Quote:
Like your husband, my sister used to take leftovers to work and people would drool over my mom's pork chops and scalloped potatoes. Who makes homemade scalloped potatoes anymore?
When I was in college 20 years ago, everyone in the dorm called me "Grandma" because I cooked meals from scratch and they cooked from a box. At Thanksgiving 1988 I made a turkey and all of the fixings for our floor, and most of the girls gagged when I told them how I cleaned out the inside of the bird before roasting, telling me they would NEVER do that. They had no idea how to make dressing or pie or potatoes from a real potato. But after Thanksgiving they all wanted to pool grocery money with me and teach them how to cook. I thought, "Your mom should have taught you that." It was strange being "Grandma" when this was normal.
My 7-year old has learned to cook and bake, and unfortunately has learned how to defend her food to the kids who "yuck her yum." I told her, "Do you like our homemade soup?" (She chops the carrots, garlic and hamsteak for our potato soup.) She says YES. "Then who cares if (NAME) doesn't? They are eating it. You are." It's early to teach her this, but she'll be ahead of the curve when bullied later.
Okay, don't laugh, but i'd never (to my knowledge) eaten a hamsteak until 2 nights ago. We bought our first pig this year and when the guy asked how i wanted it processed, i had no idea......i just said gimme all the bacon possible and do what you do with the rest. well, besides the expected bacon, sausage and porkchops we got a lot of hamsteaks. When my wife asked me how to cook them, i just said season it and chuck it on the grill......i was amazed how much it tasted like a normal steak. anyway, you mentioned using them in your soup and that sounded like a good idea for leftovers. can you send me your recipe?