity. Most recently I made it for Christmas Eve dinner, and it was fabulous.20131223_185250

And now that he is married and has three children and one on the way, he cooks at least some of the time. Well, I think mostly now he grills. He makes a mean pot of green chili, and grills pork chops that he maintains might – MIGHT – be better than his Poppo’s, and are almost certainly better than his Uncle Dave’s. (His words, not mine.) Now there’s a throwdown challenge for you.

I asked him to share one of his recipes for this post. He said, “I don’t really have recipes; I just mostly eyeball ingredients.” I assure you, he didn’t learn this from me as I am almost entirely unable to cook without a recipe in front of me. I’m pretty sure that means he’s a better cook than I.

Chicken Creolechicken creole

Ingredients
1 pack boneless chicken thighs, cut into pieces
1 onion, diced
1 green pepper, diced
1 red pepper, diced
2 jalapenos, diced
1 stalk celery, diced
3 cloves garlic, minced
1 cup sliced mushrooms
1 large can diced tomatoes
½ can tomato paste
Lots of creole seasoning throughout cooking process
Garlic salt, regular salt, pepper to taste

Process
Combine ingredients and cook in crock pot on low for 6-8 hours. Serve with rice.

Anyone care for a grilled porkchop throwdown?