Ann and Pat each work long, hours. Ann manages the kennel;
Pat is a lost wax engineer for a major foundry. Ann enlisted Laura at once last
week as Personal Assistant. They made a shopping list for cookies and meals for
a week, and the PA was left mostly to her own devices.
Laura is the cook here at Dale 23, and a stubborn little
cook. She believes Pinterest and Mr. Google only. No suggestion of mine ever
has been entertained, though my three edicts remain: neither soy nor Worcestershire
will be an ingredient, and there will be a vegetable with every supper. And we
rub comfortably along.
Ann, however, is a person of awe. Laura has heard about her
for years. Grandma has slipped up to Wisconsin once or twice a year for most
years Laura has known. Ann must be a real force in the universe. Not to
mention, Ann taught Grandma to make Burning Love, one dish Laura serves because
she confirmed it on the internet, and it is good.
Laura was tasked with Christmas dinner, turkey and
trimmings. Her expertise was limited to mashed potatoes. She swallowed hard and
forged on, with Ann’s instructions.
At my request, there were no Brussels sprouts. The first
time in thirty odd years I have not endured Brussels sprouts at a holiday meal,
nor agreed, “It wouldn’t be (name of holiday) without Brussels sprouts.”
The turkey duly buttered up and confined to the oven,
attention turned to sides. Laura scrubbed up potatoes. “Not peeled,” she
announced. No dissent. Ann produced a bag of stale bread for dressing, Laura
produced other ingredients Ann called out. “Now, you chop the trinity,” Ann
instructed a very blank face. “The what?”
“The cook’s trinity. Celery, carrot, onion, for the
dressing.” Laura went on to prepare fresh green beans, sweet potatoes, cranberry sauce (which
flipped from Yuck to Yummy in her repertoire, having learned to make the real
deal), gravy, and a dish of peas and carrots. “Your Grandma loves them!”
An entire drumstick, the chief cook's reward. And cranberry sauce to dress a week of leftovers!
And for John, Scotch eggs at a restaurant on the way to the airport. In Wisconsin they are made with bratwurst and served with mustard and sauerkraut. Good.
Good for Laura!
ReplyDeleteThose Scotch eggs sound very inviting...
Hari OM
ReplyDeleteThat table looks properly festive!!! Bravo to all hands in the kitchen and to the gran who got to eat so well. Blessings to you all for the new year. YAM xx
You made out like a bandit Joanne. I wish I could get someone to cook for me. The scotch egg sounded good. I've never had one.
ReplyDeleteDear Joanne, I'm so glad I read the posting preceding this one and learned about Pat and Ann. I'm not surprised that Laura listened to Ann about the cooking. Somehow others have more authority than those nearest and dearest such as yourself. The meal must have tasted delicious! Peace.
ReplyDeleteyummy, what an accomplishment; hard boiled egg ? scotch eggs I must look those up
ReplyDeleteThe only thing wrong with the trinity is the celery. I feel about it like you do about Brussel sprouts.
ReplyDeleteWow! I think Laura did a fantastic job of preparing the dinner and she will feel so good about having done it. I know countless women who (and men) could not pull off a dinner on their own. It is a lot of work to feed a small crowd. I had scotch eggs once and I enjoyed it but never had it again as they are not that common here and I never made one myself.
ReplyDeleteYou sound like you had a wonderful time and I'm glad you are safely home.
Yum. Your Christmas dinner sounds good.
ReplyDeleteI haven't been able to get a Scotch egg since leaving the UK. How great that you've them out in your neck of the woods. Anything served with Sauerkraut and mustard can't be beat.
ReplyDeleteLooks like Laura did a great job with Christmas dinner! As for the trinity... ours is onion, bell pepper, and garlic. And I have heard of scotch eggs, but never tried one. I think they have them at the Renaissance Fairs.
ReplyDeleteYay, Laura. You are turning into a great cook! It all sounds delicious!
ReplyDeleteYou are a very proud grandma, and deservedly so. How many teenagers of today could produce such a lovely Christmas meal? Very few.
ReplyDeleteEverything said above is resounded here....with the exception of soy and Worcestershire sauce. Alas, we can't agree on all, eh? I use both in liberal amounts, soy particularly, in everything from gravy onwards to beans, and the Worst' and sauce in many other things. That's how it goes, eh?
ReplyDeleteIt's the salt, Mike. I like my BP at 90/60. But it was a great dinner. Cheers.
DeleteIt's a big deal to cook Christmas dinner, even part of it, and especially the turkey.
ReplyDeleteThat is an impressive accomplishment, to cook an entire Christmas meal with turkey, sides and condiments - kudos to Laura! Tell her it still takes two of us (my husband and me) to do ours every year :)
ReplyDeleteLol on the Scotch egg for John - well done :)
I'm truly impressed that a teenager accomplished a meal that nice. You must be bursting with pride!
ReplyDeleteYay for Laura, having the courage and the fortitude to perserver and cook an entire Christmas dinner. An accomplishment which will never be wasted.
ReplyDeleteSprouts were christened 'baby garbages' by my father and were not served. Yay. My mother boiled them to a nasty grey slush. And bless her heart many years later told me I couldn't be a vegetarian because I didn't like them. She was wrong.
Huge congratulations to Laura, though I don't understand why she doesn't listen to you...Are you not a good cook? I'm sure you know a lot which would help her. But it sounds as though she did a splendid job! (And I love brussel sprouts, with nothing on them at all. But I am convinced that people don't experience the tastes of things always the same.)
ReplyDeleteShe has a fierce desire to do things independently and well. I stay back unless disaster looms. She will take advice from people for whom she does not want to fail, like Ann. She's an interesting child.
DeleteSo it was your Scotch Eggs which made it to Santa Cruz.
ReplyDeleteCook's Trinity indeed. There's not a single winter when my kitchen doesn't contain all three all the time, often joined by garlic.
ReplyDeleteCranberry sauce is nice on turkey sandwiches.
Burning Love? More detail please?
Slowly fry diced bacon slices to nice crisp. Drain and set aside. In drippings, saute onion and garlic. When seer, add bacon back to rewarm. Serve in a well in mashed potatoes. Single servings among all college friends gathered for a Saturday evening. Ann learned to make it in college in Switzerland.
DeletePS--lots of onion and plenty of garlic.
Deletelots of onion and plenty of garlic is standard around here, but I'll try this and pass the recipe to my two youngest who will try anything. They go through a half dozen garlic bulbs per week, with cheesy garlic mashed potatoes being a winter favourite.
DeleteCongratulations to the chef!
ReplyDeleteI'm so impressed that Laura made such a fine meal.
ReplyDeletemy trinity would be celery, onions, and garlic. carrots seem an odd choice to me. I'm so impressed with Laura. Could not get my daughter interested in learning how to cook. well, done Grandma.
ReplyDeleteMine had to, in order to eat, and switched weeks through jr. high and high school. The competition was jealous and fierce: "Mom likes my xyz better than yours!" The oldest went on to own an award winning restaurant for years.
DeleteThat is a VERY impressive looking Christmas feast! But ugh, I'm with you on Brussels sprouts. Glad you were able to escape them.
ReplyDeletelaura is getting quite the education....
ReplyDeleteThere are different trinities in different places....Many have no carrots but do have bell pepper, for instance. But I think all have onion, and most also have celery.
ReplyDeleteLovely dinner! Hate brussel sprouts with this meal. Put them with corned beef or ham, but never with turkey! Yay for Laura!!
ReplyDeleteI'm very proud of her for doing this! But I love Brussels Sprouts
ReplyDelete