Button Sunday

Sometimes I post #foodgrams on Instagram. But during the month of October, I haven’t, because instead I’ve been posting photos of the Eleventh Earl of Houndstooth, Lord Cuttlebone. I try not to post more than one or two things a day there (it’s where a lot of dog photos and coloring photos go, too).

Lucky blog readers, because here are a few of the October meals of Houndstooth Hall that I randomly shot so I could remember that I do actually cook. Some of our takeout meals are also included. We don’t eat at restaurants during The Time of Corona.


Chili! Unlike Texans, I include kidney beans in my chili. I used to never eat chili until Timmy told me that sour cream is a great topping for it. I will do anything to find a way to eat more sour cream. Then after Harvey, Lynne taught us the trick of putting it over Fritos. So I either serve it with cornbread, or in this case, Fritos. Frito pie! This was a dinner and a couple of lunches for Tom and me.


Country-fried steak with rice and gravy, squash, salad, and corn on the cob. Normally that meal wouldn’t have corn on the cob, but it was eat it or watch it go bad.


This is baked hen, cornbread dressing, leftover rice from a prior meal, green beans, and salad. There was lots of hen left, and it went into chicken and dumplings, chicken sandwiches, and there’s still some in the freezer for what will probably be the next pot of chicken and dumplings.


This is a takeout breakfast burrito from Tacos A Go Go. I’ll eat this for dinner when Tom is in the mood for Mexican food, because I can order it non-spicy. This has eggs, cheese, potatoes, refried beans, and spinach.


Roast beef with potatoes and carrots (all cooked in the crock pot with a can of cream of onion soup that adds flavor and makes a gravy), salad, yeast rolls, and zucchini. Tim belongs to a food delivery service where they deliver all the ingredients in a kit for food preparation. Anytime his meals come with squash, zucchini, or cucumbers, he gives those to us because he doesn’t eat them. This zucchini was sautéd and delicious. Thanks, Tim!


Takeout cheeseburger and fries from Little Bitty Burger Barn.


Homemade Tex Mex. Chips and queso, and tortillas loaded with refried beans, taco-seasoned ground pork, and black olives topped with lettuce, tomato, and sour cream. That pork was another donation from Tim. He doesn’t eat pork and forgot to order ground turkey in place of it in one of his meal kits.


NOTHING goes to waste at the Hall. This is a big pot of soup made in the crockpot from leftovers. I keep a gallon zipper bag in the freezer, and every bit of leftovers goes into it until there’s enough for soup. This served not only Tom and me for a couple of days’ dinners and lunches, but I also sent soup and cornbread to Tim and Debby. Offhand, I think this contains these leftovers: roast, tomato meat sauce (from a spaghetti meal), rice, Rice R Roni, carrots, potatoes, navy beans, green beans, corn, black-eyed peas, stewed tomatoes, and kale.


Tomato meat sauce over bowtie pasta with garlic bread and salad. This is not the meat sauce that went in the soup. This actually was all devoured by Tom and me for dinner and lunches over a few days.


Another time we had takeout, this time from Chipotle. Most of their stuff is too spicy for me, but I can control that on a salad like this one. This has a mix of lettuces, spinach, corn salsa, pinto beans, and steak strips, topped with sour cream and shredded cheese.


This is a brunch tray I made for myself to eat while I was writing. I was using up the rest of a bag of broken potato chips; usually I’d have Triscuits instead. Then there’s hummus, celery, cucumbers (from Tim’s meal kit!), apple slices, a tangerine, and sharp cheddar cheese slices.


Homemade fish feast! Okay, the fish filets are Gorton’s, but other than that, this is all homemade: fries, hushpuppies, coleslaw, and corn on the cob (once again, had to use that corn before it went bad). I was STUFFED after this.

These are just a few of the meals we’ve eaten, and though they seem to have a lot of meat, we actually have reduced our meat consumption. We don’t have meat at every meal, and the meat we do eat is usually spread over several meals, so we’re eating it in smaller quantities.

Less meat is part of an overall effort to be mindful of climate change and ways we can help, along with: recycling, keeping our energy-efficient cars in good condition and using them efficiently, and little or no air travel. We also replaced all our windows with energy efficient windows, keep our thermostat set correctly, have energy-efficient appliances and lightbulbs, and are conservative with our water use. We donate clothes and household items to keep them out of landfills. We’re trying!

100 Happy Days: 77

Today I wondered: Might it be possible for me to be happy about something other than a dog? So I took my camera with me while I ran errands and meandered onto a couple of side streets away from my destinations. That’s when I discovered this, near St. Thomas University:

You can read more about Plant It Forward here. And you can enjoy these visions of a wonderful vegetable garden tucked into this busy urban area.

Now if you could only come for dinner on Friday and enjoy these fresh vegetables: baby spinach for the salad, okra, and eggplant.

I think I’ll be going back often.

100 Happy Days: 41

I’ve delayed since Day 20 doing another full-on food post, but I can’t help it. I may have cooked it, but you can blame Lynne for this one. A little bit of eggplant, some okra, a yellow and white corn medley–but the real culinary delight is that salad, with fresh pear and cherry tomatoes and cucumbers pulled right off the vines in Lynne’s garden. Oh, man–who needs meat?

Here’s another one taken with my phone a couple of nights ago. That night it was okra, squash, purple hull peas, and the same fresh goodies in the salad.

Just like the tables of my people (except there’d also be meat, rolls and/or cornbread, and sweet tea).

100 Happy Days: 20

I made it to Day 20 before I resorted to a food post! Here are the sides for our Tex-Mex tonight: cheese, sour cream, chiles, onions, black olives, tomatoes, and lettuce to go in beef and/or bean burritos, or to become part of nachos or taco salad along with chips and queso, and Mexican rice. Hungry?

You will note the absence of jalapeños. I can’t take the heat.

April Photo A Day: Water

As I’ve said before, I love water. And I love salads. But now, on Day 7 of this raw food detox, I’ll admit that I’m getting weary of so many salads, even if they are all different from one another and tasty.

I don’t miss meat, and I love vegetables. But I miss cooked vegetables. And it’s weird to make meals for Tom and Tim and eat different meals myself. This photo is of their salad. Mine was precut for me by Lindsey, who’s been a champ at following the plan, putting meals together for herself, Rhonda and me, and making sure I have the right ingredients for the meals I prepare for myself.

Tonight–catch me!–because tonight, I get a vegan, organic chocolate chip cookie. I’m pretty sure it’ll be one of the best cookies I’ve ever eaten.

Prompt from FMS Photo A Day.

April Photo A Day: On Your Plate

Tim and I are going through all the short stories we were sent for the Best Gay Romance 2014 anthology and that is a big thing on my plate. There are so many good and intriguing stories; it’s going to be tough to pick only a few of them.

At Craft Night this past Friday, Lindsey was breaking down meal plans for a ten-day raw food detox she and Rhonda planned to do. At the same time, I offered her the Bottlecap painting she inspired. She wanted to pay for it, and somehow in that discussion, I decided I wanted to do this detox thing with them. So we bartered, and Lindsey added a third person (ME!) to her grocery runs and meal plans in return for the painting. End result: I’m doing this detox thing. I have to modify it some to keep my blood glucose levels where they should be, and I’m not really detoxing so much as I am giving myself a break from meat and starches. I’ve also thrown in a few things that aren’t part of the plan (like ground flaxseed, upon recommendation of Geri and Tim), and dashes of cinnamon, a spice that’s supposed to be good for pre-diabetics and diabetics.

Even though I’ll still cook meals for Tom and Tim, it’s AWESOME to look in my fridge and freezer or at my kitchen counter and see that someone else has divided up three meals a day for me–and it’ll be this way for TEN DAYS! I always said if I won the lottery, the only rich person thing I’d ever want would be a chauffeur. But I could get used to this meal planning/cooking thing falling to someone else. Thanks, Lindsey; it’s nice to be spoiled.

It’s the end of day one of this adventure. I’ve never felt so freaking full on a day that wasn’t a holiday. I thought I’d show you what lunch looked like today. This was on my plate.

Prompt from FMS Photo A Day.