Monday, December 24, 2012

Christmas Eve Flu Bug

The past week has been tense. Our oldest daughter and family have all had a nasty intestinal flu bug that spread through their house like a wildfire! Granddaughter #1 came home from school sick and the rest was history. They quarantined themselves, I delivered pedialyte, Therm o Heat Pads, Tylenol, Ensure for adults, etc. to their front steps and didn't go near the house. Anything to keep fluids in everyone and keep them comfortable.

Our family was to gather today for our Christmas celebration. My husband woke up about 6 am with the flu. My efforts to make everything story book perfect until 1:30 this morning was for naught. We called the kids, told them to stay away and our granddaughters promptly began to cry. (The little darlings love to come to Grandpa & Grandma's...thank GOD!)

Our plan for today was to begin with brunch this morning, a mid afternoon ham dinner with gift opening in between. At 4 pm we all go to church together and then to my Dad's for a gathering of my side of the family. Traditionally we have cheese soup and some snacks, play a family bingo game and watch the little ones open more presents. Along with all the cooking I did yesterday to prepare for our family day, I had prepped for tonight's food plan. I had all the veggies chopped and the pork shoulder thawing in the fridge.

I decided this morning that the heat would kill any potential germs and I could wear gloves while cooking to cut down on cross contamination of flu germs. So I have put together the traditional cheese soup, loaded it into a crock pot and one of our girls will pick it up before church so the rest of the family can still enjoy this very special day.

My Christmas gift to everyone is my cheese soup recipe. It is rich, creamy and easy!

1 c. chopped onion
1 c. chopped carrot
½ c. chopped celery
2 to 3 potatoes (depends on their size) cut into small chunks (optional)
1 stick butter
½ c. flour
1 can chicken broth
½ t. salt
1 qt. ½ & ½ cream
16 oz Velveeta, cut in cubes

I begin by using all fresh veggies and only real butter. I sweat them in a large pan slowly until the veggies are translucent. Add the flour and blend completely. Allow to cook about one minute to take the raw taste off the flour. Basically, you are making a roux. Next you add the quart of half and half cream slowly while stirring constantly. Keep your heat low or you will have a scorched mess. When everything is blended and smooth, add the broth, salt and chunks of Velveeta. Heat through and serve with crumbled bacon.

Obviously, you can modify this recipe in many ways. Use a lighter milk product, double the recipe or thicken with a gluten free flour, which is what I did.

I used Jules All Purpose Gluten Free Flour in place of regular flour. No one will notice the difference and the soup may be enjoyed by daughter #1 who is gluten free.

This soup is yummy served in bread bowls for those able to eat wheat. We have a local fast food restaurant that will sell us a bread bowl for $1.00 each so that is usually what we use. The creamy soup soaks into the soft bread and creates this yummy comfort food. This certainly qualifies as a once every now and then treat because it isn't calorie conscious at all!

Merry Christmas!

Saturday, December 15, 2012

Kitchen Wisdom

When I got married in 1977, I didn't know how to boil water!

I know that sounds like a joke, but it is true. I was so bad at cooking, I'm not sure why my husband married me. I burned hard boiled eggs (can you say ditsy??) and the smell was worse than anything I had ever smelled. I tried to make steak under the broiler in the oven like my dad had taught me. That was a disaster, too. To the point that my husband went to work and complained to one of the guys. Well one of those guys made the mistake of repeating it to me...I didn't cook for a month. My husband and I learned two things from that experience...My husband learned to never again criticize me to his friends and I spent the month learning the basics of cooking.

I'm sure I must have cried to my mother because she came up with this wonderful book that I have used and almost destroyed throughout the years, but would never give away. The name of the book is KITCHEN WISDOM by Frieda Arkin.


Through the years I have added many items to my beloved book. If I saw a hint or a tip in Good Housekeeping magazine, I'd clip it and find the subject in my book and file it away.


Now that I have adult daughters of my own, I wanted them to have a manual for reference as well. Not that they need one...they are fabulous cooks and love to create in the kitchen. However, it feels like tradition for me to provide them with a book of their own "Kitchen Wisdom".

I found this book on a blog site I love! Cook Like Your Grandmother is a blog written by Drew Kime and he has a couple books for sale on his site. One of them is STARTING FROM SCRATCH. This book promises to explain what all the so called 'experts' believe we already know. This book is available as an ebook download or the old fashioned kind that we hold in our hands...my personal preference.

My kitchen wisdom didn't come naturally. I am grateful for those people who are able to organize their thoughts and put them to paper for the rest of us to enjoy!




Friday, December 7, 2012

You Gotta Have Goals

I've just returned from a great road trip to visit 2 quilt shops in the midwest. The first one was located in Fox River Grove, Illinois...a suburb of Chicago. The 2nd shop The Woolen Needle in Williamsburg, Iowa.

Both shops stimulated my imagination beyond description. I can see myself shifting from my love of creating quilts to creating with wool. My ultimate goal is to create a table rug made from wool pennies. I saw a picture in Country Living magazine and fell in love. I have had a picture on my inspiration board for quite some time and I've decided to get started. I hope I am done in 2013...you gotta have goals.

For those of you not familiar with wool pennies, they are cute little triple stacks of wool circles sewn together with a blanket stitch. The circles are then sewn to a piece of cloth...either black felt or black felted wool. I found the most basic and easy to understand description of a penny rug on Wikipedia:

In the 1800s, starting around the time of the Civil War, thrifty homemakers would use scraps of wool or felted wool from old clothing, blankets and hats to create designs for mats or rugs. Using coins as templates, they created circles and each piece was then stitched in blanket stitch fashion. (Thus, the name "penny" rug). Sometimes, the mats or rugs were backed with old burlap bags or feed sacks. Sometimes a penny was stitched inside the mat to make it lie flat.

Penny rugs are not actual rugs for the floor, but decorative coverings for beds, tables and dressers and mantles. Sometimes they are used as wall hangings or pillows. Most designs include circles and some include images from everyday life such as cats, flowers, birds and shapes such as stars and hearts.

Penny rugs are made by selecting good quality 100% wool. It must not be too thick. It may be hand-dyed or overdyed to give the piece dimension. Circles are cut from the wool in varying sizes and then stitched together concentrically using complementary colors. The circles are stitched to a wool backing in a pleasing design. When finished the entire piece should have a backing to cover the stitches and to protect it. The backing may be wool, linen or burlap.


I don't have any pictures to post of my own "pennies" as I haven't started yet. If you Google wool pennies or penny rugs, then click 'images', you will find hundreds of pictures.

This art is not for someone who hates hand work because it is almost entirely handwork. However, if you enjoy sitting in a comfy chair with a nice cup of hot tea and relaxing beyond description, you will love making wool pennies!