Skip to main content

Menu Plan Monday: January 25th

Well, it's the last week of January~and the last week of the *eat from the pantry* challenge. It has been an interesting month of meals. The first couple of weeks went great as far as hardly any spending. This last week I spent quite a bit on fresh produce after my hubby decided he wanted to go on a *fruits & veggies only* fast. I told him to wait until summer the next time he wanted to do that:) There will be a better veggie selection and hopefully we'll have a little garden again! But all-in-all it has been a good month. The total so far for the month is $115. It's possible that we'll need to pick a thing or two up this week, but I'm going to do my darndest not to! That total is amazing to me, since just two years ago I was spending around $125 a week on groceries~now it's usually around $70. I have definitely learned a lot in the past couple of year about being frugal and spending wisely.

We definitely had some interesting moments at dinnertime this past week. Some veggie dishes were hits and some were definitely NOT hits.

Hits
included: veggie-stuffed baked potatoes (stuffed with olive oil-based butter, minced garlic and steamed, chopped broccoli), sauteed zucchini, blended cauliflower (steamed and then blended w/a hand mixer with olive oil-based butter, salt & white pepper) and gazpacho.

Non-hits
included: Greek caponata (would've been great....as a side dish with a grilled steak!), and acorn squash wedges (it's the first time I didn't like a recipe from P-Dub...sorry). I didn't get around to the butternut squash puree...but since I still have that butternut squash in the fridge, I'm sure we'll be trying it somehow.

I'm sharing the gazpacho recipe with you today. I've tried gazpacho maybe once before and I remembered liking it. And even though it's traditionally a summertime dish, it's chock full of veggies so I decided to try it. The kids wouldn't even taste it, but Vince and I loved it!! It's a good thing, too, because it made a whopping two quarts+! The recipe I used came from Susan Branch's Girlfriends Forever book. I made just a few changes to it to fit the veggies I had on hand, and I added fresh cilantro. Because everything is better with fresh cilantro in my book!


Gazpacho
In your blender:
10 oz. cold tomato juice
1 med. tomato, cut up*
1/2 med. cucumber, cut up
1 tsp. sugar
1/4 cup balsamic vinegar
1 Tbls. olive oil
To blended ingredients, add:
2 1/2 cups tomato juice
1 med. tomato, chopped
1/2 med. cucumber, chopped
1 sm. red onion, finely chopped
2 celery stalks, diced
2 green onions, chopped
1 sm. squash, chopped**
1 sm. carrot, finely chopped**
about 1/4 cup chopped fresh cilantro
*****
Make sure that the veggies you are chopping to add to the blended ingredients are chopped small enough so that they will fit nicely on the spoon together. Chill well.
*I was out of fresh tomatoes so I used a 14.5 oz. can of diced tomatoes in the blender, then I just didn't add any more in the second round.
** You can add fresh diced zucchini and green pepper instead, if you'd like. In fact you can be pretty flexible on the veggies you put in, picking and choosing ones you like versus ones you don't.


Ok, now for this week. We are still planning to eat lots of veggies, of course, but not just veggies this time around. The kiddos will be so happy:)


Monday: Beef~Vegetable Soup with Cornbread
Tuesday: Chuck E. Cheese celebration for the kiddos
Wednesday: Hamburgers Diane, Steamed Broccoli, Garlicky Baked Butternut Squash
Thursday: My Grandma's Goulash
Friday: TBA~Possible Date Night:)
Saturday: Tuna Noodle Skillet Meal

This post is linked to Menu Plan Monday at I'm an Organizing Junkie.

Comments

This sounds yummy. And I agree, everything is better with fresh cilantro.

Thanks for stopping by my blog!

Popular posts from this blog

The Reading Game: A Review

I was excited to receive this review product recently, thinking my 1st-grade-son could really benefit and enjoy it a lot. And I was right! He is having so much fun with this game. The Reading Game is a fast-paced memory card game using words. The game comes with 6 sets of memory cards with 6 corresponding readers. The idea is for you and your student to play memory with each set of cards (playing 6 rounds with each set), after every 2 rounds your student then reads 2 test sentences to see how he is retaining the new words he is learning. After the whole set has been played, he is then ready to read the corresponding reader...and has learned 30 new words! By the time your student has played every set of cards and read every reader, he will have learned 180 words. Of the 25 most common English words, 23 are on that list; of the 50 most common words, 42 are on that list. So this little game of reading really does prepare your student well. The readers are illustrated with cute

The Making of an Egyptian Death Mask

We are learning all about the ancient world this year with Story of the World I and loving it! We've been learning a lot about Egypt, of course, which is completely fascinating. Most recently we have studied the New Kingdom of Egypt, which includes the story of King Tut. So we decided making an Egyptian death mask in the style of King Tut's would be a fun project. First since it was too cold at the time to paper mache in the garage (it probably would have frozen instead of dried-ha) and it was too messy to do it in the house, we decided to pick up a couple of cheap craft masks at Hobby Lobby. Next we cut out cardboard shapes to complete the shape of the death mask, attaching them with hot glue. Vince even put a little detail on the *beard* with the hot glue per The Princess' request. Then the kiddos started to paint them with this metallic gold tempera paint. It worked okay for the cardboard, but would not coat the plastic of the mask. We thought maybe a second coat

Door Hanger Chore Charts

My kids have had a chore chart for a while.  It's one of those magnetic boards and they share it.  However, it's not by their rooms and often they (and I) forget to update it.  Plus it's a little bulky.   When I saw the concept of a door hanger chore chart on Pinterest, I loved it!  It was compact, right there were the kiddos could see it coming out and going into their rooms, and it costs almost nothing to make.   I headed over to one of my favorite stores: Hobby Lobby, of course.  They  have these little wooden door hangers for .79.  I also grabbed a couple of packets of decorative buttons for $1.99 each.  I already had the clothes pins and the paint so those cost me nothing.   I began by painting the door hangers (I used tempera paints because that's what I had).  Then I grabbed a fine point Sharpie and the clothes pins and started writing chores on them, making sure to write them correctly so they will clip on the right direction.   The left