Alison Hodgson

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An excellent save

March 8, 2006 by Alison Hodgson 4 Comments

Yesterday Lydia and I were a flurry of cookery. As I was pulling things out to make dinner she asked how old she would need to be to take a cooking class. I told her there were classes for all ages but I didn’t think she needed to take one and offered to teach her. Last spring we had begun her culinary education but with the addition of all her other schooling it had fallen by the wayside. She was very excited to resume her learning. Together we made a potato and sausage stew that the family loves. She cut the sausages, browned the onions and did most of the stirring. It was great to have her help and her company.

While we made the soup I baked some chicken that was marinating from the day before and made rice to serve with it. Assembled, the dish was a little disappointing, but I put it in the fridge and figured I would be able to spice it up today.

The stew was quite good and Lydia happily ate a bowl for lunch and then dinner. All of the children were going to Paul’s mom’s for a sleep over as we had tickets for a concert of an award winning choir.

Just as the choir was walking out I realized that I had forgotten to refrigerate the soup. I whispered this to Paul.

“That would be a serious drag if all that went to waste especially before I got a chance at it. Did you turn off the burner?”

I thought for a moment. “I don’t know…I think so…but I know I left the soup out.”

Further conversation was not possible. I thought about the burner. It hadn’t been a concern until Paul said something. I figured it was probably fine, and yet…I comforted myself with the thought that the alarm goes if I think about burning toast so it wouldn’t be long before the fire department was there and maybe just maybe they would break down the front door (hideous beyond belief) to get to the fire, enabling us to claim a new one on our insurance. With that happy thought I turned my attention to the concert.

When we got home that night there were no traces of fire but the sad pot of soup was on the stove – uncovered even. I couldn’t bear to throw it out, covered it and threw it in the fridge.

The sum total of yesterday’s exertions were: a once tasty stew now harboring unknown diseases and a dish that somehow managed to be bland and repellently lemony at the same time.

This afternoon I contemplated the chicken and rice. What could be done? I couldn’t bear to serve it but didn’t have any idea on how to spice it up without making it worse. Fortunately I remembered a “Thai-ish” soup I absolutely love. I took out the chicken and rice added chicken broth, coconut milk, tumeric and a little bit of peanut butter and now have a delicious soup.

Isn’t that a happy ending to such a sad tale?

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Comments

  1. AmberJ says

    March 8, 2006 at 10:55 pm

    Very creative!

    Just one question: so you know how you can heat stuff up and kill bacteria? Does the same not work in the opposite? You know, if you refrigerate it long enough it will be okay and then you will zap all the bad bugs once you cook it…

    Just wondering…not that I do anything like that…

    Reply
  2. alison says

    March 9, 2006 at 1:38 pm

    I was going to ask my husband to try some and be the canary for the family coal mine. I’m not crazy about that soup without the possibility of food poisoning. I will let you know how it turns out…since you haven’t tried anything like that…

    Reply
  3. Sheila says

    March 9, 2006 at 4:47 pm

    My rule is, if it smells ok, heat it up really really hot and you’ll be fine. I’m convinced that microwaves and intense heat will kill anything that could make you sick. Besides, it’s cold there. If it was a hot month, you’d be in trouble.

    Any visible mold or bad smells are bad.

    Stuart fondly refers to leftovers as my science experiments. Isn’t he a dear?

    Reply
  4. Sherry C says

    March 20, 2006 at 9:01 pm

    This post, back when it was first written, actually inspired me to get cooking. The night before we left for Portland/Vancouver, I made a huge pot of pasta sauce, a roast turkey and a beer can chicken as well.

    I froze the sauce in three meal-sized portions, sliced up the turkey and froze likewise, then actually pulled every bit of chicken off the carcass and shredded it to freeze as well.

    Coming home from our trip, I knew we would eat well all week and into the next without much time spent on meal prep.

    I really need to do things like that more often.

    Hey, and sorry I haven’t been commenting lately. It certainly isn’t anything personal. You might have noted that I’ve not commented on any of the blogs for a couple of weeks now. Just no energy for it.

    Perhaps I’m back in the saddle again now; we’ll see.

    Reply

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