Computer desk plans

Little Five lost his television and Wii privileges this week, and so there have been long afternoons when he has NOTHING to do and NO ONE to play with. Oh, and EVERYONE IS SO MEAN. On the plus side, he has spent some quality time with his matchbox cars and his Tag reader, and I haven’t listened to the Caillou theme song in four whole days.

So it’s been a tricky week for getting anything done. I suppose I should be embarrassed to admit that I can’t get anything done when my kid isn’t entertained by a screen of some kind, but there it is. Just Dance 4 has been my babysitter lately. He’s getting exercise, and I can attack a project or write an entire paragraph without interruption.

Did I accomplish anything this week, beyond emptying the dishwasher and folding clothes? I cleaned out the computer armoire, which is Step 1 toward the goal of replacing it with a simple desk. Step 2 is to measure and cut down one of our old closet doors into a desk top, then a trip to Ikea for some table legs (that’s on the calendar for next week). Just writing this post motivated me to find a home for the things I removed from the armoire (one bag of computer games to Freecycle, several reams of paper, a box of CDs and cords, and a stack of old photos).

Except for the photos, the contents of an entire cubby went straight into the recycling. This is why I want a desk without storage–fewer places for junk to hide. This is the computer the kids use, and the only desk accessory they really need is a waste basket. I envision an uncluttered desk with only a small tray containing a pencil cup, note pad, and a little box to store a few flash drives. We might keep a small memo board to post frequently used usernames and passwords, and maybe some hooks to hang their headphones.

With an open desk, I’m going to have to wrangle some cords and decide how to disguise the modem and router, but I’m not there yet. Baby steps, no?

Monday Menu

After several weeks of digging deep into the freezer and pantry to plan meals, it’s time to admit that we are nearly out of staples. (Except for flour. Plenty of that.) It’s been good to empty the freezer and pantry and know that we’re not wasting food or storing things that are past their prime. So February is going to be the Month of Restocking the Pantry. I am weirdly excited by the idea of making a list of staples, stocking up, and then organizing and inventorying the goods. Doesn’t that sound fun?

This week I’m working with the last few items in the freezer…a couple of Christmas duck carcasses, tofu, edamame, and the little post-Christmas sale turkey that the Hub roasted yesterday. A few pantry items: spaghetti, rice, barley. But after that, we’re kind of out of everything, unless we plan to survive on condiments and liquor. Probably not the breakfast of champions.

It feels good to start fresh.

 

Monday: Turkey dinner leftovers (yum!)

Tuesday: Duck and Barley Soup (this going to be an experiment), tomato salad

Wednesday: Turkey Tetrazzini, carrots

Thursday: Tofu Stir-Fry with Pork, rice, edamame

Friday: Penne with Vodka Sauce, green salad

 

If you had a completely empty pantry, what would you buy first?

Chocolate cake and tomato soup

But no, NOT in the same recipe.

Behold, the cake:

That, my friends, is a Chocolate Blackout Cake. Three layers of devil’s food cake filled and frosted with chocolate pudding and covered in more devil’s food cake crumbs. Get your fork and a tall glass of milk.

The original recipe was created in a Brooklyn bakery called Ebinger’s, and you can read a little history about it here. Google tells me there have been many attempts to recreate the recipe, and though I’ve only tried one and have no opinion as to its authenticity, I can heartily recommend it. Gale Gand shared her version in the latest issue of Food and Wine, and I found it on her own website as well. Compared to some other recipes for blackout cake, this one is streamlined, using the same chocolate custard for both the filling and the frosting. It’s rich, it’s moist, it’s cake AND pudding, for goodness’ sake!

I just thought you should know about it, in case you have a birthday coming up soon, or maybe you’re thinking about Valentine’s Day. Mr. Ten asked for chocolate cake for his birthday last week, and he was not disappointed.

But what of the tomato soup? It’s Friday, it’s cold (we even finally have snow on the ground), maybe you just want something simple for dinner. Grilled cheese (properly known as the Cheese Toastie) and tomato soup. I love a cheese toastie, but I never much liked tomato soup from a can. Too sweet for me, and don’t canned soups tend to have too much sodium and other unnecessary stuff? Somewhere along the line, I tried the tomato soup from New Recipes from Moosewood Restaurant, and will never go back. I don’t even consult the cookbook anymore. It takes about two minutes of effort, and it still relies on opening a can. And when I answer the what’s for dinner question with, “Grilled cheese and tomato soup,” I get a “Yay!” Sometimes you want a good review even if you didn’t put in a lot of effort.

Tomato Soup

serves 2-3 people (I have to double it)

Open a 28-oz. can of tomatoes (whole, diced, crushed–doesn’t matter). Heat 1-2 tablespoons of olive oil in a saucepan over medium heat. Mince or press 1-2 cloves of garlic and add them to the oil. Add a couple shakes of mild paprika (if you like hot or smoked paprika, go for it). As soon as the garlic is fragrant, but not too brown, pour in the tomatoes. Stir and heat through. Blend until smooth with an immersion blender (easiest) or in a regular blender. Add salt and pepper to taste. If you like, stir in a few tablespoons of cream.

Garage, girl’s room, and plenty of recycling

Clearing one area in the house makes me long for a magic wand to zap away all the other messes, visible and invisible. Very soon–maybe today!–I’m going to clean out the computer armoire in the living room. It’s full of old Christmas cards, empty printer ink cartridges and defunct computer games that won’t play on our computer.

Over the weekend, back when it was 47 degrees (and before the thermometer plummeted to 3–have I mentioned how climate change is beginning to feel so immediate and scary?), we did the garage cleaning we should have done in the fall. Hanging the bikes, collecting the outdoor toys, putting garden tools away in the shed, and sorting the pile of recycling that had accumulated since Christmas. Now the second car fits in the garage, making the Hub’s mornings slightly less chilly.

I also dealt with the large pile of Christmas boxes and gift wrap in the basement. All the boxes and packaging to recycle went on the curb, all the reusable wrapping got folded and put away in the proper place. Yesterday I even took a trunk full of plastic grocery bags to the recycling bin at the grocery store. For people who usually use reusable grocery bags, I don’t know why we had so many. Usually isn’t the same as always, apparently.

The Hub also dragged the 8′ x 10′ rag rug (possibly originally from Pottery Barn) I bought on Craigslist for Miss Seven’s room to the laundromat. He brought it home, clean but wet, and we hauled it to the basement and draped it over every spare chair and stool to dry. Three days later, I took it up two flights of stairs (dry, it was much lighter), rearranged all Miss Seven’s furniture, and installed the clean rug. Now I’m getting motivated to get the brown dresser down to the basement so I can begin the process of stripping and restaining it. (Hot pink! I mean, “Sangria.”)

What else? I got out my tube of epoxy and glued the casters back on the Hub’s reject Ikea office chair. It still doesn’t roll very well, but the casters don’t fall out and it works well at my kitchen desk where I have no need to roll, anyhow. It has lumbar support! My back approves.

It all felt so productive, so I looked at my New Year’s resolutions. Surely I could cross something off the list. January is nearly over! Alas. We did make progress on Miss Seven’s room, but that’s not going to be finished quickly. I have seven more days. Which project should I choose?

Monday Menu

It’s 11 degrees outside right now (-7 windchill), and I have no desire to set foot outside the door today until I absolutely have to. The kids are home from school today on this Martin Luther King Jr./Inauguration Day. My big plans for the day include a little laundry and swabbing down the kitchen while I watch the inauguration festivities on tv. So my meal plan for the week is based completely on what food we already have in the house. We have enough milk to get us through the week, and if I get crazy and make a big batch of banana bread, maybe the kids won’t notice that we’re nearly out of cereal.

Monday: Potato soup (best soup on a cold day EVER)

Tuesday: Lasagna (that one I put in the freezer a few weeks ago); Brussels sprout slaw (the one I didn’t make last week)

Wednesday: Herb-rubbed top sirloin steak (maybe broiled instead of grilled) with roasted tomato and garlic relish; oven fries; asparagus

Thursday: Egg salad on Seven-grain bread

Friday: Beef ragu (made from a portion of pot roast in the freezer) with spätzle; green salad

Saturday: Roast turkey dinner

 

What meals can you make this week without a run to the store for ingredients?

Cleaning out the pantry

Saturday morning, while the Hub got the oil changed in his car and the kids played Just Dance 4 in their pajamas, I cleaned out the pantry. The Hub did it about a year ago, and I know we cleaned it out at least a couple of times before that (when we renovated the kitchen we went from two pantries to one and did a major overhaul then). So honestly, this time it wasn’t that bad. I forgot to take a picture of the worst part, which was the floor. Ew. Crumbs, dust, lost craft supplies, onion skins….It had also become the catch-all for empty plastic containers and anything that didn’t have a place in the kitchen proper.

The rest of the pantry just needed a good maintenance clean. The general organizational system has been working well for us over the past year, but things had gotten messy.

I removed every bin, rinsed out the crumbs, and threw away expired or empty containers. Everything that didn’t belong (gift bags, grill accessories) got put away elsewhere. Then I used my label maker to label the bins. I’m thinking about labeling the shelves, too.

The biggest change was that I removed the kids’ craft cart from under the lowest shelf and moved it to the basement. They have two tables and plenty of space to make a big mess create down there. I sorted through all the aprons and the giant bag of lunch bags that hang from hooks on the left side (just outside the picture), narrowing down the selection to those we actually use daily. The rest went to the basement with the picnic supplies. Suddenly there was so much space, I was able to slide in the extra set of counter stools that we use in the kitchen. Convenient, but out of sight. (I’d love to paint those stools a fun color. Suggestions?)

With that chore completed, the kitchen is in pretty good shape. The cupboards and drawers are staying organized, and there is a place for everything. Of course, now I really notice how much everything needs a good scrubbing. And I really ought to finish painting the trim inside the door frame.

Another day.

Monday Menu

I’m shivering in front of my computer, despite my quilted slippers and fleece scarf. Still no snow, but winter temperatures have finally arrived, so I’m especially grateful that we got all our grocery shopping done over the weekend and I don’t need to venture out again this morning. We huddled inside on Sunday, planning the menu, supervising homework, wiping runny noses, doing a few chores and working through several games and puzzles that were unearthed during the game cupboard reorganization. The Hub and Miss Seven baked a carrot cake, dark with cinnamon and dusted with powdered sugar, and we all sat down to tea. We’re looking forward to more cake next weekend, as Mr. Nine becomes Mr. Ten (!!!).

We shopped first, buying what was on sale or looked appealing, and then planned our menu. I usually work the other way around, but it can be a fun challenge to search for recipes based on ingredients you have on hand. Today I got even more organizationally inspired, and wrote on my week’s to-do lists when to defrost the chicken and when to soak the beans. The best laid plans can all come to naught if you forget to soak the beans.

Monday: Spaghetti with cherry tomatoes and feta, fennel salad

Tuesday: Cauliflower frittata, Brussels sprout slaw

Wednesday: Thai-style ground beef, coconut rice, stir-fried broccoli

Thursday: BBQ chicken pizza, green salad

Friday: Red beans and rice, pan-roasted asparagus

Saturday: Dinner with friends

Sunday: Indian Butter Chicken Curry, rice, naan, birthday cake

 

What are you cooking to keep you warm?

 

 

Reorganizing board games

Yesterday I boxed up all the Christmas decorations and returned them to the basement. I stopped there, not returning any pictures or other decorative stuff to their previous places. I figured it would be a good time to rethink what I want to display, and besides, everything needs a good dusting. Since we concentrated most of our holiday decor in the family room (the fireplace and tree were there), it looks the most bare at this point. I can imagine all sorts of things if I could have a clean slate and start over with paint, new furniture, built-in bookcases and a fireplace renovation. But since that’s all just in the thinking phase, I decided to finally sort out the mess of board games in the corner cupboard that I don’t like.

We bought this cupboard from the previous owners because it fit the space, and we knew we needed storage. It’s designed as a media cabinet for a small television and components, but ours is too big for it, so we’ve always used it to store toys and games. Unfortunately, the triangular shape is less than ideal and the oak finish is dated. We paid too much for it at the time, and I regret it. We’ve lived with it for five years, but maybe in the next couple of years we can replace it.

Before Christmas, I cleaned out the toy shelves, but gave up before tackling the games. Despite the dusting I still haven’t done, the four half-built Lego sets and mess of stuff on the coffee table, the crumbs on the kitchen counter and floor, I feel incredibly productive now that I’ve sorted through that game cupboard.

 

I filled two boxes with games and puzzles that we don’t play with anymore. I set aside one stack of games for Miss Seven to decide their fate. I sorted all the scattered playing cards (miraculously, there are several complete decks) and returned stray pieces to their boxes. I culled the duplicates–how many versions of Memory do we need? I even branched out and sorted through the puzzle cupboard under the tv, where wooden toddler puzzles and bead stringing sets have gathered dust for many months.

 

Even though I am eager to demolish those dinky little concrete shelves above the fireplace, and fill the niches on either side with shelving, at least things are tidy for now. I want to take plenty of time and thought (and save some money) before making those big changes. And now I’m off to see if I have some volunteers to dust and sweep.

Lasagna

If you’re looking for a 30-minute meal, this isn’t it. Frankly, this recipe is a lot of work, and I wouldn’t waste my time making it for just anyone. There are some things you only make for someone you love (or maybe someone you want to impress). It’s the first meal I ever cooked for the Hub, and nearly 15 years later, he’s still remembers it. If I had an Italian grandma, this is the dish I could imagine her making. I’m not trying to scare you away, exactly. I just want you to understand the seriousness of this lasagna. You make it for an Occasion. Company, a birthday, Sunday dinner. Do it right.

The recipe originally came from a cookbook my parents bought on a trip to Italy, and the instructions are deceptively brief. Turns out, there’s a good bit of prep work, and you have to coordinate the cooking of two different sauces. There are no shortcuts (except for the wonder that is no-boil lasagna noodles), no grainy store-bought ricotta, no sauce from a jar. I’ve made that lasagna, and eaten it happily, but this isn’t it. This is a northern Italian version of lasagna, light on the tomato, with a silky white sauce that melds with the deep flavors of soffritto, sausage and wine. It’s rich, but not heavy. As they say, it’s a labor of love. Set aside an hour or two, put on some music, and maybe pour a glass of wine (but save some for the sauce).

A couple of months ago, my mother offered to bring the lasagna when they came for dinner one day. I had made it the weekend before, but would never say no to the good fortune of eating lasagna twice in one week, especially one made by someone else. But tasting her version and my version so close together, I discovered that they weren’t the same. She has adapted the recipe over the years and never told me. All this time, I had been making perfectly good lasagna from the original recipe (really good, in fact), when I could have been making lasagna that was sublime.

Well. Now that I have the secret to sublime, I’m going to share it with you.

A few notes: Doubling the recipe is a good idea. Not because there isn’t enough to feed a good-sized family, but because if you’re going to the trouble, you should get an extra meal or two out of the deal. Bake it, cool it, wrap it and freeze it for another day. Thaw it overnight in the refrigerator before reheating it in a warm oven (or even a slice at a time in the microwave). If you don’t have celery root, you can substitute parsnip, or skip it and just add an extra carrot and rib of celery.

Lasagna with Italian sausage and béchamel sauce

1 large onion

2 medium carrots

2 ribs of celery

small chunk of celery root, peeled

2-3 large cloves of garlic

2-3 Tbsp. olive oil

1 pound Italian sausage (mild or hot–up to you)

2 cups white wine (dry sherry is fine)

1 28-oz. can of tomatoes, diced or crushed

1 bay leaf

4 Tbsp. butter

4 Tbsp. flour

4 cups milk (at least 2%)

2 cups freshly grated parmesan cheese

1 cup freshly grated mozzarella cheese

1 package no-boil flat lasagna noodles (Barilla seems to be easiest to find around here)

Dice the onion, celery, carrots and celery root in a very small dice (1/4-inch or smaller). Mince or press the garlic. Heat the olive oil over medium heat in a large, deep skillet or Dutch oven, and then add vegetables and sauté until soft, 8-10 minutes. Don’t let them burn. Transfer the cooked vegetables to a bowl and set aside. Split the sausages (if still in their casings) with a sharp knife, peel off and discard the casings. Brown the sausage in the same skillet over medium-high heat, breaking the meat into small pieces as you stir. When it has browned and the fat has rendered, drain off the fat and add the vegetables back to the pan. Pour the wine over the sausage and vegetables and bring the mixture to a simmer. Add the tomatoes with their juices, the bay leaf, and salt and pepper. Let simmer, uncovered, for about 20 minutes, or until the mixture reduces and thickens slightly. Taste and add salt if necessary.

While the sauce is simmering, start the béchamel sauce. Heat the milk (I use my glass batter bowl and heat it in the microwave for 3-4 minutes). In a large saucepan, melt the butter over medium-low heat. Whisk in the flour until there are no lumps, and continue whisking the mixture for 2 minutes. Slowly pour in the hot milk and whisk until smooth. Turn up the heat to medium-high and whisk continuously, until the sauce comes to a simmer and thickens noticeably. Turn off the heat and stir in one cup of grated Parmesan. Add salt and pepper to taste.

To assemble the lasagna, grease a 9″ x 13″ baking pan. Spread a couple ladles-full of béchamel in the bottom of the pan. Then add a layer of uncooked noodles, breaking them in pieces to fit the pan, if necessary. Spread a layer of meat sauce, then a layer of béchamel, and then a little grated mozzarella. Repeat (3-4 layers of noodles usually fit in my pan), and end with a layer of béchamel. Make sure to cover all the edges and corners of noodles with sauce. Sprinkle on the remaining cup of grated Parmesan on top, and cover with foil. Bake in a 350 degree oven, covered, for about 45 minutes. Remove the foil and bake about 15 minutes more, or until the top is bubbly and the noodles are tender when a thin knife is inserted into the lasagna.

Let the lasagna rest for at least 15 minutes before serving. It works fine if you bake it early in the day (or the day before) and reheat it gently, covered, in a 300 degree oven.

Monday Menu

After all that holiday gluttony, it’s time to get back to the routine. The kids are all back in school today, my to-do list is yards long and I finally have a hope of accomplishing some of it, so I was thrilled to read the Dinner: A Love Story post full of dinner ideas for me to steal. A couple of them even match the stuff that’s already in our fridge and pantry, so I can put off shopping until tomorrow. It couldn’t have come at a better time, because as we all know, the hardest part of getting dinner on the table is coming up with an idea. I got up early this morning, showered, did the dishes, started the laundry, made the lunches, and have almost finished with my grocery list. I’m counting on this desperate burst of productivity to carry me through the rest of the day.

If you need some fresh ideas for dinner, go check out DALS right now. You won’t be sorry.

Monday: Crispy Black Bean Tacos/Quesadillas and guacamole

Tuesday: Lamb meatballs, pita, hummus

Wednesday: Moosewood Tomato Soup and grilled cheese sandwiches, salad

Thursday: David Lebowitz’s Olympic Seoul Chicken, rice, edamame

Friday: Taco pizza

Saturday: Pasta with caramelized cabbage, anchovies and breadcrumbs

 

Are you trying a new recipe this week, or sticking with old favorites?