• Dinner Tonight 5/29/25 will be

    From Jill McQuown@21:1/5 to All on Thu May 29 17:35:42 2025
    An approximately 6 oz. piece of nicely marbled chuck eye steak, seasoned
    with S&P and a little garlic powder. It will be pan seared in a very
    hot cast iron skillet, cooked to medium rare. The chuck eye steak is a
    nice 2" thick which is why I had to cut it into a smaller portion from
    the 12 oz. To go with it I'm going to boil some small red potatoes then
    place them on a baking sheet then smash and roast them, drizzled with
    olive oil and seasoned with S&P and some dried dill weed. The green
    vegetable will be steamed broccoli florets.

    What are you eating at your house tonight?

    Jill

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  • From Cindy Hamilton@21:1/5 to Jill McQuown on Thu May 29 21:41:38 2025
    On 2025-05-29, Jill McQuown <j_mcquown@comcast.net> wrote:
    An approximately 6 oz. piece of nicely marbled chuck eye steak, seasoned
    with S&P and a little garlic powder. It will be pan seared in a very
    hot cast iron skillet, cooked to medium rare. The chuck eye steak is a
    nice 2" thick which is why I had to cut it into a smaller portion from
    the 12 oz. To go with it I'm going to boil some small red potatoes then place them on a baking sheet then smash and roast them, drizzled with
    olive oil and seasoned with S&P and some dried dill weed. The green vegetable will be steamed broccoli florets.

    What are you eating at your house tonight?

    Lunch was hot-and-sour soup, Szechuan tofu, a crab Rangoon, and rice.
    Dinner is a salad.

    --
    Cindy Hamilton

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  • From Dave Smith@21:1/5 to Cindy Hamilton on Thu May 29 17:48:20 2025
    On 2025-05-29 5:41 p.m., Cindy Hamilton wrote:
    On 2025-05-29, Jill McQuown <j_mcquown@comcast.net> wrote:
    An approximately 6 oz. piece of nicely marbled chuck eye steak, seasoned
    with S&P and a little garlic powder. It will be pan seared in a very
    hot cast iron skillet, cooked to medium rare. The chuck eye steak is a
    nice 2" thick which is why I had to cut it into a smaller portion from
    the 12 oz. To go with it I'm going to boil some small red potatoes then
    place them on a baking sheet then smash and roast them, drizzled with
    olive oil and seasoned with S&P and some dried dill weed. The green
    vegetable will be steamed broccoli florets.

    What are you eating at your house tonight?

    Lunch was hot-and-sour soup, Szechuan tofu, a crab Rangoon, and rice.
    Dinner is a salad.

    That sounds like a pretty tasty lunch. We just got in and my wife is
    about to start cooking. We have some chicken breast, some asparagus,
    broccoli and some nice fresh rolls. It will be interesting to see what
    she comes up with. She had taken over most of the dinner cooking and is learning to wing it the way I do.

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  • From Jill McQuown@21:1/5 to Dave Smith on Thu May 29 17:59:05 2025
    On 5/29/2025 5:48 PM, Dave Smith wrote:
    On 2025-05-29 5:41 p.m., Cindy Hamilton wrote:
    On 2025-05-29, Jill McQuown <j_mcquown@comcast.net> wrote:
    An approximately 6 oz. piece of nicely marbled chuck eye steak, seasoned >>> with S&P and a little garlic powder.  It will be pan seared in a very
    hot cast iron skillet, cooked to medium rare. The chuck eye steak is a
    nice 2" thick which is why I had to cut it into a smaller portion from
    the 12 oz.  To go with it I'm going to boil some small red potatoes then >>> place them on a baking sheet then smash and roast them, drizzled with
    olive oil and seasoned with S&P and some dried dill weed.  The green
    vegetable will be steamed broccoli florets.

    What are you eating at your house tonight?

    Lunch was hot-and-sour soup, Szechuan tofu, a crab Rangoon, and rice.
    Dinner is a salad.

    That sounds like a pretty tasty lunch.   We just got in and my wife is about to start cooking. We have some chicken breast, some asparagus,
    broccoli and some nice fresh rolls. It will be interesting to see what
    she comes up with. She had taken over most of the dinner cooking  and is learning to wing it the way I do.

    I saw a nice looking recipe online for chicken breast halves with a
    honey glaze. Not usually my cup of tea but it looked like it would be
    tasty. The boneless chicken breasts are cut cross-hatched then dredged
    in seasoned flour, browned in butter in a large skillet. More butter is
    added to the center of the pan along with three cloves of finely minced
    garlic, 1/3 cup of honey (or maple syrup was suggested), 1 Tbs. of soy
    sauce. Stir and cook down until the sauce thickens and the chicken is
    nicely coated with the glaze. Sprinkle some finely minced chives on top
    of the chicken. It was not mentioned but it seems like this would be
    served with rice.

    Jill

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  • From Leonard Blaisdell@21:1/5 to Jill McQuown on Thu May 29 23:30:19 2025
    On 2025-05-29, Jill McQuown <j_mcquown@comcast.net> wrote:

    An approximately 6 oz. piece of nicely marbled chuck eye steak, seasoned
    with S&P and a little garlic powder. It will be pan seared in a very
    hot cast iron skillet, cooked to medium rare. The chuck eye steak is a
    nice 2" thick which is why I had to cut it into a smaller portion from
    the 12 oz. To go with it I'm going to boil some small red potatoes then place them on a baking sheet then smash and roast them, drizzled with
    olive oil and seasoned with S&P and some dried dill weed. The green vegetable will be steamed broccoli florets.

    What are you eating at your house tonight?


    Polish sausage and sauerkraut with two diced Fuji apples and a little
    celery seed included.

    <https://postimg.cc/wRczLd1K>

    Yours sounds better.

    leo

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  • From Leonard Blaisdell@21:1/5 to Jill McQuown on Thu May 29 23:37:23 2025
    On 2025-05-29, Jill McQuown <j_mcquown@comcast.net> wrote:

    I saw a nice looking recipe online for chicken breast halves with a
    honey glaze. Not usually my cup of tea but it looked like it would be
    tasty. The boneless chicken breasts are cut cross-hatched then dredged
    in seasoned flour, browned in butter in a large skillet. More butter is added to the center of the pan along with three cloves of finely minced garlic, 1/3 cup of honey (or maple syrup was suggested), 1 Tbs. of soy
    sauce. Stir and cook down until the sauce thickens and the chicken is
    nicely coated with the glaze. Sprinkle some finely minced chives on top
    of the chicken. It was not mentioned but it seems like this would be
    served with rice.


    Almost certainly. If not, they're missing the boat. dsi1, chime in here!

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  • From Ed P@21:1/5 to Jill McQuown on Thu May 29 19:54:44 2025
    On 5/29/2025 5:35 PM, Jill McQuown wrote:
    An approximately 6 oz. piece of nicely marbled chuck eye steak, seasoned
    with S&P and a little garlic powder.  It will be pan seared in a very
    hot cast iron skillet, cooked to medium rare. The chuck eye steak is a
    nice 2" thick which is why I had to cut it into a smaller portion from
    the 12 oz.  To go with it I'm going to boil some small red potatoes then place them on a baking sheet then smash and roast them, drizzled with
    olive oil and seasoned with S&P and some dried dill weed.  The green vegetable will be steamed broccoli florets.

    What are you eating at your house tonight?

    Jill

    Rummaging through the freezer I ran across some cooked pork tenderloin
    from a few months ago.

    Some time ago I bought Orzo for something and still have a half box of
    it. So, tonight was Orzo Alfredo.
    Made a simple salad to go with it.

    Have enough of both to have it again Saturday night. I have some
    applesauce to finish up too so that will replace the salad.

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  • From dsi1@21:1/5 to Leonard Blaisdell on Fri May 30 00:07:23 2025
    On Thu, 29 May 2025 23:37:23 +0000, Leonard Blaisdell wrote:

    On 2025-05-29, Jill McQuown <j_mcquown@comcast.net> wrote:

    I saw a nice looking recipe online for chicken breast halves with a
    honey glaze. Not usually my cup of tea but it looked like it would be
    tasty. The boneless chicken breasts are cut cross-hatched then dredged
    in seasoned flour, browned in butter in a large skillet. More butter is
    added to the center of the pan along with three cloves of finely minced
    garlic, 1/3 cup of honey (or maple syrup was suggested), 1 Tbs. of soy
    sauce. Stir and cook down until the sauce thickens and the chicken is
    nicely coated with the glaze. Sprinkle some finely minced chives on top
    of the chicken. It was not mentioned but it seems like this would be
    served with rice.


    Almost certainly. If not, they're missing the boat. dsi1, chime in here!

    I had some roasted chicken the other day. It was marinated with shoyu
    and sugar. It was very tasty. It was better than a Costco chicken. It
    was smaller and cost $11 for a whole chicken. It was damn tasty but the
    price was tough to swallow. OTOH, a tasty whole roasted chicken is
    probably worth $11.

    https://photos.app.goo.gl/Me65GFzrEnJBS3JQ8

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  • From Bruce@21:1/5 to dsi100@yahoo.com on Fri May 30 10:39:24 2025
    On Fri, 30 May 2025 00:07:23 +0000, dsi100@yahoo.com (dsi1) wrote:

    On Thu, 29 May 2025 23:37:23 +0000, Leonard Blaisdell wrote:

    On 2025-05-29, Jill McQuown <j_mcquown@comcast.net> wrote:

    I saw a nice looking recipe online for chicken breast halves with a
    honey glaze. Not usually my cup of tea but it looked like it would be
    tasty. The boneless chicken breasts are cut cross-hatched then dredged
    in seasoned flour, browned in butter in a large skillet. More butter is >>> added to the center of the pan along with three cloves of finely minced
    garlic, 1/3 cup of honey (or maple syrup was suggested), 1 Tbs. of soy
    sauce. Stir and cook down until the sauce thickens and the chicken is
    nicely coated with the glaze. Sprinkle some finely minced chives on top >>> of the chicken. It was not mentioned but it seems like this would be
    served with rice.


    Almost certainly. If not, they're missing the boat. dsi1, chime in here!

    I had some roasted chicken the other day. It was marinated with shoyu

    *brand name withheld for confidentiality reasons*

    --
    Bruce
    <https://i.postimg.cc/JhVjfHY8/trumputin.jpg>

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