I was such a great family dining moment, with all of us round the table, our faces glowing with shared pleasure, that I thought it would fun be to make a new pudding every Sunday during Winter. While this may sound like a Very Bad Idea in this forum, in fact, the promise of something special to cook and share with family helps me apply discipline during the rest of the week. A bit like the practice of sitting down to eat and using the good china and proper utensils. Making food a celebration and attaching some degree of formality to it, rather than something to snatch on the run.
The same applies to my dire habit of eating a sandwich at my desk in front of the computer I am shackled to for hours and hours and hours every day. I could certainly make more of my lunch break than I do, without dropping crumbs into the keyboard or crunching audibly on a Pink Lady. (Then there is the eternal problem of what to pack in each child's lunchbox that will be nourishing and actually eaten, but that's another challenge.)
Imagine how much more impressive a food journal would sound if each meal read like a menu from a best-selling cookbook... and not a forensic list of week-old fridge left-overs.
Chicken paillard with rocket and cherry tomatoes
Pasta e fagioli
Pasta e fagioli
Crips skin salmon with sweet chilli dressing
Orange sweet potato, labne and rocket salad
Pumpkin roasted hazlenut and feta salad
Peach melba
That's going to be my approach this week. ...and I think we shall have two course dinners on Sunday (exercising portion control, of course). The recipe books might be getting a workout at last.
With thanks to Debra and Jeanne for pricking my conscience and helping to maintain my enthusiasm for making subtle lifestyle changes, or at least contemplating them.
Oh what happened with the lamb shanks?? I missed that one. I have mine cooking in the slow cooker now... what am I in for? I have never done them in the slow cooker before... A-M xx
ReplyDeleteBill Grainger anything is ok in my book! And lamb shanks is a staple here in the slow cooker (the appliance not me..although it could be said!). I'm admiring your resolve Deborah...I may have to take a proverbial leaf and follow suit! Thanks for the comment on my blog...I think you might be right about Melbourne!
ReplyDeleteThanks for you comments. Tickled pink I am. But honestly that slow cooker. I've a 5.5 l model which takes a mountain of meat so we suffer the same meal for days, and if I use only 1 kg or so, it seems to dry out on the sides by the time I stagger home late. The lamb shanks looked/were gristly and the bones were far too ghoulish for my sensitive 5 and 7 year olds. It didn't look like a sausage.
ReplyDeleteI press on.
Have Slow Cooker recipe book, will conquer the beast.
morning deborah- oooh you make me laugh- we have high hopes of dinners like in the cookbooks don't we- but i always have a giggle that as i'm cooking from jaime's or bills books, their kids are also eating in their jammies...maybe all wanting something *else* for tea...maybe hoping for a *take-away*!?!
ReplyDeletei find it best to aim -medium-low {teehee} that being that all 5 of us eat...i don't mind the level of enthusiasm for the meal...but that its together as much as possible- and that the kids set the table...thankgoodness we use alot of *mix-match* vintage china!!
melissa :)
hey deborah- i thought i sent you a messge- but it seems to be gone.....bit like my time!
ReplyDeleteanyway...said i was soo glad you found me- love bill....love jaime- live in hope of everyone in this big ol'house loving the things i put out as much as me....as long as the kids set the table and we eat together as much as possible...i'm smiling...
melissa :)