A nice recipe for eggs in winter

I created this when I wanted orange eggs for some reason but couldn't find a recipe! 

pleasant mandarin eggs

 

Place in a nonstick skillet generous amounts of

         butter (up to 2 tbl)

         country mustard

Turn on the heat; when the butter is melted and you’ve stirred it and the mustard together, break in

         4 eggs

Salt them.

Top with modest amounts (unless you really want more)

         pepper

         chili flakes

         paprika (smoked if you’d like)

         tarragon (if you have fresh, add it after the eggs are done)

Cover and cook about 4 minutes, until done. Meanwhile get the mandarins ready…

Top with

         2 or 3 mandarin oranges, sectioned

 

 

The LAST of 12 installments! of a wonderful source of menus & recipes for you: DECEMBER

Here's the last of the free source of menus and other food ideas for you! I usually do this mid-month in the preceding month, but I'm having computer issues so wanted to publish this before any delay!

Details about using this are at http://favoritefoodthisweek.blogspot.com/2021/12/the-1st-of-12-installments-of-wonderful.html .

Here's December!!!

https://drive.google.com/file/d/16GDPh51kcZL5EV_RwZYTR3Izw7eqGlGE/view?usp=sharing

A glimpse of this last month:



 

 

A 1954 fridge feature you're probably better off without!

Haha, I just saw an ad (in an old Ozzie and Harriet DVD) for a Hotpoint refrigerator-freezer from 1954 -- its INSIDE door features an aluminum foil dispenser! You'd have to have your door open for a while to use that! 

Sorry I can't find a picture of that...though in looking for it I found a 1954 General Electric fridge STILL WORKING for sale online!!! That's something you won't find I bet in 68 years, a working 2022 fridge! (Hmm, it looks like GE bought Hotpoint; but this in-operation fridge is GE.)

Meal planning with fabulous recipes!

UPDATE: Jamie Oliver has made all of this free on his website, except for the actual meal planning....

 

I'd been seeing a lot of meal planning services -- and had tried several for a year -- but they just didn't have fabulous recipes. I thought, "I wish Jamie Oliver would do that..." because I adore his recipes.

And today I found out he is offering such a service!!!!! It's called JUM and is available through www.jamieoliver.com -- though I believe it's going to be very helpful that he has a Jum app for iPhone, because I don't have a laptop from which to read recipes...

It actually costs considerably less than others I've seen advertised, and has a feature where you can look for specific ingredients, and you can easily assign when you want any meal you've chosen. 

SO happy. (I know, I have already written A Book of meal plans, which you've hopefully noticed I'm offering free on this site, but it's much less lonely and more fun to cook when some of your meals have been suggested by friendly lovely people such as Mr. Oliver and his friends.)




In case anyone else is having the same problem...

I was shocked too many times early this year by 2 serious food sourcing problems in my area in the USA:

1. All the food I eat is extremely more expensive than it was.

2. Perishable food in all the grocery stores available to me is truly rubbish, absolutely inedible.

Because of my health including eyesight difficulties, I had to try local delivery, but it seems almost illiterate and more blindish than I, delivering wrong items and the above rubbish, even though I tip the maximum amount...

...So finally after wasting a lot of $ including on delivery charges, I looked into other options and came up with a new sourcing and eating plan with which I have been very happy so far, and which so far costs much less than using only local options.

The sourcing plan consists of mostly patronizing fine boutique shops...

a. Order directly from farms (in my case in California) for my perishable vegetables and fruits and say nuts and cheeses if they carry those too. Get those deliveries at least once a month. 

b. Supplement with however one gardens (in my black-thumb case only something like Aerogarden works; I adore their greens and bok choy and herbs especially). 

c. Also supplement with homemade bread if that works for you; I adore Bread Toast Crumbs' recipes (https://alexandracooks.com/bread-toast-crumbs-cookbook/) and I make all of them (yes, all of them!) whole grain using flours recommended for bread from a boutique flour mill, adding 10% more liquid to the recipes.

d. If one has certain requirements like amazing coffee and chocolate and spices, get those delivered directly from one's favorite boutique makers and bottlers or whatever. 

e. Lastly, fill in the blanks (eg milk, beans, olive oil, and frozen vegetables and fruits) via the most reliable local service (in my case -- ever since the 1980s, so I'm feeling pretty confident! -- is Target). 

The heart of the plan, the meal part: 

* When the perishable produce arrives, of course take total advantage of the freshness and have amazing salads, fresh fruit plates, etc. My farm service (at the moment the beautiful Girlndug service, including it makes me feel like a fairy princess with their edible flowers!) includes recipes I consider for the box I receive.

* When one is out of the perishables except what one is growing in one's garden, eat mostly out of the freezer and pantry, serving dishes like farro topped with cooked frozen vegetables and drizzled with balsamic reduction and olive oil and fabulous salt and pepper.

My perishable food arrived extremely fresh and beautiful and surprisingly so far costs the same as when I tried the services about a year ago! and with no wastage and less $ than local services now cost. And the plan so far keeps my interest (which believe me is quite the accomplishment for Ms Easily Bored here).