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Chewin'the NewsJuly 2007 |
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by Shelley Miller
COOKIN' AT THE KEYBOARD WITH SHELLEY
Our family at Sarah's high school
graduation
I started freezer cooking when Sarah was nine years old, and now she's a high school graduate. The last few months have been packed with all the activity and emotions of this significant milestone. Many times I found myself in the middle of a task, yet lost in thought as I recalled the memories of my little girl, and the only thing that brought me back to the task at hand was my need for a tissue.
As our family has changed through the years, so has my approach to freezer cooking. In the April issue of Carol's newsletter, she replied to Danielle's questions:
In addition to answering these questions, I will also described how I've made use of the Advantage Cooking software.
Situation:
Starting to home school; Sarah in 3rd grade; Lauren in 1st grade; the
twins were 18 months; cooked 30 meals at a time. .................................................... Situation:
Freezer cooking was working so well, I started to cook for 4 months at a
time, using my own recipes. I also developed the SANE approach (Some
Assembly Needed Eventually). By freezing only the time-consuming portion
of each recipe, I could put dinner on the table, save on freezer space,
and reduce the initial cash investment at the grocery store. ....................................................
Situation: We
started to purchase locally raised beef and chicken from friends. The
meat was already frozen when it arrived at my house, which made it
difficult for me to decide to thaw, cook, and refreeze just to have
freezer meals available. ....................................................
Situation: I
wanted to train our older daughters to cook from scratch and to put a
hot meal (main dish, salad, and vegetable) on the table at dinner. ....................................................
Situation: My
husband went on a low-carb diet. ....................................................
Situation: Our
family has been busy for long seasons of time in the last couple of
years. It's been difficult to carve out even a couple of days to stock
the freezer like I used to, even though the busy schedule creates the
need for freezer meals. My latest approach has been to do mini-cooking
sessions when I have a window of time and to stock the freezer with the
building blocks for a meal, e.g. cooked ground beef and diced chicken,
shredded beef, marinades, grated cheese, and meals for ministry and
hospitality. ....................................................
Situation: Cousin Camp is at our house this summer. We're going to spend a week camping out in the backyard, pretending we are pioneers on the Oregon Trail, charting our travels from Independence, Missouri to Oregon City, Oregon (where we live). I don't expect to have much time to cook, so I'm planning a cooking day to freeze breakfast, lunch, snacks, dinner, and desserts for the week.
Our family will be camping next weekend. I don't get too creative when it comes to food at camp. We repeat the same basic meals every time. All the meals are planned out and entered in Advantage Cooking. All I do is create a cooking day and select all my camp meals and my grocery list is ready to go! Note: even though these files look like recipes, they're actually meal plans. Examine them more closely and you'll get the idea.
Meal Plans for Camp
This "recipe" includes all the items needed to serve a pancake breakfast for six. The ingredients include pancake mix, blueberries, butter, syrup, eggs, ham, and orange juice. Import the "Camp Breakfast - Pancakes" recipe/meal plan.
This "recipe" includes all the items for lunch. The ingredients include deli rolls, ham, turkey, cheese, lettuce, cookies, chips, and fruit. Note: the mayo, mustard, and pickles are included in the "Camping Miscellaneous" recipe below.
Import the "Camp Lunch - Deli Sandwiches" recipe/meal plan.
This "recipe" includes all the items for dinner. The ingredients include buns, ground beef patties, worcestershire sauce, steak seasoning, cheese, sweet onion, chips, and fruit.
Import the "Camp Dinner - Burgers" recipe/meal plan.
This "recipe" includes all the food items we consume at camp outside of meals, as well as some of the staples for other meals. The ingredients include graham crackers, chocolate bars, marshmallows, hot chocolate mix, apple cider packets, biscuit dough (for roasting), salt, pepper, ketchup, mustard, pickles, and relish. The recipe serves our family for one day at camp.
Import the "Camping Miscellaneous" recipe/meal plan.
Camp Breakfast
Sandwiches A friend of mine serves these breakfast sandwiches to her family every year when they camp. I'm planning to add them to our menu this summer. Thanks, Jennifer, for the recipe and the picture!
Click here to view/print this recipe!
Be Creative! Import the files above, and use them as examples to create your own meal plans. If your family doesn't camp, you can use them when hosting company for the weekend or entertaining for a holiday.
As the seasons of life change in your household, experiment with the software. The hardest thing to do is actually sit down at your computer and get it working for you. Decide to do the hard things. Be creative.You'll feel good when you're done! Download a trial version of the software! It's free!
You will hear from our second daughter, Lauren, in my next newsletter. I'm looking forward to what she has to say! Happy summer!
>>>>>Back to April 2008 Newsletter
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