Keep calm and eat well

Although I play golf at least twice a week, I almost never ride. I don’t like to ride in carts, I play better when I walk and my body feels better when I walk. Yesterday I agreed to ride and by the end of the round, my knees were screaming. These are the knees that have been devoid of pain for months now.

The moral of the story is walk if you can. Always. Except tomorrow. I have another tournament where it really is best if I ride, but after this, I’m staying away from any event or course where I can’t walk. It’s called Make Donna’s Knees Great Again.

And for tomorrow’s event, our four-person team will be wearing matching outfits with a floral top that for me at least, will never see the light of day again. I believe I may be expected to wear a plastic lei. I’m all in. Our team won last year, so you know, whatever it takes.

In a moment of weakness, I accepted the role of co-captain for our league, with the expectation I will be captain next year. I’ve been wondering if I’m the right choice, so I asked my playing partners this week what they thought.

I acknowledged I can be aloof, but they didn’t seem to think that was a problem. Our current captain is absolutely perfect, so finding a replacement has unique challenges. Apparently, the first priority is finding someone who is willing to do it. Qualifications include being alive and upright. Check.

The next big thing is to avoid being a jerk, bitching out women on the course for rules violations and stuff like that. I’m proud to say I actually put some effort into not being a jerk, so I’m feeling pretty good about all that. Additionally, I hate the rules and would rather take a 10 than argue with someone over the proper way to drop a ball out of the hazard.

All in all, I’m optimistic. I got this.

In spite of all the bad craziness going on out there, my new mantra is keep calm and eat well.

In that spirit, on Sunday I made pasta with pesto sauce. Pesto is so easy. I just eyeball it these days. Lightly toasted pine nuts, a big bunch of fresh basil, a couple of garlic cloves, grated parmesan cheese, a dab of butter and enough olive oil to whiz it all together in the food processor. I even made the pasta from scratch.

I used to have the hand-crank pasta machine but recently upgraded to the KitchenAid pasta attachment, and it is worth every penny. It’s a whole lot easier when you can use both hands to feed the machine and guide the pasta as it comes out.

For a fancy little accompaniment, I made sardines fried in beer batter. This was a first, and all I can say is it won’t be the last. Damn, they were good. And yes, just regular canned sardines packed in olive oil, although I did use Matiz, which are imported from Spain.

The best part was I had an early morning tee time, and Dale got stuck with the mess.

Yesterday we had tacos from the freezer. It was a selection of chicken, bison and pork. The pork tacos are new, and they’ve become my new favorite. The pork filling is made in the slow cooker with pickled jalapeños and a good bit of the brine. And a little bit of brown sugar. Then it’s all shredded up at the end.

I’m not really into pulled pork sandwiches, but it sure does make great tacos. I make the kind with crispy shells. We freeze those, and Dale revives them in the oven quite successfully. A little bit of his homemade scorpion pepper salsa is a great addition, but one does have to be careful. Not him, of course. He’s a pepper machine.

We went to the corn place today. It was not pick your own, so we were disappointed. But I believe it was picked this morning, so we have high hopes. We’re just going to have corn with a couple of grilled sausages.

I’m not sure there will be leftovers, but I have corn chowder on my list. A little trick I learned last year is to make the stock from the shucked corn cobs. I may also try a bit of crispy pancetta as a topping. And some homemade bread to dunk.

My sourdough continues to improve, but I’m not quite there yet. Today I’m timing my starter to see how long it takes to reach its peak.

I’m aiming for six hours, so I can feed it at 8 a.m., go about my day, and then make the dough around 2 p.m. I store the starter in a temperature-controlled keeper and had it set at 78 degrees. At that temperature, it was peaking too soon, and by the time I get ready to make the dough, it’s somewhat bubbly but not full-strength.

Today I have it set at 75 degrees, to see if that improves the timing. It sounds obsessive, but it’s really one small detail that is keeping me from perfect bread. Not that imperfect bread is a bad thing.

Speaking of imperfect, I finished number 44! It was fun to do, and I’m very happy with how it turned out. I always tell myself it’s OK to deviate from the norm. It doesn’t have to be hyper-realistic.

It’s art! It can be anything we want it to be.

14 thoughts on “Keep calm and eat well”

  1. Any tips on using the pasta attachment? I bought it on sale during a COVID moment and haven’t unboxed it yet. You’ve reminded me that I have it and I’ve added to my “try something new or different thing” this week. Thanks!

    1. It’s pretty easy. Just follow the instructions for making pasta. I did learn one thing this week. I wanted to dry out the pasta a little so that it wouldn’t stick together when it went through the cutter. But it turns out you can dry it too much — and then the feeder won’t take in the dough.

  2. #44 is a beauty! I love all the various elements that keep the eye moving about the board.

    I love the idea of pre-made frozen tacos. My husband and I always struggle with finding relatively healthy, quick lunches that won’t ruin our appetite for dinner. We used to buy those bagged salad kits but a recent article I read about food poisoning has stopped that habit.

    Good luck with your tournament!

    1. Thank you. I like #44 more every time I look at it. Having a stash of tacos in the freezer is a great thing.

  3. I volunteered to help out our league’s fun tourney and whoa! I had flashbacks of inane meeting and a lack of decision-making. I’m new to the league and very familiar with ‘church work’ but this situation is taxing my patience and July 8 can’t come soon enough.

    1. We have an amazing competitions director. She does all the heavy lifting. I did that kind of stuff when I worked, but I want no part of it now. Still, I’m glad it’s over. But good for you — not enough people sign up to help. I was one of them, so I’m making up for it now.

  4. It is nice to see you getting your tongue in cheek humor back. Number 44 turned out awesome! Creativity and cooking are good for the soul.

  5. The Spanish do such great tinned fish 🙂 Himself keeps slipping them into our diet – as I’m not that keen on sardines, I insist on Spanish produce in order to make the experience as positive as possible. I love the idea of the deep frying – not sure I’ll be able to persuade him on that front, but you can be sure I will be trying!

    1. I am a recent convert to sardines, but I love them. There are lots of great recipes using tinned fish.

  6. I’m intrigued with making corn chowder now! We had some first of the season corn a couple of weeks ago – Florida is always early on crops and it was 13/$2! Yes $2. I couldn’t bring myself to get the whole baker’s dozen… and now wish I had thought of making chowder & freezing some.

    1. My sister cuts the corn off the cob and blisters it in a dry frying pan. Then she freezes that and tosses the kernals into salads, on baked potatoes, etc. But having a tub of chowder in the freezer is also a beautiful thing.

  7. No. 44 is stunning! I love how colorful it is. The butterfly is wonderful. So sorry about your knees.

    At our last supper club, someone made elote, aka Mexican street corn, which was incredibly good. She only brought one ear per person–I could easily have eaten two. Or more. Not fond of food that gets stuck in my teeth, but I’ll make an exception for elote.

    1. Thanks for the kind words. My knees are actually OK — just stiff from riding in the cart. I got a good walk in this morning, and they feel fine now.

      Dale made Mexican street corn once, and we didn’t like it. But we didn’t know what we were doing, so I’d definitely try it again. I also hate corn stuck in the teeth, but you are right. Worth it!

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