Category Archives: Eating

Chomp it up.

How to make the perfect pot roast

Sundays are our Big Family Dinner day. Rockford’s parents come over, and Don and his family frequently join us as well. I often default to something seriously simple — like Sandwich Night — on Sunday, but I’m going to make an effort to do less of that and more actual cooking in the coming months.

Yesterday we had pot roast, and it really wasn’t all that much more difficult than making a sandwich. My mother-in-law gave me this recipe when Rockford and I were newlyweds. There are only three ingredients, the roast comes out fall-apart tender, and it makes its own gravy. I really don’t know why we don’t have this for dinner every night.

Perfect Pot Roast
Ingredients
  • 3-4 pound boneless chuck roast
  • Lipton’s onion soup mix
  • 1 can cream of mushroom soup
Instructions
  1. Heat oven to 350 degrees. Roll out enough heavy-duty aluminum foil to make a giant packet for your roast — I like to use the extra-wide for this — and put it in the roasting pan.
  2. Put the roast in the middle of the foil. Sprinkle onion soup mix over the roast and rub it in just a bit. Spread the mushroom soup over that. Seal the foil most of the way around, leaving one end open. Fill the soup can about 1/3 of the way with water, pour it into your giant roast packet and seal it up.
  3. Cook at 350 degrees for 4 hours.
  4. Open the foil really carefully; it’s going to be very steamy. Lift the roast out and put it on your serving platter. Seal the foil back up so you don’t accidentally spill gravy on yourself. Get the gravy boat ready. Hold the foil packet above the gravy boat, then use your scissors to snip a hole in it. And voila! Gravy boat full of gravy!

I’m not always brand-loyal, but I think Lipton’s does make a superior onion soup mix. That feels like a dopey thing to say, but it’s true. I’ve tried the off-brands, and they seem to have an off-flavor. So in this case I’ll just stick with the one I know and like.

We usually have this with mashed potatoes and some other kind of veggie. I didn’t have the potatoes thought that I had, though, so I resorted to a box of instant mashed potatoes. They were fine and much simpler to make than “real” mashed potatoes. I also made some of Emeril’s maple-glazed carrots. Poppy told me awhile back that she likes maple-glazed carrots, but yesterday she said she doesn’t like them on Sundays. Go figure.

“But hey,” I’m sure you’re saying to yourself. “It’s Monday! Where’s the menu plan?”

We’re having a Rather Hectic Week, and I’m not sure what our evenings are going to look like, exactly. I’m thinking it’ll be something like this:

Monday: Fast food
I’d like to say we’ll be eating an organic farm-to-table meal, but I’d also like to tell you the truth. It’ll be Taco Bell or McDonald’s, probably.
Tuesday: Breakfast for dinner
Possibly pancakes for the kids! And probably an omelet for me.
Wednesday: Poppy’s birthday!
Exactly what we’re going is up in the air for now, but it’ll be something A Bit Special.
Thursday: Sandwiches
Possibly from Subway. We’ll see.

 

Dessert in my favorite shade of blue

On Saturday we stopped by Rockford’s grandmother’s house to pick some blueberries. His grandfather, Pop, had the greenest of green thumbs, and the blueberry bushes he planted when they moved into their “new” house some 12 years ago have been magnificently productive. Pete puts at least as many blueberries in his mouth as he does in his bucket; Poppy, not surprisingly, doesn’t eat a single berry from her harvest.

“I don’t like eating them,” she says. “I just like the festivity of picking them.”

Rockford and the kids picked probably 2 quarts of blueberries, and last night we turned some of them into a Blueberry Upside-Down Cake.

Blueberry Upside-Down Cake

adapted from “The Best Recipe

Topping
4 tablespoons butter, plus more for cake pan
3/4 cup light brown sugar
2 1/2 cups blueberries

Cake
1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
3 tablespoons cornmeal
1/2 teaspoon salt
8 tablespoons (1 stick) butter, softened
1 cup granulated sugar
4 large eggs, separated
1/8 teaspoon cream of tartar
1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract
2/3 cup milk

For the topping: Butter bottom and sides of 9×3-inch round cake pan. Melt 4 tablespoons butter in medium saucepan over medium heat; add brown sugar and cook, stirring occasionally, until mixture is foamy and pale, 3 to 4 minutes. Pour mixture into prepared cake pan; swirl pan to distribute evenly. Distribute blueberries evenly over topping; set aside.

For the cake: Heat oven to 350 degrees. Whisk flour, baking powder, cornmeal and salt together in medium bowl; set aside. Cream butter and sugar in large bowl. Gradually add 1 cup sugar; continue beating until light and fluffy, about 2 minutes. Beat in yolks and vanilla. Reduce heat to low and add dry mixture and milk, alternating in three or four batches, until batter is just smooth.

Beat egg whites in a large bowl at low speed until frothy. Increase speed to medium-high and beat to soft peaks. Add cream of tartar and continue to beat to stiff peaks. Fold a quarter of the beaten egg whites into the batter with a large rubber spatula. Fold in remaining whites until no white streaks remain. Gently pour batter into pan and spread over blueberries. Bake until top is golden and toothpick inserted into cake center comes out clean, 65 to 70 minutes.

Rest cake on rack for 2 minutes. Slide a paring knife around the edge of the cake to loosen it from the pan. Place a serving platter over the pan and hold tightly, then invert the cake onto the platter. Carefully remove the cake pan.

A note about the order of things

I only have a stand mixer, and I only have one bowl for it. This means I have to be a little creative about the batter and the egg whites. I get everything I need for the batter lined up, then I beat the egg whites, put them in another bowl and wipe the bowl down so I can use it to mix up the rest of the batter.

I am considering getting a second bowl for the stand mixer.

Pop gave us a few sticks (or sproutlings or cuttings or whatever you call them) from his blueberry bushes after we bought the house, and I so want them to thrive. I do not have the greenest of green thumbs, though, not by a long shot. So for now we will continue enjoying the bounty of Mom & Pop’s blueberry bushes, and I will keep coddling the sproutlings for as long as they need to be coddled.

Dessert in my favorite shade of blue

On Saturday we stopped by Rockford’s grandmother’s house to pick some blueberries. His grandfather, Pop, had the greenest of green thumbs, and the blueberry bushes he planted when they moved into their “new” house some 12 years ago have been magnificently productive. Pete puts at least as many blueberries in his mouth as he does in his bucket; Poppy, not surprisingly, doesn’t eat a single berry from her harvest.

“I don’t like eating them,” she says. “I just like the festivity of picking them.”

Rockford and the kids picked probably 2 quarts of blueberries, and last night we turned some of them into a Blueberry Upside-Down Cake.

Blueberry Upside-Down Cake

adapted from “The Best Recipe

Topping
4 tablespoons butter, plus more for cake pan
3/4 cup light brown sugar
2 1/2 cups blueberries

Cake
1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
3 tablespoons cornmeal
1/2 teaspoon salt
8 tablespoons (1 stick) butter, softened
1 cup granulated sugar
4 large eggs, separated
1/8 teaspoon cream of tartar
1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract
2/3 cup milk

For the topping: Butter bottom and sides of 9×3-inch round cake pan. Melt 4 tablespoons butter in medium saucepan over medium heat; add brown sugar and cook, stirring occasionally, until mixture is foamy and pale, 3 to 4 minutes. Pour mixture into prepared cake pan; swirl pan to distribute evenly. Distribute blueberries evenly over topping; set aside.

For the cake: Heat oven to 350 degrees. Whisk flour, baking powder, cornmeal and salt together in medium bowl; set aside. Cream butter and sugar in large bowl. Gradually add 1 cup sugar; continue beating until light and fluffy, about 2 minutes. Beat in yolks and vanilla. Reduce heat to low and add dry mixture and milk, alternating in three or four batches, until batter is just smooth.

Beat egg whites in a large bowl at low speed until frothy. Increase speed to medium-high and beat to soft peaks. Add cream of tartar and continue to beat to stiff peaks. Fold a quarter of the beaten egg whites into the batter with a large rubber spatula. Fold in remaining whites until no white streaks remain. Gently pour batter into pan and spread over blueberries. Bake until top is golden and toothpick inserted into cake center comes out clean, 65 to 70 minutes.

Rest cake on rack for 2 minutes. Slide a paring knife around the edge of the cake to loosen it from the pan. Place a serving platter over the pan and hold tightly, then invert the cake onto the platter. Carefully remove the cake pan.

A note about the order of things

I only have a stand mixer, and I only have one bowl for it. This means I have to be a little creative about the batter and the egg whites. I get everything I need for the batter lined up, then I beat the egg whites, put them in another bowl and wipe the bowl down so I can use it to mix up the rest of the batter.

I am considering getting a second bowl for the stand mixer.

Pop gave us a few sticks (or sproutlings or cuttings or whatever you call them) from his blueberry bushes after we bought the house, and I so want them to thrive. I do not have the greenest of green thumbs, though, not by a long shot. So for now we will continue enjoying the bounty of Mom & Pop’s blueberry bushes, and I will keep coddling the sproutlings for as long as they need to be coddled.