That was DS - Dear Son. Who, when he went off to college, had me each him how to make cheap, easy meals. Enjoyed a couple months of mother-son cooking.Dissie wrote:Awesome daughter Diane! My kids would have whined, but probably never thought to help. Now my daughter is a good cook, but she rarely takes the initiative to cook on her own for us.
Cook one day, Eat for a week
- dianegrapegrower
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- Joined: Sun Jan 15, 2012 9:09 pm
Re: Cook one day, Eat for a week
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- Joined: Wed Jan 01, 2014 2:12 pm
Re: Cook one day, Eat for a week
During the school year, I try to do most of my cooking during the weekends (an OAWC as opposed to OAMC). I meal plan each week (although sometimes that goes awry), and Thursday (because, for some reason it tends to be the day when we break from the meal plan from exhaustion) is designated as leftover or "hot dog" day. I've been known to make a recipe of pulled pork and make sandwiches one day, barbecue potatoes the next, and wraps/nachos with it another day. Same with chili (I call both of those my 3-per meals): chili (sometimes over rice) with fixings, followed by frito pies/nachos, and then chili dogs (because it tends to use the least chili). Leftover day is also good for baked potato bars to use up bits of leftovers not even big enough for a complete serving.
Re: Cook one day, Eat for a week
Blue Ash chili does that with their Cinti chili. They open for breakfast. I think I'd rather have the Texas chili though for at home. I agree these taste really good. A frittata with chili and Hatch peppers, onions, tomato and Jack cheese on top is the bomb.Shadows1 wrote:You should try some of your leftover chili in an omelet or scrambled eggs! It is out of this world.