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.

 

Wading into ‘Green Gables’ and other homeschool pursuits

Catherine M. Rooney, 6th grade teacher instructs her alert pupils on the way and how of War Ration Book Two
This is pretty much what our days look like.

We’re finishing up our second week of school today, and so far it’s going swimmingly. Poppy has been eager to get to work every day. Pete has been a little difficult this week; I think he’s entering a Whiney Stage of Development. He settles down and actually enjoys himself once he finally succumbs to the learning process.

Would you like to know a little more about what we’ve been doing this week? Allons-y!

Reading

Our first read-aloud of the year is “Anne of Green Gables,” because that’s what I picked up on my last mad rush through the library. I’ve tried to read it before on my own without much luck. I just have a hard time getting into the story. Pete has been paying very little attention to it. He wanders through the room while we’re reading, but that’s about it. I don’t think it’s Poppy’s favorite book ever, but she enjoys the cuddle-on-the-couch time anyway.

We’re going to be studying the Middle Ages in history this year, so after we finish “Anne” I’m going to try to choose read-aloud books that are at least tangentially connected to that. Here are a few I’m considering:

  • Igraine the Brave,” by Cornelia Funke
  • The Squire’s Tale,” by Gerald Morris
  • The Adventure’s of Sir Gawain the True, by Gerald Morris
  • Favorite Medieval Tales,” Mary Pope Osborne.
  • Poppy’s daily schedule this year includes 30 minutes of free reading. This week she read a lot of books from my old “Sesame Street” collection as well as a new “My Little Pony” book from Grandma.

    Teaching Pete to read is one of my primary goals this year. We’re using the BOB books, and he read the first one on the first day of school with hardly any help at all.

    “How’d you know all those words?” I asked him.

    “Oh,” he said. “I’ve just been learning.”

    I’m hoping he magically absorbs Calculus the same way in a few years. Speaking of which …
    Continue reading Wading into ‘Green Gables’ and other homeschool pursuits

    MomComm gives me some constructive criticism

    When Mel at MomComm started offering blog critiques, I kind of wanted to sign up for one. But I wasn’t entirely sure I wanted to be critiqued, and then her queue filled up and stayed full forever. She offered a lot of great advice in her critiques, though, and it made me wish I hadn’t been so averse to criticism.

    So when she asked for another wave of blogs to critique, I signed up. This time she’s looking at specific pages; today, she’s focused on my About page.

    As always, Mel has a lot of great advice, and it’s stuff that’s applicable to any blog. She suggested, for example, that I change my permalink structure — that’s the stuff after butterscotchsundae.com/ in the location bar up there — to make things more SEO-friendly. Another web-savvy friend suggested I do that some time ago, but I’m wary. I’m afraid it’ll break my web site.

    I’m not afraid of any of the other suggestions, though. They’re just going to take a little time and effort to rearrange and rewrite some things.

    Thanks for the advice, Mel!